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Full Council Meeting report
Harare Residents'
Trust (HRT)
June 13, 2011
Executive
Summary
The Harare Residents'
Trust (HRT) is providing residents of Harare with an update of what
happened during a Full Council Meeting held at Town House on Tuesday
31 May 2011. The Full Council meeting is held once every month,
tentatively on the last Thursday of each month starting at 4.30pm,
in terms of the Urban Councils' Act (Chapter 29:15). This
meeting is chaired by the Mayor, and is usually flanked by the Deputy
Mayor, the Town Clerk and the Chamber Secretary. The Full Council
is meant for all 46 elected councillors of Harare, representing
the 46 wards in Harare, the 11 appointed councillors, who represent
the Minister of Local Government, Rural and Urban Development, and
heads of council's departments, who are expected to be in
attendance to respond to issues raised by the councillors pertaining
to their departments. On this particular council meeting, 32 elected
councillors were in attendance. Residents need to know that six
councillors have been dismissed by the Minister of Local Government
while two have died. This update will highlight the key decisions
made, policies being pursued and other such pertinent developments.
The residents in Harare have to be aware of the work of their elected
representatives, what they say in council committee meetings and
what decisions they have made as a full council, in the name of
the residents. It is the responsibility of every elected councillor
to provide feedback to the electorate whenever they have held meetings
at councils. Citizens have a duty to participate in the affairs
of their council if they hope to have excellent services. The City
of Harare has the following Standing Committees, which help the
council discharge its mandate;
- Finance and
Development,
- Environmental
Management Committee,
- Human Resources
and General Purposes Committee,
- Procurement
Board,
- Business
Committee
- Education,
Health, Housing and Community Services and Licensing Committee,
- Information
and Publicity Committee and
- Audit Committee,
These committees
have different mandates which have all got to do with serving the
interests of Harare residents. In our next update, the HRT will
provide the basic mandates of each committee. This new service by
the organisation is meant to enhance accountability by the City
of Harare, and in the process build institutions of governance that
respond to the real expressed issues affecting the community. In
our updates, we will highlight the major decisions, policies and
other such pertinent issues. Below is the update of major highlights;
Human Resources and General Purpose Committee
City of Harare
councillors on Tuesday evening lambasted the Town Clerk and Chamber
Secretary for their failure to present the manpower audit report,
the council's organogram and the salary schedules of senior
management, demanding that Harare Mayor Muchadeyi Masunda stops
coming to the defence of senior management whenever issues arose
during council meetings. They said that employees of public entities
such as council must be open to public scrutiny. The mayor highlighted
that these documents will be availed soon to the council. The councilors
raised concern about the workers who had resigned during the chaotic
year 2008. They are angered by the fact that the workers were allowed
to return and get hefty salaries which they said has demotivated
the work force that remained behind. The councilors highlighted
that the directors of various council departments or works are supposed
to be questioned on what they have done for the City ever since
2008. The city councillors have been demanding to see the manpower
audit report since 2010 without success. They noted that it is time
for council to chop off dead wood that is within council and draining
away financial resources for nothing. They have also demanded to
have sight of the salary structure of senior management, all without
success. Yet again they have demanded to see the organogram of the
City of Harare which specifies the command structure of council,
again without success. The Harare Residents' Trust (HRT) commends
the efforts by the councillors to have unfettered access to all
information pertaining to the running of the City of Harare as this
promotes accountability, transparency and effectiveness among senior
management.
Councillors Demand Explanation on Recalled Employees
In a case of
unbridled corruption in the Human Resources Department, bordering
on partisan and incompetence, the Human Resources Director of the
City of Harare Mr Kainos Chimombe reportedly wrote a letter authorizing
the return to work of around 500 city employees who emigrated to
neghbouring countries for greener pastures at the height of the
economic and social hardships in 2008. The director is said to have
gone further to authorize their payment of salaries backdated to
the time they left, and even restored them to their positions, heightening
the tensions among city employees who feel badly let down by the
management. According to disgruntled councillors, the majority of
the returning employees were given salaries around US$20 000 from
the city coffers, as back pay, while the city is struggling to pay
its staff on time. Treasury reports that it is broke.
It was given
this background that this matter featured prominently during deliberations
of the full council, with councillors demanding to know what exactly
was happening in the City, where directors were making policy decisions
without involving the policymakers. This and other issues are set
for further deliberations when the Human Resources Committee will
meet on the 14th of June 2011 at Town House. The manpower audit
report is set to be given to the councillors, as well as the organogram
and salary structures of the senior management.
Finance
and Development Committee
The councilors
from the committee said that the City of Harare is contributing
much to the road maintenance. Councillors questioned the rationale
of the City of Harare paying 50% for road maintenance while central
government which collects most of the revenue for vehicle licensing
does nothing about the urban roads. The councillors urged the Finance
and Development committee to intensify efforts to raise the much
needed revenue for service delivery. The councilors felt that the
Minister of Local Government Rural and Urban Development must be
the one at the forefront of ensuring that local authorities get
revenue from Central Government in support grants. The Town Clerk
said they would engage the Ministry of Finance and Development about
it. He said they were given US$2million under ZINARA. The councillors
took turns to castigate the performance of the Finance and Development
Committee accusing the committee of incompetence and lacking the
seriousness expected of a committee that should be raising funds
for the city.
Prices
of Residents' Stands
The councilors
raised concern about the faulty prizes of council stands in Harare
by the City of Harare. It was pointed out that it does not make
much sense if stands in high density areas such as Warren Park cost
$10.00 per square meter while those in low density areas like Gunhill
cost $7.00 per square meter. Councilors said that the Finance and
Development committee is exhibiting lack of capacity to prize stands.
They said that the prizes for land were exorbitant and unrealistic.
Councilors defended their role saying they were elected to safeguard
the interests of residents, and not to punish them. The councillors
said the cost of stands land should be reduced to address problems
of overcrowding in council flats and rented houses which is a characteristic
of many high density suburbs. It was also highlighted that those
who buy council stands are faced with an additional huge cost of
servicing the stands as they are not properly serviced. They also
highlighted that most available stands were being bought by business
people who will build houses or keep the land idle for speculative
purposes. If they decide to build houses, they will resell to the
poor at high costs, hindering access to decent accommodation by
the majority in Harare, who earn little every month.
Environmental
Management Committee
The councilors
expressed concern with the lack of resources for services delivery
to take place. The councilors from the committee led by Chairman
Herbert Gomba (Ward 27) highlighted that the lack of these much
needed resources means that the committee cannot do its work well.
It was noted that there is need for more trucks for refuse collection
to avoid the inconsistency that the residents of Harare have experienced
in the suburbs. It was noted that if there are no resources and
if they continue to be limited as they are, road repair and maintenance
is not possible. It was suggested by councilors that to avoid accidents
at major intersections in the City there is need to have solar powered
robots. Delta Beverage was recognized much for the donation of bins
which were located in suburbs accordingly and they are now being
used in the communities and they are going to receive some donation
of 300 brooms from.
There was particular
attention to the intersection of Bishop Gaul and Samora Machel Avenues
with the area Councillor saying the area had become a black spot
requiring urgent council action. It was recommended and adopted
that the matter be taken to the committee. However the prevailing
idea was that the traffic lights be replaced with a roundabout,
which rarely causes traffic accidents.
Visit the Harare
Residents' Trust fact
sheet
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