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Traffic Signal Vandalism Costs City R37 Million, In Just Two Months


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Traffic Signal Vandalism Costs City R37 Million, In Just Two Months

3rd February 2022

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/ MEDIA STATEMENT / The content on this page is not written by Polity.org.za, but is supplied by third parties. This content does not constitute news reporting by Polity.org.za.

On Tuesday, the 1st of February 2022, my office embarked on an oversight visit to a Joburg Roads Agency repair assignment of at least two of the 120 traffic signals that were damaged between December 2021 and January this year.

In December, 93 traffic signals were damaged either as a result of cable theft or after being driven into by motorists. That number dropped to 27 in January.

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Repairing these traffic signals will cost the City R37 million, in just two months.

Depending on the size of the intersection, it costs between R300 000 and R400 000 to repair a traffic signal after it has been damaged. More often than not, the Joburg Roads Agency has to undertake a complete rebuild of an affected signal.

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This is because traffic signals are completely uprooted or, in some cases, cut off at the bottom using an angle-grinder or any other destructive tool in order to access copper cables, Uninterruptible Power Supply (UPS) units, and Sim Cards, amongst others.

The Sim Cards installed in the traffic signals use GPS technology to communicate information to the JRA, allowing the roads agency to keep track of its signals and perform the required maintenance during downtime.

In addition to the cost of repairs, the City incurs a heavier financial burden related to increased insurance premiums. This means the City’s roads agency JRA has less money to undertake crucial maintenance work.

Armed with this information, I then convened an urgent meeting, yesterday the 2nd of February, with the JRA CEO, Mr Selemo Republic Monakedi, and senior JRA officials, to determine what immediate remedies the agency would implement to curb the nonchalant destruction and vandalism of the City’s infrastructure.

The JRA CEO undertook to push for a board resolution to resuscitate the agency’s Infrastructure Protection Unit and to adequately capacitate it, if so deemed. Feedback on this matter will be provided to me in our bi-weekly meeting with the roads agency.

In the meantime, I call on law enforcement to step up efforts to monitor the City’s valuable infrastructure as well as to properly investigate and prosecute people arrested for the destruction of the City’s assets.

Without this stringent action, our efforts will be futile as we would continue to watch our City descend into further lawlessness. We will not let this happen.

 

Issued by Cllr Funzela Ngobeni, MMC: Transport for The City of Johannesburg

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