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Mayor Masunda has lost touch with reality
Harare Residents
Trust (HRT)
August 16, 2010
The Harare Residents'
Trust (HRT) has been monitoring media reports emanating from Town
House with keen interest and has become seriously disturbed by reckless
utterances by Harare Mayor Muchadeyi Masunda.
Lately he was
quoted in the Herald (12 August 2010) insisting that the solution
to the crisis affecting service delivery in Harare had more to do
with huge debts owed by commercial enterprises (US$78, 476 million),
residents (US$36, 245 million), Government (US$12, 207 445), Norton
(US$603 593), Ruwa (US$3 554) and Epworth owes the city less than
US$300, totalling US$132 million.
His remarks
come in the wake of government's directives to local authorities
to comply with the 70-30 percent ratio of service delivery and salaries.
Masunda believes this is unachievable because this is not a 'normal
situation'. The Mayor is lost and is being unrealistic. Junior
city employees are wallowing in poverty as a result of unexplained
delays in paying out their salaries, every month. Yet senior managers
get paid on time.
Central Government
has a right to intervene where the rights of ordinary citizens are
trampled by elitists masquerading as professionals, who lack a connection
with the harsh economic, social and political environment. Residents
have a legitimate right to withhold their rates and rentals to the
City of Harare if it continues to focus on enriching its underperforming
senior managers. Service delivery has slightly improved since the
coming in of this council in March 2008, but it is far from satisfactory.
Self-praise
by Mayor Masunda on water delivery is deceptive and hollow. Residents
are committed to paying their rates and rentals to the council,
but expect quality services that relate to the charges.
The HRT reiterates
its demand for transparency and accountability by service providers
and elected representatives, which the City of Harare has failed
to achieve in its handling of residents' issues.
The City of
Harare went against the residents who objected to the current 2010
City Budget when the council adopted the budget on 30 November 2009.
When the city advertised the proposed budget on 4 December 2009,
as provided for in the Urban
Councils' Act, residents raised more than the mandatory
30 objections and thousands others signed petitions objecting to
the budget proposals. What should have happened in terms of the
Urban Councils' Act (Chapter 29:15), is that the city should
have come up with revised figures lower than the objected rates.
Residents objected to the proposed budget not for the sake of objecting
but because they could not and still cannot afford the current rates
and rentals. Still the City of Harare, with the backing of a Ministerial
Directive, maintained the rates at 2009 levels, this despite evidence
that the majority of the residents were unable to pay the huge bills.
The Mayor's
responses to the queries on the huge salaries being paid out to
senior managers have demonstrated beyond doubt that putting unelected
officials at the helm of strategic institutions has its own weaknesses.
Citizens have not benefited from Masunda's expertise as a
businessman. Since coming in as the ceremonial Mayor, Masunda has
not sided with the electorate as the chief policymaker at Town House.
Instead he has constantly sided with some incompetent heads of departments
who have been previously castigated by the elected councillors as
insubordinate and bent on undermining their policymaking roles,
power and authority.
The Deputy Minister
of Local Government, Rural and Urban Development Sessel Zvidzai's
directive that 70 percent of city revenue should go towards service
delivery is justified, achievable and reasonable in the eyes of
the residents of Harare. Mayor Masunda should explain the 9 500
workers in the City, department by department, and specify what
percentage each grade is getting of the total money spent on workers'
salaries, every month.
The resistance
by the Mayor to comply with the Deputy Minister's directive,
which is a Central Government directive, clearly demonstrates beyond
doubt that Masunda is becoming too big for his boots. His reasoning
is driven by the desire to amass wealth at the expense of the ratepayer.
City heads of departments are in the employ of the public and there
is nothing confidential about their salaries and perks. The residents
of Harare have a legitimate right to know how much the directors
earn from the ratepayers' money.
If the Mayor
wants to be a legal consultant, as he has on several occasions tried
to be, he should resign forthwith and leave that position to competent
people who want to serve the interests of the ordinary people.
Given the above
issues, the HRT makes the following recommendations to improve service
delivery and cash-flows to the City of Harare;
- The Urban
Councils' Act (Chapter 29:15) should be amended to ensure
that local authorities are led by elected mayors, who derive their
mandate from the residents, and not from their political parties.
- Mayor Masunda
should desist from making statements that undermine the concerns
of residents with regards to transparency, accountability and
governance at Town House.
- The City
of Harare should make the necessary adjustments to its huge salary
bill, in line with the Government's directive.
- Residents
of Harare, industry and business should pay justified rates and
rentals and not allow themselves to be held at ransom by Mayor
Masunda and his colleagues in the top management of the City of
Harare who take home 70 percent of the city's revenue in
salaries and allowances against service provision of 30 percent.
- The mayor
should drop his attitude and listen to the voice of stakeholders
who have repeatedly expressed concern at the city's rates
and services.
Failure by the
City of Harare to heed this call, the HRT will be left with no option
but to mobilise residents against undue exploitation by an elite
class managing public resources at Town House. One of the options
is for residents, business and industry to delay payment by two
weeks every month until service delivery really improves.
For details
and comments please contact the Harare Residents' Trust (HRT)
on +263 912 869 294, +263 733 296 806 or email us on hretrust@yahoo.com
/ hretrust79@gmail.com
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