CoGTA APPOINTS ENGINEERS TO ASSIST DISTRESSED MUNICIPALITIES

CoGTA appoints engineers to assist distressed municipalities

Aug 7, 2018 | News |

The Department of Cooperative Governance and Traditional Affairs (CoGTA) has appointed 81 new engineers and town planners in an effort to assist distressed municipalities to get back on track.

The appointment follows a report by Auditor General Kimi Makwetu detailing the dire state of municipalities, with 87 municipalities classified as dysfunctional.

In a bid to provide support to the municipalities in the nine provinces, CoGTA announced an intervention programme focusing on three areas, namely governance and administration, service delivery and infrastructure as well as financial management.

Lack of technical expertise

“The ability of municipalities to plan, deliver, operate and maintain infrastructure is dependent to a greater extent, on the capacity of officials to execute their responsibilities. The technical nature of the responsibilities demands requisite levels of expertise and skills, mainly in the field of civil engineering.

“The situation in the country has been such that only 55 municipalities out of 257, had engineers leading their technical divisions.

District technical support teams

“Through our implementing agent, the Municipal Infrastructure Support Agent (MISA) supports 55 struggling municipalities to spend their infrastructure allocations. It is my great pleasure to warmly welcome to CoGTA, our 81 new engineers and town planners,” said CoGTA Minister Zweli Mkhize.

The cohort of technical experts is appointed as part of the District Technical Support Teams in the affected municipalities. The teams comprise:

  • Nine provincial managers, most of whom are engineers;
  • Thirty-six civil engineers, with seven of them being chief engineers;
  • Fourteen electrical engineers;
  • Sixteen town and regional planners;
  • Seven candidate civil engineers, who are experienced engineers who are in the process of completing their professional registration.

Mkhize said the technical support programme will run until the end of April 2021.

Recruitment ongoing

“Our overall recruitment programme is still continuing. The Municipal Infrastructure Support Agent has advertised for more engineers and town planners to fill existing vacancies as the MISA organogram makes provision for 150 technical experts.

“We are aware of the shortage of skills in critical sectors such as water engineering and our next recruitment drive will seek to correct that shortage,” said Mkhize.

Ageing infrastructure, poor maintenance, sewage spillages and blockages are just some of the challenges that await the infrastructure experts.

A MISA town planner deployed in Gauteng, Enkosi Mpondo, said areas such as Merafong Municipality have problems with sinkholes, infrastructure backlogs and aging infrastructure but the team stands ready to assist.

“We have already started working and while we have identified areas that require immediate action to address backlogs, it is also crucial for us to establish long-term plans for the municipalities at hand to ensure long-term efficiency,” said Mpondo

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