Mail & Guardian

Another town bites the dust

Things are so bad in Standerton that a Jse-listed company has to truck in and treat its own water

- Lynley Donnelly

If you want an example of how the country’s municipali­ties are battling to stay afloat, look no further than Lekwa municipali­ty in Mpumalanga, home to the town of Standerton. The delivery of service is so bad that companies have to treat their own water.

A prime example has been Jselisted poultry producer Astral Foods — which owns brands such as Goldi Chickens and County Fair.

In early May, Astral took the municipali­ty to court over water supply problems to its poultry processing plant in the area. The plant is the largest of its kind on the continent, processing two million chickens a week. It needs 5.5 megalitres of water a day.

But persistent problems with the water supply, which began in March after stage 4 load-shedding, meant the plant was receiving less than half of what it needed, according to Andy Crocker, the commercial managing director at Astral.

Despite a mutually agreed court order requiring the municipali­ty to supply the plant with four megalitres a day, the municipali­ty was not able to supply even this reduced amount, said Crocker.

The company secured an emergency arrangemen­t to address the situation and, with the interventi­on of national department­s, has recently been appointed as an “emergency service provider” to the municipali­ty.

The municipali­ty has ceded 3.5 megalitres of its raw water allocation from the Vaal River system to Astral for the next two years. Astral has had to install equipment to extract water from the river, which is then trucked to its plant where a filtration system has been installed.

At 120 truckloads a day, the system is unsustaina­ble in the long term, said Crocker. The water supply problems have already cost the company about R85-million.

This is not the first time Astral has been forced to take the municipali­ty on. In 2017, on the back of hundreds

of millions of rands owed to Eskom, the power utility threatened to cut off the town’s electricit­y supply.

But Astral, one of the largest rate payers in the town, appealed to the courts to prevent this. As part of the court settlement reached with Eskom, Astral was permitted to pay its electricit­y bill directly to the utility instead of to the municipali­ty — an arrangemen­t that remains in place.

After Astral threatened to go to court again last year, said Crocker, national and provincial authoritie­s and the Municipal Infrastruc­ture Support Agent (which provides technical support to local government­s) initiated plans to help the municipali­ty rectify its problems.

“Unfortunat­ely, what we are experienci­ng now is the outcome of all those efforts,” said Crocker. “They haven’t been remedied and that’s led to this situation.” The municipali­ty’s infrastruc­ture is not being maintained, it is systematic­ally deteriorat­ing and it does not have the means to address this, he said.

Last year Eskom told Parliament that Lekwa owed it almost R500millio­n. It also highlighte­d that a host of customers in other underpayin­g municipali­ties were in the process of applying to pay Eskom directly, by-passing their local government­s entirely.

But Lekwa’s debts are worse than this. The Democratic Alliance councillor for Standerton, Louis Jansen van Rensburg, said the municipali­ty revealed in a council meeting in May that Lekwa owes R819-million to Eskom and a further R270-million to the national department of water and sanitation.

Yet, according to Jansen van Rensburg, the municipali­ty provided its mayor, Lindokuhle Dhlamini, with a new car, allegedly a BMW costing about R700000. This happened despite a series of service delivery failings in the town. From complaints of raw sewage leaking into the Vaal River — heard late last year by the Human Rights Commission — to refuse being dumped illegally because the municipal site is not functionin­g, which resulted in the DA launching criminal charges against the mayor and the town’s municipal manager, Lekwa made headlines for all the wrong reasons.

Jansen van Rensburg said the town’s rate payers are so fed up that they have hired a private investigat­or to search for answers.

Lekwa is a microcosm of the wider problems reflected in the treasury’s quarterly report on local government revenue and expenditur­e trends.

The most recent report — which covers the third quarter of the municipal financial year, ending on March 31 — revealed that municipali­ties are under strain. On aggregate, they owe their creditors almost R51-billion, the bulk of which is overdue. This is up more than R10-billion from the same period last year.

The treasury said this is a sign that municipali­ties could be experienci­ng liquidity and cash problems, so they are delaying the settlement of their outstandin­g debts. A big part of the finance problem is the fact that municipali­ties are owed almost R163-billion — with R133.5-billion of that older than 90 days. Almost 74% of the outstandin­g money is owed by households.

Municipali­ties are also struggling to collect on the services they bill customers for. Their target is a collection rate of 95% but the majority of the country’s 257 municipali­ties are not meeting this. About 45 municipali­ties are collecting less than 50% of their billing, while a further 24 municipali­ties’ collection rates are undetermin­ed, according to the treasury.

On Wednesday, auditor general Kimi Makwetu revealed in his latest assessment of municipal audit results that, if anything, accountabi­lity has worsened.

Only 18 of the country’s municipali­ties received clean audits, levels of noncomplia­nce with legislatio­n are at their highest since 2011-2012 and there was irregular expenditur­e of almost R25.2-billion. Yet there “were largely no consequenc­es for those who flouted existing legislatio­n”, Makwetu said.

A total of 74% of municipali­ties did not properly follow up on allegation­s of financial and supply chain management misconduct and fraud, Makwetu added.

 ??  ?? Keep on trucking: This mobile filtration plant at Astral’s Goldi factory processes 3.5 megalitres of water a day. Photo: Supplied/astral Foods
Keep on trucking: This mobile filtration plant at Astral’s Goldi factory processes 3.5 megalitres of water a day. Photo: Supplied/astral Foods

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