Wednesday, June 17, 2009

Video of the recent fire fiasco in Pietermaritzburg

Questions over metro status

17 Jun 2009


THE municipal manager and the city council must be living in a world of their own believing that this city is worthy of, or can attain, metropolitan status. Recent frightening events indicate that its managers are absolutely incapable of running an ordinary city, let alone a metropolitan one.

The latest fiasco at the Colonial Building with inadequate firefighting vehicles and equipment confirms that it cannot protect its citizens properly. One wonders what the end result would have been if it had been a fire in a high building such as Park Avenue with many people trapped by flames and smoke attended by such an inefficient fire and rescue services department?

The short-staffed and equally inefficient traffic department is another essential service department but it is receiving regular complaints from the community about poor traffic management and assistance with the free flow of traffic in the city: so much so that the provincial road traffic inspectorate has to step in and set up roadblocks to deal with inebriated motorists.

Add to these the refuse removal, electricity and water departments with their problems and we have an abominable situation far removed from a city to be proud of, or a capital city worth boasting about. Metropolitan status? You’ve got to be kidding.

JAMES MILLS
Pelha, Pietermaritzburg

Fire damage

Comment by the Editor, The Witness, 16 june 2009 on the devastating fire and the inability of the ill equipped fire department to save a colonial icon in Pietermaritzburg.


IT is ironic that only two weeks after The Witness published as its leading story an exposé of the inadequacies of the city’s firefighting capacity, Pietermaritzburg should have been afflicted by the worst fire disaster since its city hall burnt to the ground in 1898. It is doubly ironic that it could well have been restoration work on the Colonial Building, which has been disgracefully neglected for many years, which quite literally, sparked the inferno. A further irony is that on the very day of the fire, a correspondent to this paper pointed out that the Lion’s River Fire Protection Association is better equipped than Msunduzi.

In terms of the loss of architectural heritage, Friday’s fire is in the same tragic league as that of 1898. Fortunately, not being a “working” building, there was no equivalent loss of priceless records as was the case when the first city hall burnt down. But what if it had been the current city hall? Or Natalia? Or the deeds office? Or the master’s office? Mercifully, too, the fire broke out on a calm and windless day. What might have happened had there been a hot, howling berg wind blowing is a prospect too ghastly to contemplate. Everything downwind ­— the old Presbyterian Church across the road, the master’s office, the Tatham Art Gallery, the complex of parliamentary buildings, perhaps even the Natal Museum and the Imperial Hotel — could have been consumed in an appalling and unstoppable fire storm which would have torn the very heart out of the city.

Mayor Zanele Hlatshwayo declares herself “deeply disturbed”. Two weeks ago the city fathers declared that they were unaware of the parlous state of our fighfighting capacity. They certainly know now. One hopes that disturbance at the highest levels will immediately translate into vigorous action further down the chain of command. The obvious shortcomings in our ability to fight fires must be rectified with all possible speed — lack of pressure in the fire hydrants, leaky hoses, defective fire engines, uncertain command arrangements in a time of crisis — to ensure that nothing similar can take place and the damage of future fires can be mitigated.

Whether the Colonial Building can ever be restored to its former glory remains to be seen. Let us hope it can, although Pietermaritzburg in 2009 does not contain anything like the pool of building and masonry skills that it had in 1898. The least that can be done, however, is to fix that which can be fixed.

Sunday, June 14, 2009

Fire-fighting fiasco


THE Msunduzi Municipality fire-fighters were unable to quell flames that gutted the Colonial Building in Church Street yesterday because their equipment was below standard.

Flaming Shame


Flaming shame
A HUGE blaze gutted Pietermaritzburg’s iconic 109-year-old Colonial Building in the CBD yesterday.
http://www.witness.co.za/index.php?showcontent&global[_id]=23987

Tuesday, June 9, 2009

Exco hear of fire engine saga through ‘Witness’

MEMBERS of the Executive Committee (Exco) at Msunduzi Municipality have lambasted fire department officials and management for bringing the council into disrepute by failing to upgrade the firefighting fleet.
http://www.witness.co.za/index.php?showcontent&global[_id]=23786

Exco has certainly shown us how pathetic they are. Zanele Hlatshwyo, the sprendthrift mayor is too busy waisting ratepayers money on irrelevant projects like imbizos and youth day concerts. How is it possible that EXCO does not know what is going on in the Council they are suppose to manage. It is time the ANC sort out these pathetic, uneducated rate wasters.

Monday, June 8, 2009

Take off those blinkers

AS “out of towners”, we have spent a good few hours wandering round the streets of the capital of KwaZulu-Natal waiting for our car to be repaired.

We have been apalled by the litter on the streets and in the gutters, and that so many manhole covers are missing. Even in the city centre, broken concrete litter bins are left lying on the pavement.

When will we see the city being cleaned up and maintained? We’re so tired of inertia. How about some integrity?

There are many men who congregate at the corner of Greyling and Boshoff streets looking for work. Perhaps they would be prepared to clean the streets if given a decent wage.

We were warned not to walk anywhere near the Selgro Centre as it is dangerous. Having driven past that area, we have never noticed a police presence there.

Come Ms Mayor, you and your councillors need to stop walking around with blinkers on, get off the gravy train and start giving the citizens of Pietermaritzburg some service.

After all, the buck has to stop somewhere, why not with you?

SHEILA MILLER Nottingham Road

Monday, June 1, 2009

Msunduzi fire engine crisis

The Witness: "Msunduzi fire engine crisis"
IF YOU thought the Msunduzi Municipality fire department would rescue your family in case of fire, or save your property from being gutted by fire, think again.

Most of the fire engines in the municipality are more than 20 years old and are beset by faults, which the fire-fighters have alleged the municipality is not taking seriously.

The fire-fighters, who spoke to The Witness on condition of anonymity, alleged that of about 11 fire engines, only two are in good working condition.