The Gauteng Executive Council has placed the City of Tshwane under provincial administration following current uncertainty and instability within the municipality.
Making the announcement on Thursday, Gauteng Premier David Makhura said the decision to take responsibility of all the executive powers of the City of Tshwane council was taken after an assessment, which showed that the city is substantially failing to comply with the directives issued, and the situation is getting worse by the day. “Over the past seven months, the Gauteng Provincial Government has been engaging with all municipalities proactively on matters pertaining to sustainable service delivery, good governance, sound financial management and institutional stability. “The City of Tshwane has been deteriorating rapidly and is evidently on the decline. Residents are suffering, while political parties are fighting in council and in the courts,” Makhura said. He said that the Gauteng Executive Council met on Wednesday afternoon to assess the developments in the City of Tshwane, and decided to invoke section 139(1)(c) of the Constitution.“This means that the Tshwane Municipal Council is dissolved and an administrator will be appointed to run the municipality until a new council is elected within 90 days,” the Premier said.
Ongoing mismanagement of the city include:- Flagrant disregard for the Municipal Finance Management Act (MFMA), especially regarding procurement processes, which has eroded good governance in the city, as can be evidenced by the tenders irregularly awarded to Glad Africa and Aurecon.
- Unauthorised, irregular, fruitless and wasteful expenditure flagged by the Auditor General. The city has been slow in effectively applying consequence management to deal with matters raised by the Auditor General.
- Failure to spend conditional grants, leading to loss of money to National Treasury. At the same time, in terms of its financial position, the city is facing serious challenges, given its current inability to pay all its creditors and the serious problems it is experiencing in terms of revenue collection.
- Constant irregular appointments of senior managers. For example, Cooperative Governance and Traditional Affairs (Cogta) received the appointment report of the municipal manager and various managers directly accountable to the municipal manager between January and September 2017. The department found some areas to be non-compliant with Regulation 17(4) of the Local Government Regulations on Appointment and Conditions of Employment of Senior Managers (2014).
- Since 2016, the city has failed to elect ward committees that allow citizens to get involved in how their communities are governed. This conduct is against the Municipal Structures Act, 1998.
- Supply of clean drinking water is severely compromised and refuse collection is at its worst.