Daily Dispatch

state staff owe ec massive R800m

Report reveals they owe more than three quarters of a billion

- ASANDA NINI SENIOR REPORTER asandan@dispatch.co.za

Provincial councillor­s and municipal officials are among those responsibl­e for crippling their own municipali­ties when it comes to revenue collection.

They owe more than three quarters of a billion rand for rates and services.

A report tabled at the Bhisho legislatur­e by the provincial treasury, dated May 7, reveals that municipal officials around the province owe their respective councils more than R761millio­n and councillor­s in 37 of the province’s 39 municipali­ties owe R36.6-million.

The situation could be much worse as these figures exclude officials and councillor­s in the province’s two metros, Buffalo City and Nelson Mandela Bay.

Treasury, however, revealed that the “credibilit­y” of the figures provided by municipali­ties “remains a challenge”.

In a written parliament­ary response report by finance MEC Oscar Mabuyane, which came about after DA MPL Bobby Stevenson had formally inquired through written parliament­ary questions, it also emerged that residents in the 37 municipali­ties owe R2.2-billion.

Provincial government department­s are also among the culprits. Mabuyane’s report reveals they owe municipali­ties R475-million, with R247-million of that being owed by six of the 13 state department­s.

Public works tops the list, owing provincial municipali­ties in excess of R170-million.

It is followed by health at R44.1-million, education at R21.7-million and rural developmen­t and agrarian reform at R9.7-million.

The department of human settlement­s owes provincial municipali­ties R301 278 and transport R508 594.

The report reveals that;

Municipal officials at troubled Enoch Mgijima municipali­ty in Komani owe in excess of R498-million and councillor­s R13.6-million;

Officials at Inxuba Yethemba owe R135-million and councillor­s R3.8-million;

In Sakhisizwe, officials owe more than R59.4-million and councillor­s R13.8-million;

At Emalahleni, officials owe R54-million and councillor­s R2.2-million;

At Intsika Yethu, officials owe R4-million and councillor­s R726 194;

At Engcobo officials owe R3.1-million and councillor­s R256 482; and

At Sunday’s River Valley, officials owe R1.6-million and councillor­s R138 875;

Ndlambe and Makana municipali­ties owe a combined R2.7-million and at Alfred Nzo and King Sabatha Dalindyebo (KSD) councillor­s owe a combined R2.3-million;

Residents at KSD owe R435millio­n, Makana R362-million; Joe Gqabi R250-million; Sunday’s River Valley R225-million; Kouga R140-million; Beyers Naude R128-million and Ndlambe R12-million;

At bankrupt Great Kei, residents owe R70-million and officials R211 238; and

O R Tambo municipali­ty residents owe R60-million, those at Walter Sisulu R82-million, Kou-Kamma R115-million, Sakhisizwe R13-million and Ngqushwa R30-million.

Co-operative governance MEC Fikile Xasa said they had instructed political and administra­tive leaders in some councils to find legal ways to deduct such debts from officials and councillor­s’ salaries.

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