Cape Argus

WC municipali­ties lead country in service delivery

- MWANGI GITHAHU mwangi.githahu@inl.co.za

WESTERN Cape municipali­ties continue to lead the rest of the country with regard to selected aspects of service delivery, such as sewerage and sanitation, according to the 2019 Non-Financial Census of Municipali­ties (NFCM).

The NFCM keeps track of all 257 municipali­ties, providing data on service delivery, indigent households, bucket toilets and the size of the municipal workforce.

Releasing the results, Statistics South Africa deputy director-general Joe de Beer said: “According to 2019 estimates, 12.5 million consumer units received sewerage and sanitation services from municipali­ties across the country, and 18.7% of these consumer units had access to free basic sewerage and sanitation.

“Western Cape showed the highest proportion of consumer units that benefited from free basic sewerage and sanitation at 47.9%, followed by Eastern Cape with 32.5% and Northern Cape at 20.1%.

“The province with the lowest proportion was Limpopo at 7.2%, followed by Mpumalanga with 7.6% and North West with 8.8%.

“There were 2.3 million consumer units receiving free basic sewerage and sanitation from municipali­ties in 2019 compared with three million consumer units in 2018.”

Sewerage and sanitation services are described in the survey as “provision of flush toilet connected to a public sewerage system, or conservanc­y tank, bucket toilet, pit latrine/toilet with ventilatio­n pipe, pit latrine/toilet without ventilatio­n pipe, other toilets such as ecological toilet such as urine diversion and enviro loo”.

According to the survey, bucket toilets are on the decline across the country, but some municipali­ties continue to struggle.

De Beer said: “The number of consumer units using a municipal-supplied bucket toilet decreased slightly from 42 622 in 2018 to 42 434 in 2019. This follows a general trend of declining numbers since 2013 when 100 610 consumer units used a bucket toilet system.

“Municipali­ties often provide bucket toilets as a temporary measure while they develop improved sanitation.”

Explaining the delay in the release of the results, De Beer said: “Owing to the Covid-19 lockdown, this publicatio­n has been delayed since August 2020 due to poor response rates brought.”

The spokespers­on for informal settlement­s campaign organisati­on Asivikelan­e, Sikhander Coopoo, said: “Most metro budgets for informal settlement­s are allocated to large longterm upgrading projects rather than to responsive provision of taps and toilets. But these projects are failing to deliver. Almost half of the residents have been promised upgrades. A quarter were told this more than five years ago.

Local government expert Paul Kariuki said: “We can no longer pretend that our political leaders do not know what is happening at the local government level given the increasing civil protests.

 ??  ?? STATISTICS South Africa deputy directorge­neral Joe de Beer.
STATISTICS South Africa deputy directorge­neral Joe de Beer.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa