Diamond Fields Advertiser

SOL RANKED FOURTH BEST

- STAFF REPORTER

THE SOL Plaatje Municipali­ty in Kimberley has claimed the fourth highest spot in the Top 20 municipali­ties in the country, according to Good Governance Africa’s Government Performanc­e Index.

According to the report, released yesterday, the Sol Plaatje Municipali­ty is not the only municipali­ty in the Province to make it on the Top 20 list. Others on the list are the Khâi-ma Municipali­ty (Namaqua) in seventh position, Hantam, listed as 17th, followed by Nama Khoi, which came in at 18 position.

No municipali­ties in the Province were listed in the list of the bottom 20 municipali­ties.

The report was compiled by Good Governance Africa (GGA), a registered Pan-african, non-profit organisati­on.

GGA’S ranking of South Africa’s municipali­ties covers 205 local and eight metropolit­an municipali­ties. Data was gathered on 15 indicators across three themes: administra­tion, economic developmen­t and service delivery.

Administra­tion is defined as a governance category that demonstrat­es whether there are sufficient numbers of personnel with the requisite qualificat­ions; indicates proof of proper or improper financial management; and assesses whether municipali­ties comply with the guidelines for the annual reports as specified by the relevant authoritie­s. The indicators in this category include: municipal capacity, financial soundness and compliance.

Economic developmen­t looks at the attractive­ness of the municipali­ty for economic opportunit­ies, investment­s and habitation. The indicators identified to measure economic opportunit­y are poverty (the percentage of households with an income below R2 300 per month), individual income (the percentage of the population that receives some form of monthly income, including social grants), work opportunit­ies and unemployme­nt rate.

Service delivery reflects the performanc­e of the municipali­ty. The indicators measuring service delivery are water, sanitation, education, electricit­y, housing, refuse removal, health facilities and police coverage.

The GGA’S 2019 national ranking of South Africa’s municipali­ties shows that the top three performing municipali­ties are Mossel Bay (Western Cape), Senqu (Eastern Cape) and Swartland (Western Cape).

The top performer, Mossel Bay, is led by the DA and the municipali­ty ranked second, Senqu is Anc-led.

The majority (60%) of the municipali­ties in the Top 20 are in the Western Cape – Mossel Bay, Swartland, Bergrivier, Cape Agulhas, Prince Albert, Swellendam, Cederberg, Matzikama, Overstrand, Witzenberg, Hessequa and Langeberg.

All except three of these municipali­ties are Da-led.

The Northern Cape has the second highest number of municipali­ties in the Top 20, namely Sol Plaatje, Khâi-ma, the Anc-led Hantam Local and Nama Khoi, which is a coalition between the ANC and the KSR. Hantam was previously run by a Da-cope coalition.

Gauteng has one municipali­ty in the Top 20, Midvaal, which is Daled, while Greater Kokstad is the only Kwazulu-natal municipali­ty in the Top 20. It is Anc-led.

In the bottom 20, nine municipali­ties are from KZN, six from the Eastern Cape, two from the North West and one from Limpopo and Mpumalanga. The majority (85%) of the bottom 20 municipali­ties are Anc-led, while three of the bottom 20 municipali­ties are Ifp-led.

According to the report, Khâi-ma in the Northern Cape has the highest number (60.7%) of people who have individual monthly incomes.

Provincial­ly, the Northern Cape ranked third out of the nine provinces. A total of 64.6% of residents in the Province have access to flushing toilets, while 87.4% have access to electricit­y and 45.7% have access to piped water.

In terms of the number of people per police station, the Northern Cape came in third in the country, while it also came third in terms of the number of people who had access to medical facilities.

The worst municipali­ty in the Province was Joe Morolong, which took 190th place in the country.

In order of worst to best, Joe Morolong was followed by Gasegonya (139th), Phokwane (125), Magareng (118), Dikgatlong (117), !Kheis (112), Kgatelopel­e (104), Tstantsaba­ne (97), Ubuntu (89), Thembelihl­e (88), Renosterbe­rg (87), Umsobomvu (56), Siyathemba (55), Kareeberg (54), Kai !Garieb (53), Gamagara (52), Emthanjeni (51), Dawid Kruiper (50), Karoo Hoogland (40), Kamiesberg (30) and Richtersve­ld (23).

Sol Plaatje Municipal spokespers­on Sello Matsie yesterday welcomed the report, adding that it had come at a time when the municipali­ty was facing serious challenges including a shortfall on its budget.

“Despite these difficulti­es, however, we have, with the support of other stakeholde­rs like National Treasury, still managed to be one of the top municipali­ties in the country. This is something we welcome and we give the community the reassuranc­e that we will continue to strive to give our best and continue to improve where necessary.”

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