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Here are the best and worst municipalities

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A new municipal survey highlights the need to fast-track service delivery in impoverished areas

It’s west versus east in the battle for the country’s best places to live, and the west is winning.

The Government Performance Index, compiled by research and advocacy group Good Governance Africa (GGA), has found that nine out of the top 10 municipalities in the country are in the Western Cape, and nine out of the 10 worst are in the Eastern Cape and KwaZulu-Natal.

The index has ranked all of the country’s 234 local and metropolitan municipalities according to 15 different criteria across three spheres of performance: administration, economic development and service delivery.

GGA used information included in the 2011 Census, as well as other data from Statistics SA, National Treasury, Gaffney’s Local Government Yearbook (2013-2015), Auditor-General reports and the extended public works programme.

Service delivery was most heavily weighted, with eight indicators including access to piped water, electricity, sanitation, regular refuse removal, formal housing, health facilities, police coverage and access to quality education measured by how many residents had completed their matric.

Municipal capacity, financial soundness and compliance were included in the ranking, as were economic development indicators such as poverty, income, work opportunities and the area’s unemployment rate.

The study found municipalities in the Western Cape were the country’s best run and their residents enjoyed better services and economic opportunities than elsewhere in South Africa.

Almost all residents, or 98.8%, living in the top 20 municipalities, 15 of which are in the Western Cape, have access to piped water.

Most of the residents in those areas enjoy electricity supply to their homes (91.8%), refuse removal (79.8%) and proper sanitation.

In contrast, in the bottom 20 municipalities an average of only 56.9% of residents have access to piped water, 55% have electricity, and 5.5% of households have their refuse removed.

In the country’s top-ranked municipality – Swellendam, Western Cape – 98.5% of residents have access to piped water, while only 15.1% have it in lowest-ranked Mbizana, Eastern Cape.

GGA executive director Dr Alain Tschudin said: “DA municipalities generally performed well across all three performance clusters. With regard to service delivery, the DA’s highlights include refuse removal, water, sanitation and provision of electricity. In administration, its highlights are municipal capacity and financial soundness.

“In economic development, the DA did well in terms of the poverty and unemployment indicators,” he said.

The DA governs 17 municipalities, 15 of which are in the Western Cape. After Swellendam, Hessequa and Bergrivier occupy second and third place.

The ANC-led municipalities, the GGA found, performed well in administration but underperformed on service delivery and economic development indicators.

There are eight ANC-run municipalities in the top 20, four of which – Cape Agulhas, Beaufort West, Prince Albert and Matzikama – are situated in the Western Cape.

In the Northern Cape, the ANC has two municipalities in the top category: Emthanjeni and Richtersveld.

In the Free State, the ANC-led Metsimaholo and Dihlabeng also fall in the top 20 group.

Of the bottom 20 municipalities, 12 are in the Eastern Cape and six in KwaZulu-Natal.

ANC-led municipalities scored well in key areas. “While the underperformance of the ANC-led municipalities on service delivery and economic development indicators may seem to be the plausibly emerging pattern, we noted some exceptions,” Tschudin said.

“One such exception relates to education, where the results show a strong performance in Mpumalanga. This is demonstrated by two of its municipalities, Mbombela and Steve Tshwete, featuring in the top 10 national municipalities for that indicator.”

Limpopo and Free State municipalities, said Tschudin, performed well on the housing indicator. Sixteen out of 25 Limpopo municipalities scored high on the housing indicator, while only three out of 20 municipalities in the Free State failed to score top marks for this criterion.

In the North-West province, the City of Matlosana is the top municipality with its best scores being for sanitation and refuse removal. Tlokwe municipality performed well on sanitation and was ranked ninth in the country.

The GGA report, however, says the lowest-ranked municipalities were located in the former Bantustans formed by the apartheid government.

These governments were riddled with corruption and intentionally did not bring development to these areas.

“Taken as a whole,” Tschudin said, “our GGA rankings communicate the urgency with which resources need to be invested in service delivery in the lower-ranked municipalities, as our nationally representative governance survey report confirms.

“Perhaps equally important is to ensure that social and economic development are fast-tracked, particularly in impoverished and underdeveloped areas.”

46%

were disillusioned with government’s accountability to the public

14.3%

said government was completely accountable

21.6%

believed government represented the interest of a small political class only

50%

aged between 45 and 54 were ‘radically disillusioned’ about government accountability, as were 40% of black respondents across all age groups

The report and the index will be released tomorrow at Constitution Hill

Good Governance Africa conducted another survey called What the people really think, focusing on South Africans’ thoughts on accountability in government. More than 2 245 people throughout the country, across age and race groups, participated in August and September last year. Its findings include the following:

24.3%

agreed that government was even less accountable and sensitive to people’s needs than the apartheid government

39.7%

of respondents said government was partially accountable

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