NO ANSWER: JP Smith. Pics: Jason Boud/African News Agency/ANA NO ANSWER: JP Smith. Pics: Jason Boud/African News Agency/ANA
With Day Zero being moved from April 22 to 12, the City's plan is incomplete.
We spoke to JP Smith, mayco member for safety, security and social services, on the preparations for Day Zero.
No answer.
No answer.
The collection of water will only be regulated in order to prevent any one person from collecting far above their daily water allocation. In order to keep the water distribution sites operating as efficiently as possible, only light regulation will be put in place to monitor how much water each person is collecting.
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No one will be turned away from the water collection points. All persons living in Cape Town will be entitled to collect water at these points.
The water distribution points are one of the means through which water will be distributed to the public and is just one layer of the strategy. For example, the City is engaging with major food retailers to assess whether they can act as additional water distribution points to increase the number of sites where people can collect water easily. The City is also planning to use water tankers to deliver water to key institutions such as old age homes and homeless shelters.
No answer.
The City has done an enormous amount of work to look at all of the requirements for a disaster of this scale should it occur. The assessment of the proposed sites, as one of the means of water distribution, has been finalised and further details will be made available in due course.
The deployment of security policing role players will depend on the risk profile of the relevant water collection points. The services included in the deployment will be SAPS, Metro police, traffic and law enforcement.
SAPS and SANDF have confirmed they will assist the City with securing these water collection points.
No answer.
No answer.
@JasonFelix