The minister of Cooperative Governance and Traditional Affairs, Dr Zweli Mkhize says his ministry has taken a decision to step in and support dysfunctional municipalities in a bid to improve service delivery.
Speaking at a media briefing at the Imbizo Centre recently Mkhize highlighted that his ministry, through its implementing agent the Municipal Infrastructure Support Grant, had decided to intervene extensively and urgently in dysfunctional municipalities and those in distress, in relation to the development and maintenance of infrastructure. The Minister said despite government’s successful infrastructure delivery programme over the past 20 years, accompanied by technical capacity building initiatives over the years, municipalities still struggle to use the funds allocated to them. He said based on the department’s assessments and reports, the performance of a majority of all municipalities was still lagging. Seven percent of the country’s municipalities are classified as well functioning. About 31% are reasonably functional, while some 31% are almost dysfunctional. The remaining 31% are dysfunctional, Minister Mkhize said.Various constraints impeding municipal spend
Since 2012/13, a total of R3.4 billion in Municipal Infrastructure Grant (MIG) transfers was stopped and was reallocated from underspending municipalities to better spending municipalities. Minister Mkhize said this was not ideal, as it had an inadvertent consequence of penalising municipalities with a lower capacity, which “punishes” poorer communities. “This cannot continue. Alternatives must be found to support service delivery to poorer communities.”The Minister said over the same period, municipalities failed to spend a total of R8.2 billion. Between 2013/14 and the current financial year, a total of 55 municipalities had their annual MIG allocations stopped at least twice.
The Minister said that an analysis conducted revealed that these municipalities have various inherent constraints that impede spending.