Budget Speech 2003
Mr. Speaker, Fellow Councillors, Honoured Guests,
Ladies and Gentlemen.
Today we table before Council our first
multi-year budget for the years 2003 – 2004, 2004 –
2005 and 2005 – 2006. This is the third budget in
our term of office and so far, the most significant
because it has been compiled as a transformation
tool to effect a final rupture with the past and to
put us firmly on the path to realise our collective
vision of a better life for all.
The Multi-year budget stands as follows:
| |
2003-2004 |
2004-2005 |
2005-2006 |
|
Operating |
525 433 575 |
552 678 263 |
592 344 601 |
|
Capital |
138 246 198 |
81 056 335 |
91 608 000 |
|
Total |
663 679 773 |
633 734 598 |
683 952 601 |
Our budget priorities for this financial year
are:
- To give priority to the eradication of
poverty by continuing to address the basic needs
of our people especially water and sanitation in
rural areas.
- To reduce vulnerability and strengthen our
peoples livelihood strategies by extending Free
Basic Services throughout the Municipality.
- To strengthen our peoples livelihood
strategies by creating economic opportunities
through the promotion of Local Economic
Development.
- To play our part in the fight against
HIV-AIDS.
- To accelerate the transformation of our
municipal structure to focus on service
delivery, customer service, community
empowerment and local economic development.
- To work towards the normalisation of the
distorted spatial settlement patterns and the
building of safe and sustainable communities.
In pursuing these goals we shall seek to create
jobs, involve and empower our people and promote
economic development.
Mr. Speaker before we elaborate on the major
contents of the budget, we need to pause, stand back
and see where we stand in relation to where we come
from and where we want to go. When we adopted the
interim Integrated Development Plan in 2001, we put
as our Vision
“A safe, prosperous and caring Municipality,
free of poverty and inequality: promoting
participatory development and providing
sustainable quality services for a better life
for all”
This vision together with our mission was
affirmed in our Integrated Development Plan that we
adopted in August 2002.
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Implied in this vision is the fundamental
principle of the Reconstruction and Development
Programme – that development is about people and
that it is the people who must drive it. In his
budget speech in February 2002, Trevor Manuel, the
Minister of Finance pointed out that:
“ Development is not only about large scale
infrastructure projects, wide-ranging income
support or high profile health campaigns. For
many, real development happens when people’s
access to services and opportunities, within
their own communities, improves”.
As the Reconstruction and Development Programme
points out, “our people with their aspirations and
collective determination are our most important
resource… (we should) focus on our people’s most
immediate needs and (rely), in turn on their
energies to drive the process of meeting these
needs. Regardless of race or sex, or whether they
are rural or urban, rich or poor, the people of
South Africa must together shape their own future”.
Development is not about delivery of goods to a
passive citizenry. It is about active involvement
and growing empowerment.
It is these principles, which put the people at
the centre and in the driving seat of development,
that must inform our concept of poverty and of
development they must inform our planning, our
performance and our measurement of that performance.
Thus in looking back over the last two years we
should measure the distance we have travelled, not
in terms of the number of projects we have rolled
out but in terms of the number of lives we have
changed.
Over these last two years we have touched the
lives of tens of thousands of our people in rural
villages within our Municipality. We have lightened
the burden of many mothers who used to spend many
hours in the drudgery of fetching water and
collecting firewood instead of engaging in more
productive activities. We have helped to enlarge
their choices and raised their opportunities to
build sustainable livelihoods.
Mr. Speaker in our quest to translate our
political freedom into human development we have to
put the people first. We can no longer afford to
approach the development of our communities like
Father Christmas bringing toys to sleeping children.
As a developmental Municipality it is our
responsibility to mobilise, inform, educate and
empower our people to expand their livelihood assets
and capabilities… to participate in, negotiate with,
influence, control and hold accountable institutions
that affect their lives and their well being. Our
people should be the means and the end of
development.
Guided by these principles we have put community
participation and communication at the centre stage
of our activities and programmes to ensure that
these are guided and informed by the true
aspirations of our people and that they meet their
current needs.
At another level we will also be establishing a
local economic advisory committee which will be made
up of representatives of organised local business,
some individual business people and experts. The aim
of this committee will be to create consensus and to
ensure that this Municipality plays its part in
creating opportunities, attracting investments and
generating the economic growth that will assist in
eradicating poverty.
Mr. Speaker, the transformation of our society is
not an event. It is an ongoing process that will
continue long after our time. It is also a process
that will sometime accelerate and sometimes slow
down depending both on its internal motive forces
and the material conditions in which they operate.
The last two and half years have seen the most
far reaching changes happening in local government.
These changes are continuing at an accelerated rate.
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Mr. Speaker, today we are proud to report that we
have succeeded in effecting some of the most
far-reaching transformation of our Municipal
Structures to fit in with the new tasks and
challenges.
Over the past twelve months we have started the
process of dismantling the old apartheid monolith
and to infuse a new strategic focus of becoming a
people centred and responsive organisation that will
make full use of the available resources to attain
our common vision. Though this is an ongoing
process, we can say with pride that the tide has
definitely turned.
Over the last twelve months we have abolished the
old departments and replaced them with focussed
strategic business units that will operate within
integrating and coordinating Directorates. These
business units will each focus on meeting the basic
needs of our people while at the same time
contributing to economic development and empowering
our people to become active participants in
development.
In our Integrated Development Plan we have also
embraced a people centred approach that will enable
us to build on the strengths and assets of our
people to improve their opportunities to escape from
poverty. This approach will sensitise our policies,
programmes and projects to the possible impact they
may have on households and to ensure that they serve
to reduce vulnerability and strengthen our peoples
livelihood strategies.
We have also been selected as a pilot
Municipality to implement the National Treasury’s
“Local Government Budget and Finance Reform
Programme” The details of this programme are in your
Budget Report. In short this program will assist us
in bringing our financial planning, reporting and
controls in line with international practise and the
Municipal Finance Management Legislation currently
being processed by National Parliament.
The immediate challenge of these reforms is that
as from the 2003 - 2004 financial year we have to
table a multi year budget that will be guided by our
political priorities as captured in our IDP. In line
with our theme of “putting people first” the budget
also shifts attention from inputs to outcomes – from
how much we have spent and how many projects to how
may lives we have touched.
But while we introduce these changes we are also
acting in an environment over which we have little
control. Several developments at National and
Provincial level have emerged that may pose serious
challenges or open up new opportunities to better
serve our people.
EDI Restructuring
The possible impact of EDI restructuring and the
establishment of REDs is not yet fully understood.
In this financial year we have to ring-fence all
activities assets, personnel and finances that are
associated with this function. We also have to look
at the possible impact of the migration of this
function on our other business processes.
The formalisation of our position as a Water
Service Authority throughout our Municipality as
from the 1st of July 2003 may pose many challenges
in the short term but will also open up better
opportunities to serve our people better.
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The implementation of projects in the previously
neglected areas has also drawn our attention to
serious deficiencies in the way we manage the work
of consultants and the quality of the work that they
do for us. This is an area, which, if neglected, may
seriously affect our performance and undermine our
service to our communities.
Mr. Speaker, allow me to summarise the salient
features of our budget for 2003 – 2004. I shall also
attempt to sketch for this house the advantages that
we will derive from this new system of multi–year
budgeting.
Section 153 of our constitution commands us to
prioritise the basic needs of our people. Thus of
the available Capital budget of R138 246 198 we have
allocated 82% to the Key Performance Area – Basic
Needs. To Local Economic Development we will be
allocating 8% of which R5, 4m will be going towards
the development of the African Market. 1% will be
going towards the Empowerment of our communities,
which is not a capital-intensive function. 9% of our
capital budget will be going towards the
Transformation of our Municipal Structure.
The composition of this funding is made up of R30
325 020 from roll over projects which are at various
stages of implementation – R30 381 178 from external
funding such as CMIP Human Settlement Redevelopment
Programme which are mainly conditional grants and
R77 540 000 which will be funded from our own funds.
Over the next 28 days we shall allocate these
funds to the different clusters and to specific
projects in these clusters. In our next Council
meeting we shall table this report as our Budget
Service Delivery Implementation Plan.
It should also be noted that certain projects
whose implementation in the coming financial year is
uncertain have been excluded from this budget.
These are:
|
Potgietersrus Platinum Mines |
R76 000
000 |
|
Department of Local Government |
R 4
500 000 |
|
Department of Housing |
R22
790 000 |
|
DWAF |
R15
630 000 |
| |
R118
920 000 |
Because some of these projects were included in
our 2002 – 2003 budget their exclusion from the 2003
– 2004 budget has substantially reduced our total
capital budget. Another factor to note is the rapid
rise in the amount spent from R63 893 602 in 2001 –
2002 to R95 564 635, which is the estimate for 30
June 2003, this demonstrates our improving capacity
to spend and to implement. In this year we will
substantially increase this capacity and we hope to
eradicate rollovers by June 2004.
Over the coming three years we shall spread our
capital spending over the four clusters of Moletjie,
Maja-Chuene Molepo, City-Seshego and
Mankweng-Dikgale. How this will be done, will be
determined by a number of factors such as
population, growth area, economic activity, levels
of poverty etc. Above all we shall specially
prioritise those villages that do not have any
access to essential services like clean potable
water.
Mr. Speaker, as I have already pointed out we
have reached out and changed the lives of our people
in the previously neglected villages and townships.
In this financial year we shall complete the Service
Centre in Moletjie and start with the construction
of new service centres in Maja-Chuene, Molepo
cluster and Mankweng-Dikgale cluster. These Service
Centres will enable us to reach out and change the
lives of our people in these underdeveloped areas.
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In our quest to meet the basic needs of our
people, in this financial year we shall also upgrade
water, sanitation and roads in Mankweng Unit D to
the value of R8 053 000. The funds for this purpose
have been allocated to us from the Department of
Local Government and Housing. We are tarring roads
in Mankweng Unit A and we will be paving some areas
to prevent erosion and to improve the aesthetics of
the Central Business District.
The construction of a cluster sports centre in
Mankweng will start with earnestness as we have
allocated R1 000 000 for this year. This will be a
multi year project.
We shall also continue with the implementation of
water projects in Makanye, Badimong, Iraq and
Matshela-pata to the value of R4 000 000.
We are proceeding to extend the infrastructure to
deliver reliable and consistent water services in
Moletjie Central and Bloodriver Makgofe. In Sebayeng
and Dikgale we are drilling additional boreholes and
extending our services to more households.
In the next 28 days we will announce our
allocation of Capital projects in Maja, Chuene and
Molepo. But in all these clusters we are stepping up
our Gravel Road Management Programme in which we
will encourage the use of labour intensive methods
in order to create jobs for our people.
We are also continuing with our programme of
upgrading soccer and netball grounds.
Mr. Speaker, over the last five months we have
proved our capacity to deliver quality housing in
Hospital View. In a period of three months we have
completed 300 top quality RDP Houses and electrified
them. We have also serviced 1077 stands in
Doornkraal 9L and in this financial year we will be
building 750 houses there.
We have been allocated 350 rural housing units of
which 250 will be going to the Maja-Chuene cluster
under the following villages:
- Bergnek
- Sepanapudi
- Ga-Tshwene Moshate
- Ga-Maja (Moshate)
- Feke
- Matswane
- Nare Letswale
- Ga-Thiba
- Sebati
- Lekgothwane
- Ga-Makata
- Dihlophaneng
- Rampheri
- Mankgaile
- Maripathekong/Bosega
- Makubung Sehlale
|
15
15
15
15
15
15
16
16
16
16
16
16
16
16
16
16 |
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and 100 to Moletjie under the following villages:
- Ralema, Ramphele, Legodi and
Mabotja
- Ramongwana No 2
- Newlands
- Makweya
- Mapangola
- Madihorong
- Kobo
- Mabokelele/Thambo
- Moshate Ranoto Radithebela
- Mapankula
|
10
10
10
10
10
10
10
10
10
10 |
We have also been appointed by the Department of
Local Government and Housing to complete the 500
houses in Nobody Mothapo and 98 in Sebayeng. In this
year alone we shall ensure that the lives of 1700
households are changed forever.
Surely Mr. Speaker we have turned the tide. We
are building a better life for all.
When dealing with issues of poverty and economic
growth we dare not ignore the issue of our
environment and natural resources. Like the very
water that give us life, we have to ensure that in
whatever we do – we do not degrade our environment
and leave it in ruins for the coming generations. In
our IDP it is pointed out that waste poor management
and lack of sanitation contribute enormously towards
the contamination of ground water and the
degradation of the environment. Random felling of
trees for firewood and uncontrolled veld fires all
affect our environment and biodiversity.
As part of our function to ensure sustainable
communities and unspoilt environment it is our
responsibility to ensure that we limit the amount of
waste that ends up in our landfill site while also
ensuring that it is managed properly. We shall
therefore encourage the development of recycling
activities throughout our Municipality. We are also
considering forming a Public Private Partnership for
the management of the landfill site.
To deal with veld fires we have to act in
cooperation with farmers and the rural communities.
This year we shall put aside R200 000 on our capital
budget for the purchase of mobile veld fire fighting
equipment.
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Operating Budget
In the financial year 2003 – 2004 our operating
budget amounts to R525 433 575.
This being
| |
2003 – 2004 |
2002 – 2003 |
|
Personnel Expenditure |
28% |
26% |
|
Purchase of Electricity |
13% |
14% |
|
Purchase of Water |
9% |
9% |
|
Other Expenses |
23% |
26% |
|
Repair and Maintenance |
8% |
7% |
|
Interest & Redemption |
10% |
10% |
|
Contribution to Capital |
1% |
1% |
|
Contribution to Funds |
8% |
7% |
This having taken into account
|
Salary Increase |
11% |
|
Inflation rate |
11% |
|
Lepelle Water tariff increase |
4,97% |
|
Eskom Electricity tariff increase |
9% |
Mr. Speaker, these increases are all beyond our
control. To balance our budget we shall have to
effect the following tariff increases.
|
Assessment rates |
8.3% |
|
Water |
8.4% |
|
Refuse Collection |
7.4% |
|
Sewerage |
7.4% |
|
Electricity |
8.0% Effective 1Jan 2004 |
The average percentage increase will be 8%, which
is well below inflation and even below the Reserve
Banks inflation target of 9%.
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Mr. Speaker, Free Basic Services together with
various other social welfare grants, old age
pensions, disability grants, child support grants,
food security programmes, free health care, free
education and subsidised housing are all measures
adopted by our government to reduce vulnerability
and to mitigate the effects of extreme poverty.
But as the President Comrade Thabo Mbeki pointed
out in his State of the Nation Address these are
measures aimed at enabling those who fall within
this category move out of the trap poverty within
which they are caught,
“Accordingly, the government must act to
ensure that we reduce the number of people
dependant on social welfare, increasing the
numbers that rely for their livelihood on normal
participation in the economy. This is especially
relevant to the accomplishment of the goal of
enhancing the dignity of every South African”.
Basic services such as clean potable water,
electricity, sanitation, are essential not only in
reducing the vulnerability but also in enhancing the
dignity of our people. As Polokwane Municipality we
also intend to play our part.
In this financial year we shall abolish the
indigent subsidy system that has been applied in the
last four years to Seshego – City cluster. We will
replace it with a comprehensive Free Basic Services
Policy that will be applicable throughout our
Municipality.
We have put aside an amount of R6 720 839 for
this purpose. We shall also increase the amount of
subsidy per qualifying household from R87.70 per
month to R94.72.
Mr. Speaker, comrades and compatriots “Ditaba tša
budget ga di fele.” In the next 28 days we will be
allocating the capital budget according to cluster
and projects. We hope to talk again end of June.
Thank You,
TL MAKUNYANE
EXECUTIVE MAYOR
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