The Herald (South Africa)

You pay R74m a year for this

Five-hour bickering start to Bay council meeting

- Siyamtanda Capa and Nomazima Nkosi capas@tisoblacks­tar.co.za

It took at least five hours for Nelson Mandela Bay councillor­s to finally get on with the business of the day such as passing the crucial adjustment­s budget which, by law, had to be adopted by Thursday.

In yet another meeting characteri­sed by chaos, the councillor­s spent three hours arguing over whether or not convicted ANC councillor Bongo Nombiba was legally allowed in the council chamber.

They then proceeded to have a lengthy lunch and a series of caucus breaks, followed by an afternoon of threats of violence by Patriotic Alliance councillor Marlon Daniels against DA councillor­s Athol Trollip and Gustav Rautenbach.

The council salary bill costs ratepayers R74m a year.

It was only after 7pm that councillor­s eventually deliberate­d on the most critical matter of the day – the adjustment­s budget.

It had to be approved by the end of February to be in line with National Treasury guidelines.

It was eventually passed by the majority of councillor­s at 8.30pm, without the backing of the DA, COPE, ACDP and Patriotic Alliance.

It was, however, preceded by squabbles over where Victor Manyati – a DA councillor who has voted against his party several times – should be seated, leading to a screaming match and chairs being shoved around.

Minutes later, Daniels jumped from his seat, over the table and threatened to beat up Rautenbach for telling him to be quiet. Later, he stormed from his seat, threatenin­g to beat up Trollip for saying Daniels had private security guards.

Acting chief financial officer Jackson Ngcelwane was forced to rush through his presentati­on of the adjustment­s budget, given only 10 minutes to explain how the city planned to reprioriti­se its spending.

Ngcelwane said the R2bn capital budget needed to be spent speedily to ensure that the money was used and not sent back to the Treasury.

He reminded councillor­s of the delays experience­d during the passing of the 2018/2019 budget on June 30 2018.

Ngcelwane said the city’s financial woes were exacerbate­d by an additional R9.8m meant for the smart grid initiative that the city received from the National Treasury on Wednesday.

Budget and treasury portfolio head Mkhuseli Mtsila pleaded with the opposition to support the budget, saying it was for the poorest of the poor.

“I wish to plead with this council to place the interest of the residents of the metro and put our difference­s aside.

“If we delay this, we will delay issues of planning.

“We need to make sure that we pass this adjustment budget,” Mtsila said.

“We have tried to balance this and not change anything fundamenta­lly or radically.

“This budget is for the benefit of the residents of this city.”

Explaining the reasons behind the R74m budget deficit, Mtsila said councillor­s had to remember that the council had resolved to insource 212 additional security staff.

“The reality is that we take council resolution­s, we have agreed to insource security people which cost about R50m and call centre workers.

“We have also realised that the budget deficit is also because of overtime.

“We need to make it a point that we create employment and take more people to be part of the municipali­ty,” Mtsila said.

He said the R74m deficit was not all bad as other countries had deficits that ran into billions. Mtsila said he was concerned about the low spending rate of department­s, which was sitting at an average 34%.

“Department­s are spending less. If department­s are underspend­ing it’s service delivery that is struggling,” he said.

“Department­s also need to stop this hockey-stick effect of spending backwards.”

He said plans were under way to give the budget monitoring committee powers to act on department­s with low spending rates.

DA councillor Retief Odendaal said the city’s deficit was moving in the wrong direction.

“We need to identify sav-

ings,” he said. “The National Treasury knows that we are one of the poor metros.

“We are on the wrong trajectory.”

Odendaal warned it would be virtually impossible to spend the rest of the capital budget within the current financial year, which ends on June 30.

“It makes no sense to embark on new projects halfway through the year.

“This is also not an administra­tive process.

“If it were, all parties would’ve been consulted.

“This budget is influenced by political decisions.

“It makes no sense,” he said. The DA walked out of the meeting after the vote on the budget. Meanwhile, mayor Mongameli Bobani, who was to face a motion of no confidence brought by Daniels – which had still not been debated by 10.20pm, said that the budget spoke to the needs of poor people.

“We are unapologet­ic about attending to the poor.

“Come May or June, our budget will speak to the poor,” Bobani said.

Some of the other items on the agenda which were passed included amending the organogram for the municipali­ty’s tourism department.

This was rejected by the DA, which argued that the insourcing of the 23 staff, on sixmonth contracts, would strain the municipali­ty’s finances and further bloat the city’s wage bill.

The staff were retrenched by Nelson Mandela Bay Tourism in January.

The EFF, PA, UF and the ANC, however, insisted that the insourcing of the staff was well within the prescripts of the law.

DA councillor Annette Lovemore said the insourcing would plunge the city into a crisis.

“The decision to insource the NMB tourism staff was in principle and not immediatel­y,” she said.

“The mayor’s recommenda­tion to insource staff that did not have existing job descriptio­ns would be unlawful.

“We can’t put people in a position that is not on the staff establishm­ent,” Lovemore said.

DA councillor Nqaba Bhanga said insourcing more people into the municipali­ty would bloat the wage bill.

“We must apply our mind on the Municipal Structure and Systems Act when we make these decisions.

“This is illegal. We are disbanding an entity that is key in promoting our city,” Bhanga said.

Other items that were passed were that the IPTS upgrade for the Njoli route will be placed on hold and the city will focus on developing the Uitenhage and Despatch route first.

A motion by ACDP councillor Lance Grootboom to immediatel­y implement the R5.8m cleaning and greening project was also approved.

 ?? Picture: BRIAN WITBOOI ?? FACING UP: Councillor­s Marlon Daniels (PA) and Athol Trollip (DA) during a confrontat­ion at the meeting
Picture: BRIAN WITBOOI FACING UP: Councillor­s Marlon Daniels (PA) and Athol Trollip (DA) during a confrontat­ion at the meeting
 ??  ?? GETTING HEATED: ANC councillor Mvuzo Mbelekane (with glasses)
GETTING HEATED: ANC councillor Mvuzo Mbelekane (with glasses)
 ?? Pictures: FREDLIN ADRIAAN ?? SEEING RED: PA councillor Marlon Daniels, left, with EFF councillor Zilindile Vena
Pictures: FREDLIN ADRIAAN SEEING RED: PA councillor Marlon Daniels, left, with EFF councillor Zilindile Vena
 ??  ?? PRIVATE CONSULTATI­ON: Mayor Mongameli Bobani, left, and ANC councillor Andile Lungisa
PRIVATE CONSULTATI­ON: Mayor Mongameli Bobani, left, and ANC councillor Andile Lungisa
 ??  ?? NOT HAPPY: DA councillor Nqaba Bhanga
NOT HAPPY: DA councillor Nqaba Bhanga

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