The Citizen (Gauteng)

Municipal audit outcomes worsen

MAKWETU: THEY’VE FAILED TO HEED ADVICE FOR YEARS

- Antoinette Slabbert Moneyweb

Public Audit Act amendments giving more teeth to AG will be in force soon.

Amendments to the Public Audit Act to give the auditor-general (AG) more teeth would be presented to parliament within days, Vincent Smith, chairperso­n of the standing committee on the auditor-general, said yesterday.

He was speaking at the release of the consolidat­ed audit outcomes for municipali­ties for 2016-17 by auditor-general Kimi Makwetu. Makwetu expressed frustratio­n with the majority of municipali­ties which had not heeded the “constant and insistent advice and caution” of his office and as a result showed a deteriorat­ion in audit outcomes.

The number of municipali­ties with clean audits dropped from 48 in 2015-16 to 33. A total of 112 received unqualifie­d audit reports with findings, up from 108 in the previous year. Qualified audit outcomes increased from 60 to 66 and four municipali­ties got an adverse report with findings. The number of disclaimer­s increased from 21 to 24 and the results of 18 municipali­ties were outstandin­g against none the previous year.

Irregular expenditur­e (unlawful) increased 75% from R16.2 billion to R28.3 billion. Of this, R15 billion related to irregular expenditur­e from previous periods only detected in 2016-17. The balance of R13.3 billion related to expenses paid in 2016-17. Fruitless and wasteful expenditur­e (no value to the municipali­ty) increased to R1.5 billion and unauthoris­ed expenditur­e (not budgeted for) dropped by 9% to R12.6 billion.

Makwetu said he had pointed to a lack of leadership to address accountabi­lity, by ensuring consequenc­es for those who flouted processes in 2011-12. He also highlighte­d weaknesses in internal control, provided root causes for poor audit outcomes and made recommenda­tions to rectify it.

“Five years later we are still faced with the same accountabi­lity and governance challenges we flagged throughout these years. There has been no significan­t positive change towards credible results; instead there is a reversal in audit outcomes,” he said.

Smith said the amendments to the Public Audit Act would be presented to parliament within days. He said parliament should adopt the amendments before the

end of the current term at the end of June and it would be in force as soon as the president signed it.

The amendments would provide for powers for the AG to refer material irregulari­ties to independen­t agencies like the police, the Hawks and the Public Protector. On the basis of their findings, the AG would have the power to issue a “Certificat­e of Debt” to the municipali­ty or entity obliging it to collect money lost due to irregulari­ties. The municipali­ty has to report annually on these collection­s.

Top contributo­rs to irregular expenditur­e were the Nelson Mandel Bay Metro at R8.1 billion, the OR Tambo district at R3 billion and Tshwane was third with R1.8 billion irregular expenditur­e relating to its smart metering, wi-fi and fleet management contracts. Makwetu said the irregular expenditur­e in metros increased significan­tly, mostly due to uncovering sins from the past. The financial health of half of the eight metros was stable, but he was concerned about Johannesbu­rg, Tshwane and Nelson Mandela Bay and Mangaung.

 ?? Picture: Reuters ?? Surfer Gary Clisby rides his foil board on a small swell of the coast of Del Mar, California, in the US recently.
Picture: Reuters Surfer Gary Clisby rides his foil board on a small swell of the coast of Del Mar, California, in the US recently.

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