Mashaba: My plan to break up Pikitup’s Monopoly

The following is an extract from a speech delivered by the Democratic Alliance’s Johannesburg Mayoral Candidate, Herman Mashaba, during an oversight visit in Alexandra.

For years, Pikitup has been plagued with systemic problems that have prevented it from fulfilling its duty to keep Johannesburg clean.

Just last week, the Auditor General’s local government report named Pikitup as one of the ‘main contributors’ to increased irregular expenditure in the City.

In 2011/12 alone, Pikitup incurred R572 million in irregular expenditure.

The Pikitup strike earlier this year remains fresh in our minds. It created a public health hazard that endangered our citizens and our economy.

Johannesburg’s streets became a wasteland of rubbish and filth. In some places, residents were walking knee-deep through rubbish.

There was even the the discovery of the bubonic plague in a rat found in Tembisa.

Johannesburg was heading towards an environmental health crisis and there was a real risk of potential outbreaks of diseases and pest infestations.

Yet even today, nearly two months after the strike, we stand here surrounded by rubbish. This is the case in many communities I have been visiting around this city.

One thing is clear: Pikitup is failing to fulfill its purpose.

The City of Johannesburg’s first responsibility should be the protection of its residents.

I have to ask myself, when elected mayor of this great city on 3 August, will I sit by idly and wait for the next, inevitable strike or must I act decisively to ensure that Pikitup’s persistent problems are brought to an end once and for all?

Leadership is about taking difficult decisions and exercising cool judgment. Something that Mayor Tau has failed to do in this situation.

I am here today to tell you that one of my first projects when elected mayor will be to break up the Pikitup monopoly.

Continuing to employ one company exclusively has put the City’s refuse removal and your health at high risk.

Clause 59 of the Service Agreement between the City of Johannesburg and Pikitup states that the City can terminate its agreement with Pikitup by providing 180 days’ notice.

I intend exercising this right.

As mayor, my plan is to prioritise small business in procurement, especially from the townships.

From day one, there will be a transparent and open tender system. No more nepotism. No more backhands. No more slacking.

I will break up Pikitup into a number of smaller and decentralised service providers across Johannesburg’s different regions.

This, in turn, will open up unprecedented entrepreneurial opportunities and create jobs in the fastest growth industry in the 21st century: green technologies.

The beauty of breaking up Pikitup is that if there is another strike or incident of industrial strife, only one region of the City will be negatively impacted. I would then be able to immediately provide support from another refuse collector in one of the other six regions to pick up the slack.

As the jobs Mayor, let me make one more thing clear. Pikitup employees will not lose their jobs. They will be absorbed by successful service providers, and their grievances will be acted on.

Pikitup has been filled with ANC cadres, deployed in upper management and has a poisonous relationship with its employees.

Pikitup Managing Director, Amanda Nair has had a litany of charges brought against her by the SA Municipal Workers Union, yet questionably, she remains comfortable and secure in her office.

This whole debacle was born in Mayor Parks Tau’s office. Again, he failed to use the power of his office to resolve the crisis. In fact, he and his advisers would have known what was coming: But they did nothing.

It is time to break up Pikitup’s corrupt and ineffective monopoly once and for all.

Come 3 August, vote for the change you want to see.

 

Herman Mashaba

DA Mayoral Candidate: Johannesburg

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Pikitup strike exposed Mayor Parks Tau’s weak leadership

 

The DA welcomes the announcement that the prolonged Pikitup strike has finally come to an end.

Questions however remain about why Mayor Parks Tau took so long to resolve it, and what concessions the City of Johannesburg has had to make to get workers back to work.

Will no-work, no pay for the past five weeks apply, will workers who were positively identified damaging property and intimidating clean-up crews be fired and criminally charged?

This strike revealed how weak Mayor Tau is in the face of adversity and how incapable he is of standing up against unions.

In short, Mayor Parks Tau’s weak leadership posed a huge risk to the health and well-being of Johannesburg’s 4,4 million residents.

A DA-led Johannesburg would never have allowed this strike to spiral out of control as it did.

Contingency plans would have been implemented without fail, relief workers would have been protected from the outset, and individuals who damaged property and intimidated non-striking workers would have been criminally charge.

Change is coming to Johannesburg, and this weekend voters came out in their numbers to update their registration details to vote for change on 3 August.

Johannesburg’s voters are looking forward to voting day and to vote for the DA difference – because where the DA governs, life is better.

Media enquiries:

Willie Venter

Director: Communications and research

060 963 8260

Urgent Council Meeting Let-Down: Mayor Fails To Suspend Compromised Pikitup MD

Pikitup Strike

Johannesburg Mayor Parks Tau should have broken the logjam in the Pikitup strike by suspending MD Amanda Nair after a strong case against her was presented by the DA at today’s urgent extraordinary City Council meeting.

Tau let down the residents of the City when he rejected a call by DA, and the minority parties in Council, for a truly independent inquiry into serious allegations against Nair.

Instead Mayor Tau gave weak reasons for not acting against her, and offered no new insights to help councillors and residents deal with the five-week old strike.

The City is unable to act decisively because several leaders linked to Pikitup are compromised.

Corruption, Nepotism and Racism

Workers’ allegations against Nair are among the main reasons for the impasse, which has raised health concerns amid mounting piles of rotting garbage

DA Councillor, Andrew Cadman told Council that accusations against Nair included corruption, nepotism and racism.

Nair is accused of appointing friends to Pikitup positions. For example, Kelvin Ngwenya, the son of Nair’s domestic worker, was given an internship. While interns are typically paid about R2000 a month, Ngwenya was paid R9500. He was allegedly the only intern given a permanent appointment without being interviewed.

Nair is also accused of favouring the appointment of Indians to senior positions. The DA has names of individuals affected.

There is also evidence that Nair failed to comply with other recruitment and promotion procedures. Senior positions have been filled without any interview process being followed. Again, individuals are named. In addition, consultants have been loaded on the Pikitup system, so that they receive employee benefits, and are provided with tools of trade at Pikitup’s expense.

Tender irregularities are also alleged. Nair is accused of increasing the scope of the tender awarded to Aqua Plant by R40 million, despite a decision by the previous Pikitup Board not to do so because of allegations of fraud.

City’s Corporate Investigations Unit

Equally concerning is the decision by the City and the Pikitup Board not take appropriate action against Nair in relation to cellphones and tablet improperly issued to Nair.  The City’s Corporate Investigations Unit recommended that disciplinary action be instituted against Mr Donovan Denyssen, General Manager: Infrastructure Enterprise,  for “unofficially issuing cellphones and a tablet to Ms Nair without permission. .”, and that a case of theft be opened against him.

Mr Denyssen was dismissed. Nair, who allegedly used the items for her family and gave one of the cellphones to one of MMC Matshidiso Mfikoe’s children as a birthday present, was merely required to refund the City the value of the items.

The Corporate Investigations Unit curiously elected not to interview Nair and MMC Mfikoe regarding allegations that Denyssen made against them “due to the sensitivity of the investigation”.

Nair subsequently re-employed Denyssen, allegedly at an annual salary of R1.4 million, which was allegedly increased to R2.4 million within a few months.

Inquiry

Where was the Pikitup Board at this time? Bizarrely, the chair, Dr Trish Hanekom, allegedly deposed  an affidavit stating that the cellphones had no value, while the City attributed a value of approximately R33 000 to them. If that is true, Dr Hanekom has committed perjury.

This leaves the City with a compromised Pikitup MD, a compromised board chair, and a compromised political head (MMC Mfikoe).

The allegations are precise and detailed. In law, they are sufficient to warrant the immediate suspension of Nair. There must be an inquiry, not by those who are compromised, but by independent persons.

 

Media enquiries:

Cllr Vasco da Gama

DA Johannesburg Caucus Leader

082 957 8581

[Image source]

Pikitup: Joburg Concedes To Urgent DA Debate

Pikitup Crisis

I am pleased that Joburg Speaker Cllr Constance Bontle Bapela has conceded to debate the Pikitup crisis through an urgent debate called by the DA, in Council tomorrow.

Speaker Bapela has now acknowledged the urgency of this Pikitup crisis, after weeks of inaction from the City of Johannesburg and Mayor Parks Tau.

The real test though will be on whether the ANC in the Council will support a DA motion in the debate mandating Mayor Parks Tau to end the strike immediately.

It is high time we break the Pikitup deadlock. Our city cannot be held ransom by union pressure any longer.

Striking Workers

Our poorest communities are suffering horrendous health risks as rubbish mounts on streets and corners, with no access to alternative collection.

Across all areas of Joburg, our communities cannot continue to suffer the effects of Pikitup, including thuggery and violence of striking workers, until Mayor Tau decides to act.

The time to act is now, and we are hopeful that tomorrow’s debate will resolve to end the strike urgently.

 

Media enquiries:

Cllr Vasco da Gama

DA Johannesburg Caucus Leader

082 957 8581

We could be so much better than ‘Pikitup Strike Joburg’

Note to Editors: The following remarks were delivered by Herman Mashaba at the Baragwanath Taxi Rank, to commuters and supporters, during a community interaction about the Pikitup Strike and Voter Registration.

Here at Baragwanath Taxi Rank, the effects of the Pikitup strike are desperately visible, with commuters standing in queues among piles and piles of uncollected rubbish, while the ANC government in the City of Johannesburg is too weak to deal with unions.

I am saddened and dismayed that our poor residents, who struggle every day to get ahead, walk among mounting rubbish and filth to get to their transport. We could be so much better than this.

The Pikitup strike is a clear illustration of how the ANC puts its alliance with COSATU before peoples’ service delivery needs. Parks Tau would rather keep unions happy, than keep Joburg clean.

This is a failure by the Mayor, and shows that Parks Tau is not a people’s Mayor.

Today, the DA’s message is clear: A vote for the DA will be a vote for a government that puts people first, and which is not held to ransom by union alliances.

I repeat today that we respect the rights of trade unions and their activities, but the rule of law must be obeyed, and that decisive action will be taken against members who break the law.

The ANC and Mayor Parks Tau do not care about the city’s residents. They have left us all behind; they are insiders, and the rest are outsiders who walk through rubbish and filthy streets.

We could be so much better than this.

The DA will bring change to Johannesburg, and through our “Service with Pride” vision we will ensure that city officials put people first. Service delivery must be the priority, which it is sadly not at the moment.

We will transform the city administration into one which is responsive and caring to people’s needs, and create a truly world-class city.

Because where the DA governs, life is better.

 

Media enquiries:

Willie Venter

Director: Communications and research

060 963 8260

DA welcomes JMPD deployment to protect refuse collectors

The DA welcomes the City of Johannesburg’s decision to heed the DA call made last week, to have Metro Police officers protect auxiliary refuse collectors while the protracted Pikitup strike drags on.

This is a vindication of the DA’s assertion that the City of Joburg was not doing enough to work around the Pikitup strike, or to protect private refuse collectors.

The city’s response to the Pikitup strike has been woefully inadequate. Striking workers have been left to rampage unchecked while Mayor Parks Tau has been torn between his allegiances to the City, the Pikitup entity and the unions on strike.

In alliance with COSATU unions, the ANC is weak and ineffectual at solving strike action.

Recognising rubbish collection as an essential service, a DA-led city government would not allow strike action to affect residents for this ridiculously protracted time.

Enormous amounts of rotten rubbish strewn in our communities are leaving all people unsafe and in unhealthy environments.

Our poorest communities are especially at risk, as rubbish now lies where children play, where old people walk and live and is piling up at the front doors of homes.

In contrast, in the City of Cape Town where the DA governs, a large part of rubbish collection is managed by the City under its direct control, along with a number of private contractors, under close supervision of the city.

This creates an environment of competitive pricing and service delivery, as well as effective contingency planning in the event of industrial action.

It is this form of administration Johannesburg’s people can look forward to when they vote for change in the coming local government elections, and vote the DA into government.

The DA will bring change to Johannesburg, change that brings effective and quality service delivery to all.

Media enquiries:

Willie Venter

Director: Communications and research

060 963 8260

 

DA Welcomes JMPD Deployment To Protect Refuse Collectors

Pikitup – Striking Workers

The DA welcomes the City of Johannesburg’s decision to heed the DA call made last week, to have Metro Police officers protect auxiliary refuse collectors while the protracted Pikitup strike drags on.

This is a vindication of the DA’s assertion that the City of Joburg was not doing enough to work around the Pikitup strike, or to protect private refuse collectors.

The city’s response to the Pikitup strike has been woefully inadequate. Striking workers have been left to rampage unchecked while Mayor Parks Tau has been torn between his allegiances to the City, the Pikitup entity and the unions on strike.

In alliance with COSATU unions, the ANC is weak and ineffectual at solving strike action.

Where DA Governs

Recognising rubbish collection as an essential service, a DA-led city government would not allow strike action to affect residents for this ridiculously protracted time.

Enormous amounts of rotten rubbish strewn in our communities are leaving all people unsafe and in unhealthy environments.

Our poorest communities are especially at risk, as rubbish now lies where children play, where old people walk and live and is piling up at the front doors of homes.

In contrast, in the City of Cape Town where the DA governs, a large part of rubbish collection is managed by the City under its direct control, along with a number of private contractors, under close supervision of the city.

This creates an environment of competitive pricing and service delivery, as well as effective contingency planning in the event of industrial action.

It is this form of administration Johannesburg’s people can look forward to when they vote for change in the coming local government elections, and vote the DA into government.

The DA will bring change to Johannesburg, change that brings effective and quality service delivery to all.

 

Media enquiries:

Willie Venter

Director: Communications and research

060 963 8260

[Image source]

Pikitup Strike: The Time To Act Is Now

The City of Johannesburg and the South African Municipal Workers Union (SAMWU) must immediately act to resolve the illegal strike of Pikitup workers.

The strike has been raging for more than three weeks now, while SAMWU workers trash the city’s streets and intimidate contractors who have been engaged to collect waste.

For as long as the talks between the city and SAMWU continue, metro police officials must be assigned to escort service providers on their rubbish collection rounds, and immediately act against SAMWU intimidation.

During this time, it should be all hands on deck, and all JMPD officers must work extended hours and be on permanent stand-by.

Residents and business should not be allowed to suffer while SAMWU tries to hold the city to ransom.

In the City of Cape Town, the DA has placed all service delivery entities under central control to speed up delivery and for greater accountability and oversight.

Because where the DA governs, service delivery comes first, especially to the poor and the vulnerable.

During this year’s local government elections voters will choose between government under DA control that puts people and service delivery first, or an ANC one that prioritises personal party loyalties and union alliances first.

Change is coming, and the DA is ready to step in and bring the DA difference to the people of Johannesburg.

 

Media enquiries:

Willie Venter

Director: Communications and research

060 963 8260

DA Scores Absentee Mayor Parks Tau 3/10

It is almost five years since Parks Tau has taken office as Mayor of Johannesburg, but under his leadership the so-called world class African city has merely limped along, battling to provide residents with levels of service befitting of such a title.

For years inaccurate billing has remained a constant challenge, negatively impacting the city’s finances and ultimately delaying the roll-out of much needed maintenance and upgrade programmes throughout the city.

This crisis is exacerbated by a massive R1,2 billion tender for unapproved smart electricity meters which was awarded to Edison Power, whose chairperson Vivian Reddy has close ties to President Jacob Zuma.

Over the years housing and sanitation backlogs have left thousands of residents living their lives in undignified squalor, while the city simply takes no action against large scale corruption and non-delivery.

Every day Johannesburg residents are forced to cope with massive water losses, unreliable electricity supply, poor road infrastructure, failed job creation initiatives and an ever-slowing rate of service delivery.

Johannesburg should be a world-class city. It has the capacity and the people to achieve this goal, and residents want to see it shine as a caring city for all who live in it.

Johannesburg should become a model of service delivery and excellence in South Africa, a title currently held by Cape Town.

The DA has developed this report card to rate the performance of Mayor Parks Tau and Members of the Mayoral Committee (MMCs) to analyse each individual’s grasp of their portfolio, their service delivery track record, and their willingness to be held accountable.

 

Executive Mayor – Cllr Parks Tau

While the city stumbles from crisis to crisis, Mayor Tau uses every publicity stunt in the book to paint a picture of a Johannesburg which is far removed from reality.

Mayor Tau is ultimately responsible for the state of the city, but yet palms it off to others and dodges accountability every step of the way.

The recent Pikitup strike is a case in point, where the mayor prioritised the Africities Summit over rampant strikers and rubbish piles all over the city. He had to turn to provincial Cooperative Governance MEC Jacob Mamabolo to act outside his mandate to intervene and restore order.

True to form, the mayor has yet to pronounce himself on the fight against corruption, water losses, electric supply instability, and housing issues.

The fact is that residents have long ago realised that mayor Tau is merely a poster boy for the city, while he allows the proper running of the city to be hampered by ineffective spending, corruption and poor management.

Mayor Tau has not met any of his key performance indicators, is not willing to be held accountable, and continues to hold Johannesburg back from being a world-class city.

Score: 3/10

 

MMC for Finance – Cllr Geoffrey Makhubo

Since taking over the finance portfolio in 2011 from Mayor Parks Tau, Geoffrey Makhubo has been more hands-on than his predecessor ever was.

He scores well for attending Section 79 committee meetings, for listening to opposition input, and at times, accepting important suggestions.

However, he defends the indefensible, including the R1,2 billion smart electricity meters contract with Edison, which has caused major headaches for thousands of consumers.

Makhubo likes to paint a rosy picture, pretending all is well.

Yet the recent arrests of revenue employees and officials doing business with council show that he has not been able to beat corruption and build an effective financial management environment.

Score: 4/10

 

MMC for Economic Development – Cllr Ruby Mathang

Under the stewardship of Cllr Mathang, the local economic development department has failed to meet key targets, and the city has failed to facilitate a “one-stop, red-carpet” facility to attract investors.

Of particular concern is that Cllr Mathang’s written responses to questions arising from quarterly reports provide the bare minimum information, leaving proper oversight completely hamstrung.

The lack of detail on business process outsourcing (BPO) and the Johannesburg Broadband Network (JBN) are prime examples.

There is a huge gap in information about what the JBN will do and how it will be funded, which creates potential for corruption and mismanagement.

Despite numerous DA requests, members of the board of the Johannesburg Market have yet to address the Economic Development Committee and answer questions.

Score: 4/10

 

MMC for Housing – Cllr Dan Bovu

Housing MMC Dan Bovu pays lip service to critical questions.

His responses regarding the controversial 96/97 housing list are totally unsatisfactory; claiming that 5% of applicants will be housed, yet subsequent reports have contradicted him, noting that not a single house had been allocated.

The department has failed to meet its own targets, and according to the latest quarterly report, met only four out of its 14 Key Performance Indicators.

Very little effort is made to tackle corruption and improve monitoring of service providers contracted to provide housing. Overall, project management leaves much to be desired.

As a result, contractors deliver poor quality housing or in some cases abandon building sites, leaving the city with virtually no value for money.

Score: 2/10

 

MMC for Public Safety – Cllr Sello Lemao

The buck for the failures of the Johannesburg Metro Police Department (JMPD) and EMS fire services stops with Cllr Lemao.

He has let down the people of Johannesburg, which has been rated one of the world’s most unsafe cities.

Complaints about corrupt JMPD officials are received daily, while traffic law enforcement appears to be limited to occasional after-hour road blocks and joint operations.

During the past year Public Safety Department has failed on many life-and-death service deliverables, such as the Joburg 10+ service, which remains ineffective in most wards.

There are major mechanical issues with EMS fire rescue fleets, with many fire stations ill-equipped and understaffed.

Firefighters are caught up in long-standing unresolved disputes with management, and morale is at an all-time low.

Score: 3/10

 

MMC for Transport – Cllr Christine Walters

Cllr Walters is one of the few well-performing MMCs and puts her colleagues to shame.

She lives up to her open-door policy, boasts a strong attendance record at meetings and is always willing to assist all councillors. Her written responses are timeous and thorough.

However, the story for the two transport entities in her portfolio, Metrobus and the Johannesburg Roads Agency (JRA), is the complete opposite. Management of both entities are reluctant to attend compulsory meetings and respond to questions unless Cllr Walters intervenes.

The JRA remains tarnished with allegations of corruption, supply chain manipulation and collusion. While motorists and commuters have to deal with potholes, broken traffic lights, and poor infrastructure, very little change seems to be in the offering.

Public transport remains a matter of concern. Metrobus struggles with a massive overdraft and low passenger usage, while staff recently went on strike over incorrect PAYE deductions.

Score: 6/10

 

MMC for Environment, Infrastructure and Service Delivery – Cllr Matshidiso Mfikoe

Arguably the portfolio which requires the strongest of personalities, proven leadership skills, and a track record of problem solving and negotiation – all of which are lacking in Cllr Mfikoe.

With the entities at the forefront of service delivery such as Pikitup, City Power and Joburg Water all part of this portfolio, the track records of these entities during the past years tell their own stories about Cllr Mfikoe’s poor performance.

Overall, this portfolio has underachieved on every one of its key performance indicators, evidenced by the regressing quality of service delivery and ever-growing maintenance backlog.

Score: 2/10

 

MMC for Development Planning – Cllr Ros Greeff

The potential for maladministration in Cllr Greeff’s department, which has a budget of hundreds of millions of rand, is incredibly high due to the lack of proper checks and balances.

The department is plagued by staff shortages and a lack of critical skills, and urgently requires a sense of professionalism.

Very few Key Performance Indicators were achieved and as such, the department has had to return R100 million in unspent funds which were destined for Mayor Tau’s “Corridors of Freedom” projects.

The questionable number of claim applications creates an environment for potential corruption with building inspectors.

Score: 3/10

 

MMC for Health and Social Development – Cllr Nonceba Molwele

Social assistance provided by the department is haphazard to say the least, and fails to build any solid foundation to empower those who need it most.

The social net it purports to provide has too many gaps to be effective in meeting the needs of residents.

Funding remains a critical shortcoming, but this requires political will and a commitment to the plight of the needy to fulfil.

This is echoed by Cllr Molwele’s reluctance to attend Section 79 committee meetings and her lackadaisical approach to oversight.

Score: 4/10

 

MMC for Community Development – Cllr Chris Vondo

The recent horrific murders and rape in Rhodes Park, Kensington highlighted the need for improved security in the City’s parks.

Cllr Vondo areas of responsibility include Joburg City Parks, the zoo, cemeteries, and open spaces, and these facilities remain poorly cleaned and maintained. In short Rhodes Park has become a poster of the department’s inability to provide residents with safe and relaxing recreation areas.

Score: 4/10

 

MMC for Corporate and Shared Services – Cllr Mally Mokoena

The departments are plagued by operational problems due to senior managers who do not take their work seriously and are places where political patronage appears to reign supreme.

In one instance a list of bursary recipients included relatives of an ANC councillor – these were only removed by officials after the DA vehemently opposed their inclusion.

Since then, the DA has been eagerly awaiting a report reflecting that the names had indeed been removed, but to date none has been forthcoming.

In general, the Department has failed to achieve many of their annual targets, and its budget was underspent – clear indications of a lack of skilled and competent professional staff to oversee project management and implementation.

Score: 5/10

 

Johannesburg requires dramatic intervention if the city is ever going to have acceptable levels of service delivery. It is clear that Mayor Tau and his MMCs are simply coasting along in the hope that people remain satisfied with a poor quality of life.

When one compares Johannesburg’s levels of service delivery, job creation initiatives, public safety plans, revenue collection and financial management with the DA-led City of Cape Town, it is abundantly clear that Johannesburg has a long way to go before it can call itself a world-class city.

During the past five years residents have seen for themselves how the gulf between Johannesburg and Cape Town has widened, and are ready to Vote DA in next year’s local government elections.

People know that where the DA governs, life is better

 

Media enquiries:

Cllr Vasco da Gama

DA Johannesburg Caucus Leader

082 957 8581

[Image source]

Pikitup Strike Shows Up Parks Tau’s Aloof Leadership

Illegal Pikitup Strike

The DA notes the end to the illegal strike by Pikitup employees, and that it’s not thanks to the efforts of Joburg Mayor Parks Tau, but Cooperative Governance MEC Jacob Mamabolo and his team.

According to media reports MEC Mamabolo has been locked in talks with SAMWU since Monday, while Mayor Tau made absolutely no effort to do so himself.

Tau remains aloof and inaccessible, uncommitted to the hard work needed to solve crises in the City.

Clearly Mayor Tau is nothing but a lame duck Mayor if an MEC needs to clean up the mess in Johannesburg.

Johannesburg Residents Rallying Behind DA

While the DA appreciates workers’ concerns and MEC Mamabolo’s willingness to address them, we remain concerned that no action will be taken against Pikitup MD, Amanda Nair, despite being faced with numerous allegations of poor management, maladministration, nepotism and misconduct.

Why does Parks Tau keep Nair so protected when Pikitup is in disarray and facing major allegations?

What Johannesburg residents have learnt from this experience is that Parks Tau’s only function is publicity while the provincial ANC and their union allies pull the strings.

The DA has been steadfast in our convictions that mayors and their executives should be accountable to the people who voted for them, should directly engage issues, and should be accessible to the public.

Local Government Elections 2016

The people of Johannesburg are increasingly rallying behind the DA, because they know, where the DA governs, life is indeed better.

Momentum is building behind the DA toward Election 2016, where we are set on winning the City of Johannesburg.

 

Media enquiries:

Cllr Vasco da Gama

DA Johannesburg Caucus Leader

082 957 8581

[Image source]