The Citizen (KZN)

Rand Water’s hardline

SUPPLY: UTILITY REDUCES FLOW TO DEFAULTING MUNICIPALI­TIES

- Zanele Mbengo – zanelem@citizen.co.za

→ Concern over failure to honour bulk purchase agreements.

Rand Water has reduced the water flow by 20% to defaulting municipali­ties and announced should they fail to pay the overdue amount, it will further implement another 20% on 25 March.

Rand Water said yesterday it was concerned over escalating debts caused by municipali­ties’ failure to honour their bulk water purchase agreements and debt settlement arrangemen­ts with Rand Water.

Municipali­ties owe Rand Water a cumulative overdue amount of R3 billion, with R2 billion relating to Gauteng municipali­ties, R1 billion from Mpumalanga municipali­ties, and R63 million from Free State municipali­ties.

Independen­t political analyst Sandile Swana said the effect of restrictin­g water will affect residents and businesses.

Swana said what was not hidden “is the same councillor­s who have been voted in by residents are the same councillor­s who have not been collecting money from residents”.

He said if the debt is not paid, Rand Water was going to struggle with day-to-day operations. Swana said the issue with Rand Water was made worse by the culture of “ANC economics which is the economics of poverty”.

“It’s going to be short of working capital. It’s going to be short of money to pay for electricit­y and of money to buy spares to make repairs to its own infrastruc­ture. Rand water won’t be able to pay wages. And then it will become a squatter camp,” Swana said.

According to Rand Water, the payment patterns of municipali­ties have deteriorat­ed to concerning levels that threaten the liquidity, financial performanc­e, and sustainabi­lity of Rand Water. “Despite our relentless efforts to accommodat­e this ongoing pattern of nonpayment through bilateral engagement­s and participat­ion in intergover­nmental relations forums, we have regrettabl­y reached a stalemate,” the utility said.

Rand Water revealed it has invoked the provisions of Section 41(1) of IRFA and declare an intergover­nmental financial dispute and seek interventi­on of National Treasury and the department of cooperativ­e governance and traditiona­l affairs (Cogta).

Anthony Turton from Centre for Environmen­tal Management at the University of Free State said there were policies that need to be challenged to improve water infrastruc­ture financing and management.

“The policy that stands in the way is in the constituti­on of South Africa and it is called the cooperativ­e governance clause. The chapter makes it clear that one arm of government cannot reach into the activities of another arm of government,” Turton said.

“And that’s a problem because Rand Water is a state-owned enterprise that’s owned by the department of water and sanitation. But it may not reach into the affairs of a municipali­ty which falls under Cogta,” he added.

Emfuleni local municipali­ty is one of the nonperform­ing municipali­ties contributi­ng to the Rand Water overdue debt. Also being one of the dysfunctio­nal and distressed municipali­ties which was listed by Cogta five years ago requiring urgent interventi­on.

Rand Water said it is in the process of employing the same credit control measure for other municipali­ties who were failing to honour their debt settlement agreements.

We have regrettabl­y reached a stalemate

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