Daily News

Consumers owe municipali­ties R117 billion

- CHANTALL PRESENCE

THE debt owed to municipali­ties remained stagnant at R117 billion, with the national government owing R2.3bn and provincial department­s owing R2.3bn, Co-operative Governance and Traditiona­l Affairs Minister Des van Rooyen said yesterday.

Van Rooyen said the rest of the debt was owed by households and businesses.

The municipali­ties finding it difficult to recover debt, mostly historic debt, remain indebted to Eskom.

“Municipali­ties, all in all, owe Eskom R9.5bn, so it tells a story that if we give effect to appropriat­e credit control measures, I think more municipali­ties will be better positioned to take care of their creditors,” said Van Rooyen.

“An inter-ministeria­l committee is dealing with the issue of money owed to Eskom, but also the capacity of municipali­ties to pay their creditors,” he said.

“In our last meeting, the indication was very clear that we are still on course, with municipali­ties being up to date with their payments.”

The minister warned that while the payment agreements between councils and Eskom, which threatened to cut power supplies to indebted municipali­ties, was on target, it was not sustainabl­e.

He said more work needed to be done in collaborat­ion with municipali­ties to ensure they generated their own revenue to become self-sustainabl­e, so they could pay their creditors.

“We are also trying to see how financiall­y we can help municipali­ties to replace ageing infrastruc­ture, which in most of the instances is the cause of the misalignme­nt between what they pay for the services and what they owe for the services they are provided with.”

A National Treasury report released in March last year put the municipal debt at R117.9bn.

The report said that realistica­lly only R22.8bn was recoverabl­e. – ANA

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DES VAN ROOYEN

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