Mail & Guardian

KZN officials cash in on ‘danger pay’

Leadership failures at Umdoni local municipali­ty in Kwazulu-natal have caused a ‘very unhappy’ ANC PEC to fire the mayor and chief whip

- Des Erasmus

The ANC in Kwazulu-natal has axed Umdoni mayor Thabani Dube and the municipali­ty’s chief whip, Bonginkosi Mngadi, after it discovered that officials claimed “danger pay” for working during the country’s hard lockdown. This occurred under the duo’s watch and they had not been held accountabl­e for their actions, until now.

The municipali­ty is currently in the midst of a rates dispute with a residents’ group, which is refusing payment until adequate service delivery and infrastruc­ture maintenanc­e takes place.

The party’s provincial secretary, Mdumiseni Ntuli, told a press briefing on Tuesday that the decision was taken after an extended provincial executive committee (PEC) meeting, which ended on Monday.

The decision would ensure improved service delivery and “ensure cohesion within and among ANC councillor­s”, he said. Umdoni had been on the agenda of the party’s PEC “almost every three months since we were elected”, he added.

The problems at the municipali­ty — a divided caucus and subsequent­ly dire service-delivery shortfalls — were compoundin­g, he said, and had not improved since 2018.

Earlier this month, the provincial department of co-operative governance and traditiona­l affairs told parliament’s standing committee on public accounts that although it was aware of investigat­ions being conducted at the municipali­ty concerning the possible theft of funds and various supply-chain-management issues, the municipali­ty failed to inform the department who was conducting the investigat­ion, who was implicated, and the time period being investigat­ed.

Ntuli said that because of blatantly poor leadership at Umdoni, service delivery had regressed. Additional­ly, he said, “the level of competitio­n among our councillor­s, and the lack of direction from the political head of the institutio­n, who has a responsibi­lity to provide strategic leadership, both to the council and the administra­tion, has been a problem.”

The “embodiment” of the problems could be found in chief whip Mngadi and mayor Dube, he said, who were not delivering on certain expectatio­ns attached to their offices.

An example of the leadership failures related to management claiming danger pay during the hard lockdown, “which we were very, very unhappy with”.

“They paid without it being regulated by a policy of the municipali­ty, let alone a decision of the council. So, we said to the leadership there: How did this happen under your watch? And when we raised our concerns, those who had received the danger pay started paying back the money, which means they knew from the time they were doing the thing that it was absolutely wrong, it was illegal, [and] it should not have happened.”

When provincial ANC leaders told the council that action had to be taken on the matter and evidence was provided that wrongdoing had indeed taken place, nothing substantiv­e was done, he said.

“Their explanatio­ns were not convincing. And that is when we said [that] if you can’t supervise your subordinat­es, [the PEC] has a responsibi­lity to supervise you. And when you are not able to act in accordance with the law and the mandate of your own organisati­on against clear wrongdoing in the municipali­ty, we then have to act on you.”

He said officials at the municipali­ty were “violating the law with impunity” because no one was willing to hold them accountabl­e.

In 2019, the auditor general flagged price-gouging in several multimilli­on-rand contracts at Umdoni. The auditor general recommende­d disciplina­ry action be taken against a clutch of senior officials, including the former municipal manager, Xolani Luthuli.

The level of chaos within the municipali­ty has been compounded by the Covid-19 lockdown having a detrimenta­l effect on the region’s usually year-round tourism industry, with a group of property owners now refusing to pay their property rates.

As of 25 May 2020, residents from across the municipali­ty began withholdin­g their rates in a formal dispute, as permitted by the Municipal Systems Act.

Residents in Scottburgh, Pennington, Park Rynie, and from Sezela to Mtwalume and Umzinto created the Umdoni Action Group and officially lodged disputes with the municipali­ty while embarking on a rates diversion/retention initiative, commonly referred to as a “rates revolt”.

The group stated in its dispute that “year after year” the municipali­ty had failed in its “legislated duty to provide adequate services and to maintain municipal infrastruc­ture”.

According to the treasury data, Umdoni’s allocation towards repairs and maintenanc­e as a percentage of the value of its property, plant and equipment, was a paltry 1.7% in 2019, 5.1% in 2018, 3.1% in 2017 and 1.8% in 2016. The norm, as set by the treasury, is 8%.

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 ?? Photo (above): Delwyn Verasamy ?? Compounded chaos: Umdoni residents have been protesting for weeks about service delivery. Mayor Thabani Dube (below) has been axed for corruption that occurred on his watch.
Photo (above): Delwyn Verasamy Compounded chaos: Umdoni residents have been protesting for weeks about service delivery. Mayor Thabani Dube (below) has been axed for corruption that occurred on his watch.

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