Cape Argus

Masondo laments failure by municipali­ties to generate revenue

- SAMKELO MTSHALI

THE National Council of Provinces (NCOP) yesterday lamented the inability of most of the country’s municipali­ties to generate revenue and a lack of capacity to manage finances as some of the persisting challenges that impacted developmen­t at a local level.

NCOP chairperso­n Amos Masondo was addressing a gathering of the South African Local Government Associatio­n (Salga) National Members Assembly in preparatio­n for the fifth term of local government which will follow local government elections on October 27.

“This is particular­ly the case with many rural municipali­ties that have poor revenue bases and also experience difficulti­es with attracting talent. Observers have noted that despite the population shift from rural to urban areas, the health and well-being of the entire population will continue to depend on rural goods and services. This is a reminder that the rural areas and rural municipali­ties do matter,” Masondo said.

He urged national and provincial government­s to support, assist and strengthen municipali­ties instead of seeking to usurp their powers amid concerns over a growing number of repeat interventi­ons in troubled municipali­ties.

Masondo, a former chairperso­n of Salga, said that many of the issues that often triggered Section 39 interventi­ons at councils would not exist if the three spheres of government worked with one another in mutual trust and good faith in accordance with the Constituti­on. “Our concern is that this failure to advance these constituti­onal principles might suggest a tendency to simply want to take over powers of local government,” Masondo said.

He said national and provincial government­s should act in accordance with Section 141 of the Constituti­on which directs these two spheres of government to support and strengthen the capacity of municipali­ties to manage their own affairs, exercise their powers and perform their functions.

He lamented that the interventi­ons by provinces had been used as an instrument to achieve political ends, adding that they were also concerned with a worrying trend that there was no uniformity in the applicatio­n of Section 139 across provinces or within a province.

Salga president Thembisile Nkadimeng also told the gathering of the NMA that the Salga Statutory Affairs Committee would look into the matter of the members of the associatio­n’s NEC and PECs “facing challenges” with the law enforcemen­t agencies and proposed governance and reputation management protocols.

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