Sowetan

Nomvula cracks the whip

Minister warns defaulting towns to pay up or else ...

- By Sabelo Ndlangisa

Residents of municipali­ties that have defaulted on their water debt payments to government and water boards face a bleak Christmas.

Water and Sanitation Minister Nomvula Mokonyane yesterday threatened to restrict bulk water supply to affected municipali­ties.

She had given them until next week Friday to enter into agreements to start servicing the R10.7-billion debt.

About R4-billion is owed to the department’s Water Trading Entity (WTE) and the rest to water boards.

Only OR Tambo municipali­ty in Mthatha has honoured its agreement to service its debt, Mokonyane said.

She said she would ask the National Treasury to withhold the equitable share of national revenue belonging to 30 municipali­ties that owe over R50million each, and whose debt is older than six months.

“Section 59 (3) (b) of the National Water Act allows the department to restrict or suspend the flow of water to defaulting municipali­ties.

“We have as Friday, November 24 2017, communicat­ed with all the affected municipali­ties, notifying them of our decisions in this regard, consequent to their failure to pay,” she said.

Mokonyane, however, said they would avoid hurting consumers when they restrict water supply to affected municipali­ties. SA Local Government Associatio­n’s executive for municipal infrastruc­ture, Jean de la Harpe warned that it was unconstitu­tional to restrict water supply, saying the department has an obligation to consult consumers who are affected by this.

“I don’t believe that the solution they have come to is going to address the real problem that people are not paying.

“It’s going to cause public health problems and affect end users, both those who paid and those who are entitled to basic water. I believe we need to seek other solutions,” she said, adding that SA’s 257 municipali­ties were owed R130billio­n for services.

Mokonyane promised to “throttle” the water supply – instead of shutting it down altogether –“because of the constituti­onal rights of every citizen” to water. The WTE is under financial strain. Auditor-General Kimi Makwetu’s audit report shows that the entity is R3.6-billion in the red and has taken a R2.1-billion overdraft in violation of National Treasury regulation­s.

Lulu Johnson, water and sanitation portfolio committee chairman, said he had called on Mokonyane, Finance Minister Malusi Gigaba and Cooperativ­e Governance Minister Des van Rooyen to discuss the water debt crisis next Wednesday.

Johnson expressed concern that the department had appointed a single debt collector “for such a whopping debt book”, and said he would like to know what was being done to collect the debt owed by some of the major parastatal­s.

The DA spokesman on cooperativ­e governance and traditiona­l affairs, Kevin Mileham, said the “water debacle” would not have happened if government had put proper checks and balances in place.

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 ?? / VELI NHLAPO ?? Water and Sanitation Minister Nomvula Mokonyane wants councils to pay for their bulk water supply.
/ VELI NHLAPO Water and Sanitation Minister Nomvula Mokonyane wants councils to pay for their bulk water supply.

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