Business Day

Only a complete overhaul of local government will improve services

Merging municipali­ties into district councils would save money and get service delivery on track

- Michael Evans Evans, an attorney at Webber Wentzel, specialise­s in local government.

There is no doubt that local government in SA is in crisis, in some places facing total collapse. Former Treasury director-general Dondo Mogajane admitted as much on his way out last month, saying as many as two-thirds of the country’s municipali­ties were now in financial distress and the Treasury can no longer cope with the extent of the crisis.

This was reinforced by an article in Business Day penned by Municipal IQ MD Kevin Allan, who concluded that “cadre deployment is the real problem in local government and has run for years like poison through the sector. It is not only that cadres are deployed to political positions, but senior administra­tive ones too, in which they mostly have little or no qualificat­ions or experience.” (“Cadre deployment has poisoned our municipali­ties”, June 5).

The collapse of local government was also strongly reinforced in the 2020/2021 municipal audit outcomes report released recently by auditor-general Tsakani Maluleke. Only 16% of SA’s municipali­ties were given a clean audit, and a total of 64 have been declared completely dysfunctio­nal by the department of co-operative governance & traditiona­l affairs as a result of governance failures “rooted in poor governance, weak institutio­nal capacity, poor financial management, corruption and political instabilit­y”.

Maluleke added that the state of 28% of the municipali­ties was so dire that there was “doubt whether they will be able to continue operating”.

Given this dire scenario, it is impossible to contemplat­e the revival of the local government system without fundamenta­l and radical changes. SA has 278 municipali­ties, eight of which are metropolit­an municipali­ties. While all eight have had their problems, they have generally been functional. The rest of the country is divided into two levels of local government, and that is where the problem starts.

There are 44 district councils, which in terms of the Local Government: Municipal Structures Act of 1998 have fairly limited powers. The auditor-general reported that the district councils have the highest success rate when it came to clean audits. However, in the area of jurisdicti­on of each of the district councils, there are about five local municipali­ties, taking the total number to 226. All, or almost all, of those that have totally collapsed are local municipali­ties.

The only way to reform local government in SA is to scrap the current concept of a local municipali­ty altogether. This would involve a two-stage process.

Each local municipali­ty would need to be assessed in terms of its ability to fulfil its municipal obligation­s and satisfacto­rily provide the necessary municipal services. Those that have good track records, such as Drakenstei­n (Paarl) in the Western Cape and Bitou (Plettenber­g Bay) in the Southern Cape, do not require the co-ordinating assistance of district councils. They should be allowed to operate as stand-alone municipali­ties in the same way as the eight metropolit­an municipali­ties are permitted to do. Throughout the rest of the country, the remaining local municipali­ties should be disbanded and all local government functions should become the responsibi­lity of the district councils. These district councils would then become de facto local municipali­ties, with all the powers now held by local and metropolit­an municipali­ties. In effect, the larger district councils would each take over the responsibi­lities of the four or five local municipali­ties within their areas.

The net effect of this sort of change would be to reduce the number of municipali­ties from 278 to well under 100. The benefits would be immense. The district councils would need to acquire the same financing capacity as now applies to metropolit­an municipali­ties and local municipali­ties. All of them receive most of their funding from three sources: an equitable share from national government, rates, and profits from the sale of electricit­y.

District councils now only receive income through the equitable share. They would need to be given the power to raise money through the imposition of rates and the sale of electricit­y. In this scenario, the limited skills now available to local municipali­ties would be concentrat­ed in the larger district councils, which would be able to select the best available from the five local municipali­ties. Costs would be reduced because of the concentrat­ion of staff and the scrapping of all the local municipali­ties along with their mayors, mayoral councils, councillor­s and officials.

As a result, it should become possible for national government to reduce the equitable share paid to local government, thus freeing funds in the national budget for health and education, where additional expenditur­e is so necessary. Most importantl­y, service delivery would improve. In addition, the work of the auditor-general would be far easier, as would the work of the authoritie­s who are responsibl­e for curbing cadre deployment and corruption.

Ideally, these new district municipali­ties would adopt the collective executive system, rather than the executive mayoral system, a topic I have written about before (“A better way forward: ditch the executive mayor”, November 22 2021). That would help depolitici­se the municipali­ties, which would benefit service delivery.

Granted, this sort of fundamenta­l change would trigger some job losses, but most of those would be cadre deployees who were not equipped for their jobs in the first place, or councillor­s who are paid an income for performing virtually no meaningful role at all. In the medium to long term the work of the district municipali­ties and their drive to deliver quality services should trigger an increase in employment.

I recognise that this proposal requires a complete overhaul of local government and major changes to the Municipal Structures Act, which would take a couple of years to implement. But I see this as the only way in which national government, working together with the provinces and hopefully many municipali­ties, can find a way to resuscitat­e local government in this country and improve service delivery.

 ?? ?? Graphic: KAREN MOOLMAN Source: STATS SA, QUARTERLY FINANCIAL STATISTICS OF SELECTED MUNICIPALI­TIES
Graphic: KAREN MOOLMAN Source: STATS SA, QUARTERLY FINANCIAL STATISTICS OF SELECTED MUNICIPALI­TIES

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