Category Archives: pietermaritzburg

Witness: Residents told, no budget for homes

Residents told, no budget for homes
17 Aug 2008
Thando Mgaga

While frustrated Eastwood residents grabbed land owned by the Msunduzi
Municipality on Tuesday, nearby Thembalihle, Tamboville and Q-section
residents are fed up with living in mud houses and are demanding
low-cost housing from the municipality.

Chairman of the Eastwood Community Forum, Fred Wagner, said the
municipality allocated R58,6 million in the current financial year to
build houses in these communities, but there is nothing to indicate that
the houses will be built.

He said residents of these areas plan to raise the matter with national
government.

But ward councillor Mzwakhe Dladla said there is no budget to build
houses. He said he tasked municipal officials to establish how much it
would cost to build low-cost houses in these sections and they came up
with the amount of R58,6 million.

“I held community meetings and explained to the residents that an
application for houses has to be sent to council first and a social
survey to be conducted and thereafter an application to the department
of housing will have to be drafted,” said Dladla.

Msunduzi spokeswoman Evodia Mahlangu said Thembalihle, Tamboville and
Q-section are projects in the close-out phase and 90% of the transfers
have taken place.

She said an amount of R2 500 was made available, materials were issued
to beneficiaries, a housing support centre was established and the
communities were trained in building their own houses.

“A new project is being planned for the area. However, a full audit of
the beneficiaries and the type of top structure that is on each and
every site will need to be undertaken.

“Thereafter an application for funding will be prepared and submitted to
the department of housing,” added Mahlangu.

More flooding in Ash Road

Once again the City authorities are seizing on flooding to justify forced removals and to give them a humane spin….

The Witness
Afternoon downpour wreaks havoc in PMB
12 Feb 2008

Yesterday’s late afternoon downpour is said to have resulted in the worst flooding in years in Pietermaritzburg.

A number of houses were washed away in the Jika Joe informal settlement on Ash Road after the Dorpspruit burst its banks and water began rushing into the settlement from Manning Avenue.

Msunduzi municipal manager Rob Haswell said more than a dozen homes were washed away and hundreds were damaged along both banks.

Disaster management chief John Gutridge said tents have been pitched on the Tatham soccer field on Manning Avenue for families whose homes were washed away.

Gutridge said last night that the total number of homes washed away was unknown. An assessment of the area will be carried out today.

Haswell said mattresses and blankets were being provided.

He said this is the second time Jika Joe has been hit by recent heavy rains.

“It is clear that we have to come up with a [relocation] plan, as it is inhumane and unacceptable for people to be continually exposed to the elements in this way,” said Haswell.

Other homes and businesses were also flooded by overflowing streams and drains.

The Witness was inundated with calls from people with dramatic stories.

One of the worst-hit areas was Cascades. Peter Walton said the Cascades stream was overflowing and flooding Oak Park properties.

Other badly affected areas included Chase Valley, Orient Heights, Prestbury, Hilton, Northdale, and Scottsville.

At Prestbury, the Dorpspruit burst its banks briefly, flooding gardens, and nearly 100 mm of rain was measured in an hour.

The KZN Health Department reported major damage to equipment and infrastructure on the 16th floor of the Natalia Building.

Despite traffic gridlock as rush hour drivers tried to move through flooded roads, Transport Department spokeswoman Zinhle Mngomezulu reported no accidents on provincial roads.

However, Msunduzi traffic spokesman Kenneth Chetty said that two minor accidents on Chatterton Road and at the corner of Alan Paton Drive and Alexandra Road occurred.

Chetty said streets across the city were waterlogged, resulting in very slow-moving traffic, with a major traffic backlog on the main-off ramp from Liberty Midlands Mall leading into Church Street.

A landslide occurred on Old Howick Road, but traffic could still get through. Hours after the downpour, motorists were still manoeuvring through the traffic trying to get home.

nerissag@witness.co.za