The Citizen (KZN)

E Cape local municipali­ty is worst run – AG

- Zanele Mbengo

With 163 municipali­ties of 257 classed as “distressed” and 66 as “dysfunctio­nal”, the Enoch Mgijima local municipali­ty emerged in parliament yesterday as the poster child for badly run municipali­ties.

Shereen Noble of the Auditor General of South Africa noted their concern: “Without the money that they are getting and without the financial recovery plan working, we are not sure if this municipali­ty can operate as a going concern.

“Eighty-seven percent of debt is irrecovera­ble and the municipali­ty couldn’t collect it. The average debt collection period was 317 days and they are losing 22% of distributi­on electricit­y,” she added.

According to political analyst Bernard Sebake, the Enoch Mgijima municipali­ty had not recovered its financial footing.

“When a municipali­ty is limping financiall­y, it gets given an opportunit­y to operate under a financial recovery framework.

“If the financial recovery framework does not work, that municipali­ty must then be put under administra­tion,” Sebake explained.

“But with the level of debt they have now and the service delivery challenges, recovery is farfetched which indicates the level of leadership in that municipali­ty,” Sebake said.

The department of cooperativ­e governance and traditiona­l affairs (Cogta) stated the municipali­ty was among the 66 dysfunctio­nal municipali­ties nationally and the 11 in the Eastern Cape as per the 2022-23 report.

The municipali­ty was placed under Section 139 (7) of the constituti­on on 6 April, 2022 following resistance to the interventi­on.

The national interventi­on required that a financial recovery plan be imposed on the municipali­ty.

Cogta indicated the 2023-2024 budget remained unfunded and electricit­y distributi­on losses for November 2023 was standing at 48.25%, with the norm being 7-10%.

It said the total revenue collected was more than R571 million with a budget of R532 million as of December 23, and this included over R317 million billed for services and rates.

“Positive collection rate is as a result of R151 million that was fully billed in August as rates are fully billed once a year with an option to pay it over a year.

“An amount of R1.4 billion was owed to creditors in December, of which 99% relates to Eskom bulk purchases,” Cogta said.

Cogta revealed the municipali­ty was owed R1.3 billion, of which 86.5% was owed by households.

Noble highlighte­d R220.5 million of expenditur­e was deemed fruitless and wasteful and total current liabilitie­s exceeded total current assets by R984 million.

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