Archive for December, 2021

End of the year… end of your tether

December 14, 2021

Psychologist’s advice for coping with festive triggers

If you’re feeling overwhelmed by the pressures and emotions that the festive season bring, you can get help at SADAG’s emergency help line:
0800 567 567

The festive season, particularly during another Covid-19 wave, can present triggering situations for many people. A counselling psychologist offers advice for building tolerance and coping mechanisms for the interpersonal conflicts, distressing or uncomfortable situations that may arise at this time of year, and which could be compounded by the pandemic.

“Many of us may find it difficult to regulate our emotions when faced with distressing situations, such as family tensions, financial pressures, dealing with loss or worry about the future,” explains Zain Julies, a psychologist practising at Netcare Akeso Milnerton.

“Looking for ways to deal with distress, we may find ourselves reaching for the old familiar ‘crutches’ such as alcohol, food, over-the-counter medication, reliance on social media and technology, or unhealthy relationships with certain people, when facing uncomfortable situations,” she says.

“At this time of year, which is so often associated with indulgence, it may be easier to fall into unhealthy patterns with short-term fixes. It can be helpful to remember that such choices often don’t make us feel better in the long run and can frequently make things worse than before.”

Don’t waste precious time on things beyond your control

Zain suggests taking a moment to reflect on ‘What is in my control, and what is not?’ in times of stress, to provide a reality check on what falls within one’s circle of influence.

“The things that I have direct control over include my thoughts, my words, my actions, my decisions, my attitude and my mood. Secondly, there are aspects of life that we may be able to influence, such as other people’s actions, where we work, and who follows us on social media,” she adds. 

“Thirdly, there are things we may be concerned about that are simply not within our control, such as lockdown restrictions, the weather, media, a sports match, traffic, or our past decisions, choices and behaviour.

“While we may not be able to control these factors, what we can control is our reactions to them. Accept that worrying will not change the situation and will not make you feel any better. Instead, one can choose to refocus on being mindfully present, making the most of this time of year and our loved ones.”

Building tolerance and coping skills

Zain points out there are techniques one can learn to manage unpleasant situations without losing control and acting destructively. “One of the approaches that has proved effective for many people in dealing with interpersonal conflict is dialectical behaviour therapy [DBT], which is an evidence based form of therapy that can also be helpful in treating personality disorders and certain mental health conditions,” she says.

A particularly useful tool within the DBT framework is distress tolerance, defined as ‘the ability to tolerate distress without acting on it’. “These skills empower you to survive an immediate crisis without making it worse, as it can be tempting to react impulsively in times when we may be overwhelmed by emotions,” Zain says.

Five things you can see, and a partridge in a pear tree

“Distress tolerance equips the person with the skills to temporarily distract and distance themselves from emotional pain, creating a pause that enables them to act more effectively in the situation.”

“One of the easiest ways to deal with distressing situations or emotions is to focus on your five senses to ground yourself. If you are feeling overwhelmed, find five things that you can see, four things that you can hear, three things that you can touch, two things that you can smell and one thing that you can taste. This simple exercise in mindfulness can help prevent you doing or saying something you may later regret.”

Another skill that Julies suggests may prove helpful in times of frustration or when festive cheer wears thin is known as the STOP skill, which stands for:

  • S is for Stop, don’t say or do anything.
  • T is for Take a step back.
  • O is for Observe and evaluate what is happening, both inside yourself and in the external situation.
  • P is for Proceed mindfully.

“This puts a pause between your feelings and the urge to do anything. In addition to these skills, self-care is important to get through the year-end break, whatever challenges it may present,” Julies says.

  • Get enough good quality sleep
  • Eat a well-balanced diet
  • Exercise on a regular basis
  • Take brief rest periods during the day to relax
  • Take vacations away from home and work
  • Engage in pleasurable or fun activities such as yoga, prayer, meditation, or progressive muscle relaxation
  • Avoid overindulging in caffeine and alcohol

“Take care of yourself and your mental health all year round. For information about mental health issues and services, accessing care, and for professional help in a mental health crisis, Netcare Akeso can be reached on 0861 435 787 for emergency support. Psychiatrist consultations can be made through Netcare appointmed™, online at www.netcareappointmed.co.za or by calling 0861 555 565.

MORE WAYS TO GET HELP IF YOU’RE DISTRESSED OR DEPRESSED

The South African Depression and Anxiety Group has excellent resources – helpful articles as well as numbers to call for emergency counselling (someone to talk to).

Visit their website here: SADAG or call 0800 567 567

If you don’t feel like speaking, you can get live counselling online HERE (you can type instead of talk).

Shot in the arm for Makana this Festive Season

December 11, 2021
Members of the Department of Health’s Makana Subdistrict team with the VW Vaxxers (front row from left) Mnikezeli Fatman; Khanya Soci, Nontozinhle Hewana, Colleen Maqoko; (back row from left) Hayley Davids, Nonkqubela Monakali, Elize Williams and Nomawethu Ndukwana. Behind Ndukwana is Subdistrict head, Mohamed Docrat. Note: masks removed briefly for the photograph only. Photo: Steven Lang

It’s going to be easier than ever for residents and holidaymakers in and around Port Alfred and Makhanda to get up to date with their Covid vaccinations this festive season. The Department of Health’s VW Vaxxers are about to hit town at pop-up sites from Bushmans to Bathurst, Alexandria to Alicedale as they push this corner of the Eastern Cape closer to the 70% vaccination rate scientists say we need to get the better of the pandemic.

Four additional vaccinators and a data capturer have been brought in to boost the Department of Health’s Makana Subdistrict vaccinators over the next three months. The team will be setting up and operating pop-up vaccination sites throughout this period. Three VW Vaxxers will be based in Makana Municipality and one will work with a team in Ndlambe.

“We want to make it as easy as possible for people to get vaccinated,” said Subdistrict head of health, Mohamed Docrat. “The plan is to go to where people are, so they don’t have to interrupt what they’re doing, or make complicated plans to get to a vaccination site.”

Shopping centres, taverns and other popular spots are where you can expect to see them and while it’s helpful if you pre-register on the EVDS (electronic vaccination data system), you can also register at the pop-up.

While anyone eligible to be vaccinated is welcome at the pop-up sites (as well as the permanent sites), the team will particularly be targeting younger people. Latest available vaccination stats for the area show that the lowest vaccination rate is among the 18-34 age group. Just over half of 23 874 people targeted in that age group are fully vaccinated.

In order to stabilize infections and serious illness, the national Department of Health is aiming for a 70% vaccination rate. In September 2021, Deputy President David Mabuza said the country was on track to vaccinate 70% of South Africans before the end of the year. However, the covidvaxlive vaccination tracker reports that on 8 December 2021, 25.46% of the country’s population is fully vaccinated.

The Makana municipal area has somewhat bucked the national trend.

Vaccination targets refer to 70% of the population within an age group. For Makana, the 50-59 and 60-plus age groups reflect a 105% fully vaccinated population – an anomaly caused partly by the fact that vaccinations are recorded according to where a vaccine comes from. In other words, if a team from Makana conducts a community outreach campaign in Alexandria using vaccines from the Settlers Hospital supply, the vaccinations will be recorded for Makana.

The 34-49 age groups reflects a respectable 84% fully vaccinated rate in Makana.

The 18-34 group is at 54% and so it’s this group that will be the main focus of the campaign.

Meanwhile, while many are yet to receive their first shot, the South African Health Products Authority (SAHPRA) on Wednesday approved the distribution of the third dose of the Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine for adults.  This means all adults in South Africa are now eligible for a booster shot six months after the second dose. SAPHRA says Pfizer booster shots will available from January 2022.

According to Pfizer and BioNtech, three doses of the Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 Vaccine neutralise the Omicron variant (B.1.1.529 lineage). Omicron is a fast-spreading variant first identified by South African scientists.

Farmers clear Bedford road landslide

December 8, 2021

By Sue Maclennan

Farmers Thinus and *Nelma Jurgens cleared a landslide from Hell’s Poort pass with their front-end-loader just before sunset on Tuesday 7 December. The mountain of mud and rocks slid down the hill above the pass and spread across half the road on Sunday 5 December during a torrential downpour.

A frantic message circulated on local WhatsApp groups from a driver who had been driving from Bedford to Makhanda when they suddenly found themselves unable to go any further.

No one was harmed and the driver and vehicle eventually got through, but the road has remained dangerous.

“We just had to do something as we were very close to a huge accident with a truck this morning,” said Nelma.

Late yesterday afternoon, Makana Traffic Officer Solomzi Jacobs kept watch while Jurgens drove his front-end-loader on to the narrow pass and shoved the mud off the road.

The mudslide was one of several incidents on Sunday when 50mm rain torrented down in just over 35 minutes in and around Makhanda.

DispatchLive reported on disaster in and around the city, with CBD businesses flooded as masses of litter washing down the town’s streams and gutters plugged stormwater drains and toppled trees blocked roads. Undertaker Ernie Cassels came to the rescue with his TLB as the flood threatened to destroy homes at Sun City informal settlement.

* Name corrected from Thelma to Nelma (sorry!)

Farmer Thinus Jurgens, with his front-end-loader, and Makana Traffic’s Solomzi Jacobs teamed up to clear a mudslide off the Hell’s Poort Pass on the Bedford Road. Photo: Thelma Jurgens

NOW READ: Farmers celebrate the rain – but the drought’s not over yet

Relief as rain gets rivers flowing

December 8, 2021
Howieson’s Poort Dam on Monday 7 December. Howieson’s, which is much smaller than Settlers, Makhanda’s main western supply dam, is currently at 75%. Photo: Lynda Brotherton

Farmers celebrate rainfall – but the drought’s not over

By Sue Maclennan

With close to 60mm measured in and around Makhanda during the past three days, residents have asked whether the drought (and with it, some of the town’s water problems) may be over. Sunday’s downpour added to the rains of recent weeks made a difference – but the town is still short of water.

A resident in the Oatlands area measured 49mm in 35 minutes during a torrential downpour on Sunday 5 December and another 7.5mm Monday, bringing the total not far from 60mm.

DispatchLive reported on disaster in and around the city, with CBD businesses flooded as masses of litter washing down the town’s streams and gutters plugged stormwater drains and toppled trees blocked roads. Undertaker Ernie Cassels came to the rescue as the flood threatened to destroy homes at Sun City informal settlement.

The dams used to supply Makhanda west – Settlers and the smaller Howisonspoort dams – have been depleted by drought. They rely on rain falling in their catchment to fill via two rivers – the Kariega and the Palmiet rivers.

SmilingSouth asked farmers in those catchment areas what effect the recent rains have had on the water table.

“Fantastic rain!” said Richard Moss, of Mosslands west of Makhanda. “We had. 60mm in less than 60 minutes and the Kariega river is flowing for the first time since March 2015… which is beautiful.”

He said optimistically, “I think we can say the drought has broken, although we need a little more to fill the dams on the Kariega.”

Dale Howarth, Director of Pumba Game Reserve between Makhanda and Alicedale, was positive but more cautious.

“We got some lovely rain,” said Howarth. “Got 102mm for November and 90mm over the weekend, which got the water running. All our small stock dams are full and our two big lakes about half. The grass and veld is starting to recover nicely.”

But Howarth, who is the chairperson of the Central Albany Agricultural Association, said while good progress had been made, it was “a little bit early to say the drought is broken”.

The head of Rhodes University’s Geography Department Ian Meiklejohn also said it was too early to tell.

“We still have not reached average for this year,” Meiklejohn said.

“Also, the dams in the catchment area of Settlers’ Dam are not filling up. The rains were gorgeous, but limited (isolated). We need consistent rains for a while, before we can say the drought has been broken.

“In the meantime, I will simply celebrate the 40mm I measured in my garden for yesterday [Sunday] and 14mm for the day before.”

Dam levels on 7 December 2021, sourced by Makana Communication Officer Anele Mjekula, were Howieson’s Poort 75% and Settlers below 5%.

NOW READ
Update on Makhanda’s water supply – and why there’s another delay in completing the upgrade to the James Kleynhans Water Treatment Works.

A resident in the Oatlands area measured 49mm in just over 35 minutes during a downpour in Makhanda on Sunday 5 December 2021. Photo supplied
Howieson’s Poort Dam on 26 November 2021. Photo: Sue Maclennan
Settlers Dam on 26 November 2021. Photo: Sue Maclennan

When Makhanda can expect more water

December 8, 2021
Settlers Dam on 6 December 2021. Photo: Lynda Brotherton
Howieson’s Poort Dam on Monday 7 December. Photo: Lynda Brotherton

SmilingSouth update on Makhanda water supply – December 2021

Dam levels on 7 December 2021: Howieson’s Poort – 75%; Settlers – below 5% (courtesy Makana Communications Office)

Background

Makhanda’s main western supply dams, Settlers and Howieson’s Poort, have depleted during the past six years, dropping as low as 5% and 10% respectively. At those levels, water can’t be extracted. The much smaller Slaaikraal dams, Jamieson and Milner, which were used to supplement the main supply likewise emptied.

The much smaller Howieson’s Poort Dam fills up quickly but also empties quickly. At times it has filled up enough to supply the Waainek Water Treatment Works, but for the past year, for most of the time, all of Makhanda has been supplied by the much bigger James Kleynhans Water Treatment Works (JKWTW) east of Makhanda.

JKWTW is in turn supplied by Glen Melville Dam – a reservoir filled artificially (not by rain) by water released from the Orange River via the Fish River tunnel.

The average daily water demand in Makhanda is 18 megalitres a day and JKWTW produces just over half that amount, 10ML a day. In order to allow all the intermediate supply reservoirs to fill up and both high-and low-lying areas in the gravity fed system to receive water equitably, the entire supply is opened to consumers only every second day.

Old infrastructure (water supply pipes) results in a lot of water being lost through leaks. Makana Municipality appointed contractors to begin the process of replacing old asbestos pipes in certain areas. That work began earlier this year.

Previous reasons for delays in the upgrade

The James Kleynhans Water Treatment Works is being upgraded to double its production to 20 megalitres a day. An October 2019 Infrastructure Portfolio Committee report outlines the history and status at the time:

Bosch Projects was appointed in September 2013 as the service provider, starting with various scoping and technical reports. In March 2015, the project cost approved by DWS was R101 850 000. With Makana Municipality being placed under administration, Amatola Water was appointed as the implementing agent. Amatola in turn (re-) appointed Bosch in August 2015.

Because of DWS funding requirements, the project is split into four phases:

Phase 1 – Augmentation of JKWTW (R65.6 million)

Phase 2 – Augmentation of JKWTW (R102.7m)

Phase 3 – Upgrading/ refurbishment of existing pump station (R31.5m)

Phase 4 – Upgrading existing water treatment works (R31.5m)

The upgrade was delayed when the subcontractor appointed to complete Phase 1, Winwater, proved unequal to the task. Their contract was terminated and they left the site in June 2017. In line with Amatola’s procurement policy, the next in line was appointed to replace them and so Mamlambo Construction stepped in and began work in September 2017.

According to their contract, the work would be completed within 40 weeks – July 2018. But administrative delays pushed that date further back to March 2019.

But equipment had to be imported and Makana’s water crisis meant it wasn’t possible to shut down the plant for more than eight hours a week. And so the revised completion date became June 2019.

However, the Department of Trade and Industry cancelled the Phase 2 tender because, according to the report, “local content declaration was not allowed to be adjusted or amended post award”. So it was re-advertised in September  2019.

After it was awarded, the revised completion date was September 2021.

Parliament noticed

Earlier this year, Parliament’s Standing Committee on Public Accounts (SCOPA) grilled officials from the Department of Water and Sanitation, implementing agent Amatola Water and main contractor Bosch Civils on the process involved in awarding the upgrade contracts, and the delays and cost increases that resulted.

SCOPA questioned the fact that during the 10 years since the project was initiated, the budget had risen from an initial R68 million to R237.5 million. DWS explained that this was because the scope of the project had changed during that time.

What’s happening now?

Asked about the current status of the JKWTW upgrade, implementing agent Amatola Water said the new projected completion date is March 2022.

Nosisa Sogayise, Manager: Stakeholder and Communications, told SmilingSouth that Amatola Water had recently learnt that Mamlambo Construction was under new management. Responding to questions on Tuesday 7 December, Sogayise said Amatola had been giving the contractor assistance in its role as facilitator; however, this had not helped.

“The James Kleynhans project will not be finalized as per the planned date,” Sogayise said. “Amatola Water [has] learnt that the [company has] been sold and is currently under new management due to financial difficulties experienced by the contractor.

“The contractor had difficulties in procuring material for the project and to remunerate employees,” Sogayise said.

Makana referred queries about the project to Amatola Water, who referred specific questions about the contractor to Mamlambo Construction. That company in turn referred questions back to Makana. And so SmilingSouth has not yet been able to confirm the status of the contractor from Mamlambo themselves.

And what if it rains enough to fill the dams west of Makhanda?

The DA reported on a recent oversight visit to the Waainek Water Treatment Works, saying that the building was unsecured and that pumps and motors were missing.

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NOW READ
Relief as rain gets rivers flowing

Serttlers Dam on 26 November 2021. Photo: Sue Maclennan
Howieson’s Poort Dam on 26 November 2021. Photo: Sue Maclennan

One person dies in N2 head-on

December 7, 2021

By Sue Maclennan

Emergency services were still busy with mopping-up operations at 1.20pm Tuesday 7 December after a head-on collision on the N2 outside Makhanda that killed one person and left another critically injured. Two trucks were involved in the incident under the George Street (R67) offramp. In an earlier incident, one person was taken to hospital after a vehicle overturned on the N2 to Gqeberha, 35km from Makhanda.

One person died, one person was injured and a cargo of pineapples was scattered acrosss the N2 in a head-on collision between two trucks outside Makhanda this morning Tuesday 7 December 2021. Photo: Department of Transport, Eastern Cape

Spokesperson for the Department of Transport in the Eastern Cape, Unathi Binqose, said in the R67 offramp incident, one of the trucks had been carrying a full load of pineapples which were scattered across the road.

“The road was blocked and motorists travelling on the N2 from Gqeberha to East London were advised to use the R72 as an alternative route,” Binqose said.

At 1.20pm, Makana Traffic officers and other emergency personnel were still engaged in mopping-up operations.

The earlier incident occurred shortly after 6am Tuesday 7 December, around 35km from Makhanda on the N2 from Gqeberha.

Makana Traffic Chief Coenraad Hanekom said a heavy duty South African Breweries truck travelling  on the N2 towards Makhanda had left the road and tip partially overturned.

Paramedics had treated a man on the scene and he was taken to hospital in Gqeberha.

Emergency services were still mopping up at 1.20pm on Tuesday 7 December. Photo: Edwin Sias