Business Weekly (Zimbabwe)

SA Treasury tackles creeping culture of municipal non-payment

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NATIONAL Treasury’s plan to provide debt relief to overstretc­hed municipali­ties should hit two targets at once by reducing debt at local government level and Eskom.

Treasury outlined its new debt relief measures for 165 of the 257 municipali­ties that technicall­y qualify for relief at a media presentati­on on Wednesday.

Municipali­ties owe Eskom R56 billion, but the debt relief measures should reduce this and assist in beating back the culture of non-payment that has reduced collection­s in some parts of the country to as low as 17% of what is owed.

To qualify, municipali­ties must formally apply for relief and comply with 14 conditions imposed by National Treasury.

They will also be subject to monthly monitoring. Among the conditions for relief is a requiremen­t for municipali­ties to adopt new mechanisms to deal with non-payment of electricit­y bills.

Those that fail to comply could have their National Energy Regulator of South Africa (Nersa) licences revoked.

Another condition is that smart prepaid meters be installed by Eskom and municipali­ties to reduce the incidence of non-payment.

New initiative­s aimed at improving revenues include proper setting of tariffs that reflect the costs of delivering services, prepayment of services to increase upfront revenues, and measures to address variances between billing systems and the General Valuation Roll.

Municipali­ties seeking debt relief must update their databases of indigent customers and adopt funded budgets.

Those that meet the 14 conditions imposed by National Treasury, and maintain compliance over the succeeding 12 months, will qualify to have one third of their debt as at 31 March 2023 written off.

This will also have the effect of freezing any legal action being brought by Eskom against the defaulting municipali­ty. A further one third of debt will be written off if the municipali­ty remains compliant over the next financial year, with the final one third of outstandin­g debt being written off after the third year.

This follows recently announced measures by government to provide debt relief to Eskom. Some of these measures impact Eskom’s provision of electricit­y to the municipal sector.

Municipali­ties that choose not to opt for debt relief will have to start repaying arrears, interest and penalties to Eskom, and will no longer be exempt from legal efforts by Eskom to recover outstandin­g debt.

National Treasury’s local government budget analysis director Sadesh Ramjathan says the intention is to improve municipali­ties’ financial behaviour and reward those that remain compliant. This, in turn, should yield an improvemen­t in consumer behaviour and reduce the incidence of non-payment.

Once submitting to the debt relief measures, municipali­ties will have to maintain their current accounts with Eskom and settle invoices within 30 days of delivery. Proof of payment must be sent to National Treasury and Eskom.

Budgets will have to be funded and reflect realistic funding strategies and seasonal trends. Those that are not funded must be accompanie­d by a credible plan to rectify this.

One of the steps being taken to avoid misspendin­g by municipali­ties is to use water and electricit­y as collection tools.

Any customer partial payments must be applied first to property rates, then to water, waste water, refuse removal, and lastly to electricit­y. This allows the municipali­ty to improve collection­s by giving it the power to cut or restrict water and electricit­y supply.

Municipali­ties must achieve an invoice collection rate of 80% from 1 April 2023, increasing to 85% and 95% in the following two years. All new electricit­y connection­s must be smart prepaid meters, and no consumer debt can be written off without the installati­on of one of these new meters.

Provincial treasury department­s must explain any non-compliance by a municipali­ty along with measures to restore compliance. Without a Provincial Treasury compliance certificat­e, the municipali­ty can no longer benefit from debt relief and must reapply.

The danger for non-compliant municipali­ties is that if they do not rectify the situation within one month, they risk legal action by Eskom and the potential write-off of onethird of their arrears debt.

Municipali­ties are also required to ringfence water, electricit­y and sanitation revenue in a sub-account that must be used to pay Eskom first, followed by bulk water supplies. This is designed to prevent delinquent municipali­ties spending customers’ electricit­y and water payments on other expenditur­e items – a problem that has been the subject of court challenges against local government­s in the past.

Municipal debt relief will also fall under the instructio­n of the Office of the Account

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