The Passenger Rail Agency of SA [Prasa] has assured parliament that it will have a new group CEO before the end of this year.
Prasa board chairperson Leonard Ramatlakane and transport minister Fikile Mbalula told parliament’s standing committee on public accounts there was nothing stopping the agency from hiring a new administrative boss.
He said even though the previous CEO Zolani Matthews, who was fired last year, is challenging his dismissal, in terms of the law there was nothing that says this board cannot employ a new CEO. Ramatlakane added that the agency was continuing with a headhunting process after it could not find a suitable candidate from a recruitment process it undertook earlier.
United States Latest News, United States Headlines
Similar News:You can also read news stories similar to this one that we have collected from other news sources.
BACK ON TRACK: After the collapse – Prasa finally reopens rail line serving SowetoOn Monday, some Soweto residents got their first taste of a functioning rail service when the Naledi to Johannesburg line was reopened.
Read more »
Prasa can’t hire new CEO, says axed Zolani MatthewsPlans to hire a new boss for financially crippled passenger rail agency Prasa have come under fire amid warnings by its former group CEO that it is trying to dodge court action.
Read more »
Prasa adamant it will have a new boss before end of the yearThe Passenger Rail Agency of SA [Prasa] has assured parliament that it will have a new group CEO before the end of this year.
Read more »
City and Prasa to negotiate how to get Metro Rail's Central Line reinstatedThe Passenger Rail Agency of South Africa (Prasa) has had trouble getting railway routes that haven't been working for different reasons back up and running.While the Northern Line and the Southern Line are back online and providing adequate service, challenges still block progress on the Central Line.
Read more »
Road and rail washaways are next hurdle for Australia’s farmersHeavy rains and flooding in east of the country put wheat harvest at risk
Read more »