Black uselessness: This app was supposed to help fix potholes in South Africa – but officials are still learni ng how to use it
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This is the story of something that the Rhodesians kicked off in desperation after the Portuguese had collapsed. Its effect lasted decades and huge numbers of Blacks died and it had massive effects on a Black nation. In this video I also discuss many deeper things including my discussions with President PW Botha.
[So now we have apps to help the worthless Blacks to fix the potholes … but even that doesn't really help. Welcome to Africa. Note: At the source link below, if you click on it and go there, you'll see, per province, how much money they are spending on fixing potholes and what they are managing to fix. I had a family member who invented his own little machine to fix potholes. Fixing potholes would be easy as pie for Whites if we had to do it. These Blacks are so freaking worthless. Jan]
The National Department of Transport (DoT) launched Operation Vala Zonke – a National Public Pothole Reporting App – last year to help identify and locate potholes across the country that need to be fixed. However, officials still don’t know how to use the system, and training is still underway.
Additionally, while the DoT has spent in excess of R3.65 billion over the last six months repairing the country’s crumbling roads, Transport Minister Sindisiwe Chikunga showed that the department has grossly underspent its budget for road repairs.
These issues were highlighted by the Minister of Transport in written replies to recent parliamentary Q&As.
The Minister and Members of the Executive Council (MINMEC) adopted the intervention plan to fight against potholes and general road refurbishment and improvement that triggered the launch of Operation Vala Zonke in August 2022.
Chikunga noted that the SANRAL Transport Integrated Information System (ITIS) was availed to all Road Authorities for the provision of Centralised Repository and Asset Management Services with a Mobile Pothole Reporting App that enables the public to report potholes wherever they are encountered.
She added that the plan envisaged to have a central platform, using an automated system to (a) allocate a complaint, (b) track progress, (c) identify and resolve delays, (d) intervene (provide support) to address service delivery and (e) provide feedback to the public using the app.
According to the minister, since the launch of the app, there have been 138,928 downloads, with roughly 44,949 potholes reported as per the National System as of 7 November 2023.
Chikunga further noted that Gauteng tops the table with a total of 20,220 potholes reported, followed by Free State with 7,067, whereas Northern Cape reported 464 at the bottom of the table.
However, she added that little has been done using the App because municipal and department officials aren’t trained to use the new system. This is over a year after the app was launched.
“The biggest challenge is that most pothole complaints cannot be correctly and automatically allocated using the system.
“It is on this basis that SANRAL is currently training officials from Provinces and Municipalities on the usage of the App under the theme “Train the Trainer,” said Chikunga.
Underspending
Despite the issues of the App, the DoT has indeed spent billions on fixing roads, but it has grossly underspent its budget, meaning little is being done to fix and maintain road infrastructure, including fixing potholes.
In a separate parliamentary Q&A, Chikunga noted that her department has spent in excess of R3.65 billion over the last six months ending September, repairing the country’s crumbling roads.
She added the number of potholes on roads that fell under her administration repaired in each province in the past six months amounted to 1,291,442m², the bulk of the patching happening in KwaZulu-Natal.
Despite billions being spent, however, the R3.65 billion is only roughly 29% of the total Provincial Roads Maintenance Grant of R12,665,440,753.
Per province, the six-month expenditure on road repairs and the area of roads that were restored were:
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