IMIESA January 2021

Page 7

PRESIDENT’S COMMENT

IMESA

Ethics and

infrastructure A warm welcome to all our Institute members and IMIESA readers! We hoped that we’d see the back of Covid-19 going into 2021, but that was not to be. The best we can do for now is adhere to health and safety protocols and await the nationwide vaccination roll-out.

T

he year 2020 was period of turbulent change; however, histor y demonstrates that change is inevitable and that we must embrace both the threats and opportunities presented. This is particularly the case when it comes to addressing the major inequalities in our society exacerbated by the pandemic. Examples include infrastructure gaps in the provision of key ser vices that include housing, water and sanitation, and transportation. For municipal engineers, the responsibility rests with us to deliver the optimum solutions if we want our communities and regional economies to flourish. Despite recent budget cuts, a lot can still be achieved when we prioritise the most urgent projects and implement a value engineering approach. From past Auditor-General reports, we know that wasteful and fruitless expenditure has been a major factor hampering ser vice deliver y and this must stop. A contributing factor has been a fragmented approach to planning and execution, the so-called ‘fast-tracking’ methodology where projects deemed urgent are actioned, sometimes without effective due diligence. Going for ward, rigorous project, risk management and quality control processes are essential, as is real-time oversight of infrastructure expenditure.

Code of Conduct As civil and municipal engineers, we must stand together in ensuring that we live up to the Code of Conduct for Registered Persons in terms of the Engineering Professions Act (No. 46 of 2000). In addition to this, one of my key mandates as IMESA’s 2020-22 President is to take this a step fur ther by motivating that ethics be made a compulsor y part of the CPD cycle required for registration with the Engineering Council of South Africa. That would require registered practitioners to attend an ethics presentation annually during their five-year registration cycle. Within my personal life, my husband and two children are qualified medical doctors and their professional lives are governed by their Hippocratic Oath. In my view, civil engineers should take a similar oath that determines the moral principles for ethical practice since their actions have a direct bearing on civilised society.

ambitious infrastructure-led economic recover y plan will ser ve as a vital catalyst. As municipal and civil engineers, we are an integral part of that process and have an onerous responsibility to act as quality assurance gatekeepers.

Actions have consequences Our actions can either be intentional or unintentional. However, even if unintentional, a poorly evaluated decision or applied solution can still have negative consequences that could have been avoided. In the aftermath of the devastation caused by the pandemic, South Africa’s

Bhavna Soni, president, IMESA

IMIESA January 2021

5


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Minor concrete defects and their remedies

4min
pages 50-52

Experts in bespoke culverts

3min
page 53

Construction Law

7min
pages 48-49

Towards a water secure future

3min
page 47

Innovative use of builders’ rubble

2min
page 46

Bell beefs up excavator range

2min
page 43

Constructing for and with the community

5min
pages 44-45

The right equipment, the best support

6min
pages 36-37

Built to keep on performing

1min
page 39

Planers at the cutting edge

3min
page 35

The importance of postclosure management

2min
pages 32-33

Tshwane ready to up its waste game

3min
page 30

Hot Seat

6min
pages 28-29

4IR in the waste sector

2min
page 31

Why you should hire from CHPA members

1min
page 34

Meeting demand for high grade bitumen

2min
page 26

NME innovations for Africa

2min
page 27

Environmental Engineering

4min
pages 24-25

Understanding your water consumption

3min
page 20

Behind the scenes of the Kashimbila Multipurpose Dam

6min
pages 14-15

Financing

5min
pages 10-11

Cover Story

6min
pages 12-13

Editor’s comment

4min
pages 5-6

Automatic control valves regulate the levels

3min
pages 16-17

President’s comment

2min
page 7

Upgrading the Midmar WTP

2min
pages 21-22
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