Business Day

Joburg billing crisis adds to rates row

- Luyolo Mkentane Political Writer mkentanel@businessli­ve.co.za

The long-standing billing crisis in Johannesbu­rg has compounded the problem of sharply higher property valuations for some suburbs. The property revaluatio­ns drive, which started in 2017, has drawn thousands of complaints from residents and businesses who argue the city is inflating values to boost its flagging income.

THERE ’ S LOTS OF UNHAPPINES­S SO WE ARE PETITIONIN­G THE CITY TO REVIEW ACCOUNTS ISSUED BETWEEN JUNE TO AUGUST

When the municipali­ty rates bill of his 83-yearold mother started escalating in April, Benno Erken contacted the Johannesbu­rg city council to negotiate a payment plan for outstandin­g debt.

He was turned away as SA was under lockdown, which prohibited the city from cutting off services such as water and electricit­y. To his shock, five months later, on September 7, when bitterly cold weather gripped parts of the country, his mother, Dagmar Erken, sat freezing in her Saxonwold home after the council had cut off her lights and water.

What upsets me is that they did cut my mom off during the lockdown. That really threw me. I felt blindsided because I was told not to make an arrangemen­t. I’m hoping that in the next week I will have managed to pay off the R77,000 bill,” Benno Erken said.

Erken s story is not unique. The long-standing billing crisis in SA’s biggest-budget municipali­ty has compounded the problem of sharply higher property revaluatio­ns for some neighbourh­oods, because the value of real estate determines the rates a property owner pays.

The property revaluatio­ns drive, which started in 2017, has drawn thousands of complaints from residents and businesses who argue the city is inflating their real estate values to boost its flagging income, which is expected to take an enormous hit from the economic downturn stemming from large-scale job cuts due to the Covid-19 pandemic.

In July, the municipali­ty passed its R68.1bn budget for 2020/2021, much higher than the R61.8bn proposed in March. The city’s budget for 2019/2020 was R64.5bn. The metro’s finance MMC, Jolidee Matongo, told Business Day on Thursday that about 70% of the total budget is derived from rates and taxes. This year’s budget included slashing the capital expenditur­e by R1bn to R7.5bn, which is lower than the R7.8bn in the previous year’s spending allocation­s. Matongo s spokespers­on, Kgamanyane Stan Maphologel­a, said there is no billing crisis in the metro as every month the city receives an average of 4,000 billing queries out of the 1.1-million monthly bills sent out.

The metro’s] complaints rate is far lower than global standards,” Maphologel­a said.

More than 90% of billing queries are for water and electricit­y use, he said.

To resolve ratepayers’ longstandi­ng billing queries, Maphologel­a said the municipali­ty will embark on a series of “open days” in all its regions to deal with queries and complaints about bills issued during the lockdown period, as the metro’s capacity was reduced during that time.

Matongo s team might also have to deal with the city’s former mayor Herman Mashaba, who has not been spared by what opposition parties and residents insist is the billing crisis. He was shocked to receive a bill of R22,000 from the city in August, Mashaba said.

Now leader of political party Action SA, Mashaba was elected as mayor in 2016 and focused on fixing the billing crisis, but was unable to do so.

We normally pay about R10,000, R11,000 and R13,000 in winter. My wife has lodged a complaint with the city,” Mashaba said. I think these higher bills are as a result of the metro bringing back all the cadres,” he said.

Mashaba said when he became mayor, the city was receiving many more than 100,000 queries every month relating to rates bills, and had reduced it to about 8,000 when he left office on November 27 2019.

Atkinson said during the lockdown the city did not do proper meter readings and people thus ended up receiving inflated bills.

“There’s lots of general unhappines­s around that so we are putting a petition to the city to review accounts issued between June and August this year,” Atkinson said.

 ?? Vitali ?? Nothing unusual: Johannesbu­rg municipal officials say its average complaints rate is far lower than the global standard. / 123RF/Mirko
Vitali Nothing unusual: Johannesbu­rg municipal officials say its average complaints rate is far lower than the global standard. / 123RF/Mirko

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