uMzinyathi

DEAR-SOUTH-AfFRICA

uMzinyathi District municipality (Endumeni, Nquthu, uMsinga, Umvoti) calls for public comment on proposed tariff increases, the draft budget and IDP

    • Proposed increases are available in the summary below

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    In this district, the uMzinyathi District Municipality serves as the Water Services Authority (WSA), meaning it sets the water and sanitation rates for all four local municipalities: Endumeni, Nquthu, Msinga, and Umvoti.

    THE INCREASES ARE AS FOLLOWS

    Staff salaries 4.75%

    Electricity (Domestic) ⚡ Property Rates 🏠 Refuse 🗑️ Water & San (WSA: District) 💧
    Endumeni (Dundee) 13.7% 🚩 3.4% 2.13% ~5.5% – 7.0%
    Umvoti (Greytown) 9.01% 3.7% 3.7% ~5.5% – 7.0%
    Nquthu 9.01% ~4.5% ~4.5% ~5.5% – 7.0%
    Msinga 9.01% ~4.5% ~4.5% ~5.5% – 7.0%
    Staff Salary Increase 4.75% 4.75% 4.75% 4.75%
      • The Endumeni Electricity Shock (13.7%): Endumeni is the district’s “Red Flag” this year. The proposed 13.7% electricity hike is nearly triple the staff salary benchmark of 4.75%. The municipality cites high levels of electricity theft (costing over R58 million recently) and aging infrastructure as the reason for this aggressive markup. 🔌
      • Umvoti’s CPI Discipline: Umvoti is showing significant discipline by pegging property rates at 3.7%, which is below the salary benchmark. This suggests they are attempting to cushion residents from the impact of utility costs. 📉
      • The District Water Disconnect: As the WSA, the District is proposing water hikes in the 5.5% to 7.0% range. In rural areas like Msinga and Nquthu, where service delivery is often intermittent, paying a hike that exceeds the 4.75% salary growth is a major point for public objection. 🚰
      • Revenue Collection Pressure: Municipalities like Nquthu and Msinga are heavily grant-dependent. Their “low” rates (approx. 4.5%) are a tactical choice, as hiking them further could lead to even lower collection rates in communities already struggling with affordability. 💸

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