Msunduzi Local Municipality has come under the spotlight after the Auditor-General South Africa presented the local government audit outcomes of the Municipal Financial Management Act (MFMA) to the KZN Legislature-Standing Committee on Public Accounts (SCOPA) and the Portfolio Committee on Cooperative Governance and Traditional Affairs (Cogta).
Image: Doctor Ngcobo Independent Newspapers
The Auditor General of South Africa (AGSA) found several problems with projects in KwaZulu-Natal municipalities more especially the Msunduzi Municipality.
The AGSA looked at 15 infrastructure projects in the eThekwini, Msunduzi, uMhlathuze, KwaDukuza, Okhahlamba and uMkhanyakude municipalities. The AGSA said there were five new projects and 10 projects where they did follow-ups on the prior year findings and continued auditing the project as part of its life cycle.
Nomalungelo Mkhize, AGSA Business Unit Leader in KZN, presented the local government audit outcomes of the Municipal Financial Management Act (MFMA) to the KZN Legislature-Standing Committee on Public Accounts (SCOPA) and the Portfolio Committee on Cooperative Governance and Traditional Affairs (Cogta) on Tuesday.
In the Msunduzi Municipality (MM), the AGSA found:
Anthony Waldhausen, chairperson of the Msunduzi Association of Residents,Ratepayers and Civics (MARRC) said they noted the AGSA report and they were aghast at the material irregularities at the revenue not billed at the landfill site.
Waldhausen said many residents complained about the situation at the landfill site and how they experienced delays to enter the landfill site. He said most left their refuse outside the landfill site out of frustration.
“It is the norm at the municipality where most of the municipal equipment and vehicles are never repaired and maintained. This shows that the municipality is completely dysfunctional. The other irregularities reported was that of salary paid to a manager that never reported for duty for five years. This is a dereliction of duty by the municipal manager to not address irregularity in time. This is gross negligence and poor consequence management against the manager,” Waldhausen said.
Waldhausen said every effort of intervention to improve the situation at the municipality is not working.
“Municipal staff are unprofessional and unethical and this behaviour needs to urgently be addressed by the current acting municipal manager. They should recover the money for the past five years even if it means attaching the manager's pension. We as residents cannot continue to pay for poor service delivery and unethical municipal staff,” Waldhausen said.
zainul.dawood@inl.co.za
Anthony Waldhausen is co-founder and chairperson for the Msunduzi Association of Residents, Ratepayers and Civics (MARRC).
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