Business Day

Tshwane’s DA mayor vows to ‘restore financial controls’

• Cilliers Brink was elected with 109 votes, beating COPE councillor Ofentse Moalusi, who got 102 votes

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

Newly elected Tshwane executive mayor and DA councillor Cilliers Brink says his administra­tion will focus on restoring the metro’s broken financial controls, which resulted in it racking up more than R10bn in irregular expenditur­e.

“We have to get control of Tshwane’s finances, and bring our spending in line with what the city can realistica­lly hope to collect. This is as important a task as responding to the concerns of the auditor-general, and restoring the financial controls that have systematic­ally been broken down or have never existed,” Brink said after his election on Tuesday.

He was elected with 109 votes, beating his close rival, COPE councillor Ofentse Moalusi, who received 102 votes.

Brink said that in the past three years, a number of factors including “excessive salary increases negotiated outside collective bargaining, and out of proportion to what has been granted in metros of similar size and means”; and the Covid-19 lockdown had had a “devastatin­g effect on the city’s financial position, and the path of recovery on which we had embarked in the last decade”.

The metro came under fire from unions in August 2020 following its decision to withhold salaries of more than 7,000 unverified workers. The decision came two weeks after Tshwane agreed to implement a benchmarki­ng agreement signed with the SA Municipal Workers’ Union and the Independen­t Municipal and Allied Trade Union, which was set to cost the city R300m.

The agreement was meant to put Tshwane employees’ salaries on the same footing as those of their counterpar­ts in

SA’s seven other metros.

Brink said the scourge of load-shedding and the “unlawful” interventi­on by the Gauteng provincial government to place the metro under administra­tion for seven months during the lockdown period, which left the metro with a R4bn deficit, added to the city’s financial woes.

“To restore the balance between incomes and expenditur­es, Tshwane will have to make difficult decisions that we no longer have the luxury to avoid,” the mayor said.

Brink and the metro’s mayoral spokespers­on, Sipho Stuurman, did not respond immediatel­y to questions sent to them.

Tshwane had been without a political head for almost three weeks after former COPE councillor Murunwa Makwarela resigned on March 10 following the discovery that he had submitted a fraudulent court rehabilita­tion order to city manager Johann Mettler after his insolvency proceeding­s.

Makwarela, who was elected mayor on February 28 to replace Randall Williams, is said to have outstandin­g insolvency issues dating back to 2016. According to the constituti­on, an individual who is declared an unrehabili­tated insolvent cannot hold public office.

Williams’ resignatio­n came after the DA-led multiparty coalition — which included ActionSA, the ACDP, the IFP, COPE and Freedom Front Plus — issued a joint statement in August 2022 agreeing to an independen­t probe after allegation­s that Williams interfered in a R26bn energy investment proposal for the metro. The unsolicite­d bid was for refurbishi­ng the city-owned Rooiwal and Pretoria West power stations.

Randall also came under heavy criticism after auditorgen­eral Tsakani Maluleke’s report on the metro’s 2021/22 financial year said it did not have adequate systems for identifyin­g and disclosing all irregular expenditur­e, which the metro put at more than R10.4bn.

The political instabilit­y of coalitions in the Gauteng metros echoes concerns by the SA Local Government Associatio­n that service delivery in SA’s economic heartland was deteriorat­ing, as political parties battled for controls of local councils and municipali­ties.

DA Gauteng leader Solly Msimanga

said the party, like its coalition partners, had full confidence in Brink’s ability to turn around the municipali­ty.

“The lingering effects of reckless lockdown policies, unlawful ANC interventi­ons in the city from other spheres of government, poor financial decisions, and the continuous and escalating impact of prolonged stage 6 load-shedding, has caused significan­t hardships for the city, especially with regard to its devastatin­g impact on Tshwane’s finances,” said Msimanga, a former Tshwane mayor.

“The DA in Gauteng calls on all parties in the Tshwane city council to put effective, delivery focused government above party political games and stunts. The city’s residents deserve nothing less,” he said.

ANC Tshwane chair Eugene Modise could not be reached immediatel­y for comment.

EFF Tshwane regional chair Obakeng Ramabodu said Brink’s election signified the “return of Tshwane residents to another seven years of poor service delivery under the multiparty coalition”. He described Brink’s election as a setback, saying the red berets would hold him accountabl­e and demand “concrete steps to address audit findings and restore service delivery in the municipali­ty”.

Brink, a University of Pretoria law graduate, is no stranger to the municipali­ty, having served as a councillor in 2011 and group corporate and shared services member of the mayoral committee from 2016 to 2019.

Brink then moved to parliament and represente­d the DA as national spokespers­on and as a member of the co-operative governance & traditiona­l affairs portfolio committee.

He said a municipali­ty existed for the residents’ benefit, its local community and generation­s to come, stressing that service delivery by the metro could not be compromise­d.

“If we do that, we will simply deepen the deficit of trust and the deficit of money that we currently suffer,” he said.

“What has happened in our politics, and in this council chamber, in the past three weeks has been deeply unfortunat­e, and I do hope we’ve reached a turning point.”

TSHWANE WILL HAVE TO MAKE DIFFICULT DECISIONS WE NO LONGER HAVE THE LUXURY TO AVOID

 ?? /Deaan Vivier/Beeld /Gallo Images ?? Hard task: Tshwane mayor Cilliers Brink says that excessive salary increases and the Covid-19 lockdown have had a devastatin­g effect on the city’s finances.
/Deaan Vivier/Beeld /Gallo Images Hard task: Tshwane mayor Cilliers Brink says that excessive salary increases and the Covid-19 lockdown have had a devastatin­g effect on the city’s finances.

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