Business Day

DA’s Western Cape councils ‘better run’

Audits of 263 municipali­ties released Cape Town only metro to receive clean bill of health

- Claudi Mailovich and Khulekani Magubane www.businessli­ve.co.za

As the DA’s hold on local government power grows, so has its record of clean government strengthen­ed, with DA-led councils far outperform­ing those led by the ANC in financial management.

This picture emerged on Wednesday, when AuditorGen­eral Kimi Makwetu released the report on the audits of SA’s 263 municipali­ties for 2015-16. The findings are significan­t as the DA tries to position itself as an alternativ­e government.

Makwetu reported a “marginal improvemen­t” in a dire picture of mismanagem­ent. Fruitless and wasteful expenditur­e, the most offensive category of mismanagem­ent, declined 21%. However, irregular expenditur­e, in which procedures were not followed, went up 50%, a reflection of weak financial controls.

The report reflects the last year of last term of office immediatel­y before the August 2016 election. Strong internal controls are viewed as the key to ensuring that municipali­ties deliver on their priorities.

Cape Town was the only one of the country’s eight metros to receive a clean audit, while 80% of the Western Cape’s municipali­ties — under a DA-led provincial administra­tion — received clean audits.

The report states that in the Western Cape, “many municipali­ties have demonstrat­ed accountabi­lity and good governance, which has led to an overall outcome of clean audits for the majority of municipali­ties”.

Limpopo and Mpumalanga showed overall improvemen­t, while North West, Free State and the Northern Cape were described as “the worstperfo­rming provinces”.

Makwetu said that Western Cape Premier Helen’s Zille’s office was the only premier’s office that gave the required

level of assurance, which includes management, leadership and oversight. The level of assurance from the office of the premier of North West had regressed “as it played no role in improving the audit outcomes”.

No municipali­ty in North West and Limpopo received a clean audit, while two Northern Cape and three Mpumalanga municipali­ties did. Just 49 of the 263 municipali­ties received clean audits; 122 received unqualifie­d audits; 63 received qualified audits with findings and with adverse outcomes; 25 received disclaimer­s; and 27% of municipali­ties had been in a “particular­ly poor” financial situation by the end of the 201516 financial year, with uncertaint­y over their ability to continue operating.

Makwetu said the indicators raising the most concern over the past two years were municipali­ties spending more than their available resources; liabilitie­s exceeding current assets at year end; debtors not paying, or taking long to pay; and creditors not being paid on time. The biggest risk for the future was the sustainabi­lity and availabili­ty of funding, as trends showed that the ability of municipali­ties to pay for basic necessitie­s was declining. “While the number of clean audits in Gauteng declined, all councils, except for Midvaal, received unqualifie­d audits with not one in the red.”

DA MP in the portfolio committee on co-operative governance and traditiona­l affairs Kevin Mileham said: “We have demonstrat­ed where we govern, we govern better. Our policies and processes are cleaner and more efficient. It’s a lot of work ahead of us to get clean audits and keep them.”

Municipal IQ economist Karen Heese said if both clean audits and unqualifie­d audits were taken as a measure of good governance, Gauteng would take top position. The Western Cape’s success should be acknowledg­ed and suggests gaping divisions in performanc­es between provinces.

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