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Louise Muller President IMFO South Africa Legislation and Regulatory Requirements of Municipal and Utility Entities

Louise Muller President IMFO South Africa Legislation and Regulatory Requirements of Municipal and Utility Entities

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Page 1: Louise Muller President IMFO South Africa Legislation and Regulatory Requirements of Municipal and Utility Entities

Louise MullerPresident

IMFOSouth Africa

Legislation and Regulatory

Requirements of Municipal and Utility

Entities

Page 2: Louise Muller President IMFO South Africa Legislation and Regulatory Requirements of Municipal and Utility Entities

Presentation outline

Guiding Legislation in South Africa National Government Principles Oversight Responsibilities Role of the Regulator and Regulatory

Responsibilities Establishing a Municipal Entity in South Africa Essential Facets of Good Governance

Page 3: Louise Muller President IMFO South Africa Legislation and Regulatory Requirements of Municipal and Utility Entities

Guiding Legislation

Supreme Legislation - The Constitution Companies Act National Government Legislation - PFMA Suite of Local Government Legislation – MStrucA;

MSA, MFMA, MPRA, MFPFA, etc Sector Legislation – Water, Electricity, etc King III – Good governance principles GOAL: Sound & sustainable management of

available resources

Page 4: Louise Muller President IMFO South Africa Legislation and Regulatory Requirements of Municipal and Utility Entities

National Government Principles

Enabling legislation – Legislature grants authority to take certain actions. For example, enabling acts often establish government agencies to carry out specific government policies

Integrated development planning (IDP) – Municipal strategic planning strong emphasis on community participation, planning to be development orientated and in the spirit of co-operative government

Corporate performance management system

Page 5: Louise Muller President IMFO South Africa Legislation and Regulatory Requirements of Municipal and Utility Entities

National Government Principles (2)

“Batho Pele” (“People First”) -“We belong, we care, we serve” - defines service delivery ethos with principles of:ConsultationKnown service standardsRedress where these are not metEqual accessCourtesyInformationOpenness and transparencyValue for money

Page 6: Louise Muller President IMFO South Africa Legislation and Regulatory Requirements of Municipal and Utility Entities

Oversight Responsibilities

Department of Cooperative Government & Traditional Affairs have overarching responsibility of strengthening cooperative governance

Water Affairs, Mineral Resources, Energy, Transport and Human Settlements have a direct role in monitoring sector-specific outcomes & service delivery

Regulatory Roles – NERSA, Water Boards, etc.

Page 7: Louise Muller President IMFO South Africa Legislation and Regulatory Requirements of Municipal and Utility Entities

Oversight Responsibilities (2)

Section 139 of Constitution provides for provincial government intervention in local government when needed to: Maintain national security Maintain economic unity Maintain essential national standards Prevent a municipality from taking unreasonable action

that could be prejudicial to the interests of the other province or municipality

Maintain minimum standards required for rendering services

Page 8: Louise Muller President IMFO South Africa Legislation and Regulatory Requirements of Municipal and Utility Entities

Oversight Responsibilities (3)

Often there are: sector-specific regulators, general regulators (such as competition authorities), and special agencies or ministries

charged with specific tasks that all share common duties.

Page 9: Louise Muller President IMFO South Africa Legislation and Regulatory Requirements of Municipal and Utility Entities

Role of the Regulator

Regulator mandate established in Constitution Responsibilities clarified in national legislation- e.g

Welcome to the National Energy Regulator of South AfricaThe National Energy Regulator (NERSA) is a regulatory authority established as a juristic person in terms of Section 3 of the National Energy Regulator Act, 2004 (Act No. 40 of 2004). NERSA’s mandate is to regulate the Electricity, Piped-Gas and Petroleum Pipeline industries in terms of the Electricity Regulation Act, 2006 (Act No. 4 of 2006), Gas Act, 2001 (Act No. 48 of 2001) and Petroleum Pipelines Act, 2003 (Act No. 60 of 2003). The structure of the Energy Regulator consists of nine members, five of whom are part-time and four are full-time, including the CEO. The Energy Regulator is supported by a secretariat under the direction of the CEO. http://www.nersa.org.za/

Page 10: Louise Muller President IMFO South Africa Legislation and Regulatory Requirements of Municipal and Utility Entities

Regulatory Responsibilities

Total freedom sometimes leads to unfair business practices, cartelization and so on – especially where there is a single supplier/ monopoly.

A balance has to be struck – referee between players.

A Regulator is set up by the government to ensure that the ordinary citizen gets desired services at a reasonable cost.

Page 11: Louise Muller President IMFO South Africa Legislation and Regulatory Requirements of Municipal and Utility Entities

Regulatory Responsibilities (2)

Regulators, guided by the policy of the government, must obtain the views of all the stakeholders; work within the framework of the law, should not be hampered by government interference and should not be manipulated by powerful private enterprises.

The Regulator would then establish: Reasonable return on investment and Roll-out needs or continuous development of the

infrastructure to meet future needs when The pricing policy and service standards are set.

Page 12: Louise Muller President IMFO South Africa Legislation and Regulatory Requirements of Municipal and Utility Entities

Regulatory Responsibilities (3)

May conclude that, when diligently and correctly carried out, the Role of the Regulator is essential to ensure:Supply reliability Continuous investments Reasonable pricing Proper market behaviourMaintenance of service standards, etc

Page 13: Louise Muller President IMFO South Africa Legislation and Regulatory Requirements of Municipal and Utility Entities

Establishing a Municipal Entity in South Africa

When considering the establishment of, or participation in, a municipal entity, a municipality must first assess:Direct and indirect costs and benefits associated if the service is provided through an internal mechanism taking into consideration the expected effect on environment, human health, well-being and safety;Municipal organisational administrative and human capacity and potential future capacity to furnish skills, expertise and resources;Impact on development, job creation and employment patterns and views of organised labour.

Page 14: Louise Muller President IMFO South Africa Legislation and Regulatory Requirements of Municipal and Utility Entities

Establishing a Municipal Entity in South Africa (2)

If the Council decides that an external mechanism then:Notify the community of intentions;Assess all the options before – just also considering the capacity of prospective service providers to furnish the skills, expertise and resources; andConduct a feasibility study including:

Clear identification of the service to be rendered; Timeframe envisaged for the provision of the service(s); Outputs to be achieved;

Page 15: Louise Muller President IMFO South Africa Legislation and Regulatory Requirements of Municipal and Utility Entities

Establishing a Municipal Entity in South Africa (3)

Assessment on how this will provide Value for money; Address the needs of the poor; Be affordable for the municipality and the residents; Transfer appropriate technical, operational and financial risk.

Projected impact on municipal staff, assets and liabilities Projected impact on the municipal Integrated

Development Plan (IDP); Projected impact on budget including revenue impact,

expenditure, borrowing, debt and tariffs.

Council then determines if an external mechanism should be further considered.

Page 16: Louise Muller President IMFO South Africa Legislation and Regulatory Requirements of Municipal and Utility Entities

Establishing a Municipal Entity in South Africa (4)

When considering the establishment of, or participation in, a municipal entity, a municipality must first:determine precisely the function or service that such entity would perform on behalf of the municipality; and make an assessment of the impact of the shifting of that function or service to the entity on the municipality's staff, assets and liabilities, including an assessment of:

the number of staff of the municipality to be transferred to the entity;

the number of staff of the municipality that would become redundant because of the shifting of that function or service;

Page 17: Louise Muller President IMFO South Africa Legislation and Regulatory Requirements of Municipal and Utility Entities

Establishing a Municipal Entity in South Africa (5)

the cost to the municipality of any staff retrenchments or the retention of redundant staff;

any assets of the municipality to be transferred to the entity; any assets of the municipality that would become obsolete

because of the shifting of that function or service; any liabilities of the municipality to be ceded to the entity;

and any debt of the municipality attributed to that function or

service which the municipality would retain.

» Section 78 of Municipal Systems Act, Act 32 of 2000 AND» Section 84 of Municipal Finance Management Act, Act 56 of 2003

Page 18: Louise Muller President IMFO South Africa Legislation and Regulatory Requirements of Municipal and Utility Entities

Establishing a Municipal Entity in South Africa (6)

External delivery mechanism can be: A municipal entity

A private company A service utility (within municipal jurisdiction) A multi-jurisdictional service utility

Another municipality An organ of state A community based organisation of non-governmental

organisation Any other legally competent institution, entity or

person

Page 19: Louise Muller President IMFO South Africa Legislation and Regulatory Requirements of Municipal and Utility Entities

Good Governance

Generally and globally accepted attributes, ingredients and characteristics of good governance include:

1)transparency

2)accountability

3)responsibility (obligation to give explanation, responsiveness, interaction between press and offices)

4)legitimacy

5)independent judiciary

6)rule of law

Page 20: Louise Muller President IMFO South Africa Legislation and Regulatory Requirements of Municipal and Utility Entities

Good Governance (2)

7) effective management of public and private sectors

8) Participation

9) administrative integrity

10)vibrant civil society

11) respect for individual liberty and freedom (respect for human rights)

12)decentralization and local governance.

Page 21: Louise Muller President IMFO South Africa Legislation and Regulatory Requirements of Municipal and Utility Entities

Good Governance (3)

The seven Nolan Principles of good governance:

1.Selflessness: professional decisions should benefit the public, not themselves,

2.Objectivity: not favor one public or private group over another,

3.Integrity: not beholden to improper influence,

4.Honesty: not just telling the truth, disclose relationships with the potential for a conflict of interests

5.Accountability: for own actions and actions of staff

6.Openness: Transparent reporting

7.Leadership: practice the above principles and enforce them amongst their staff

Page 22: Louise Muller President IMFO South Africa Legislation and Regulatory Requirements of Municipal and Utility Entities

Good GovernanceWhatever principles used, whether:King III, Nolan PrinciplesOther Governance Principles

The Bottom line is -

Good governance is highly associated with political and bureaucratic accountability to public needs, transparency in finance, auditing and decision making, a fair and reliable judicial system, freedom of information and expression, with civil expression, effective and efficient public sector management and cooperation with civil society organizations (UNDP, 1995:22; Dahal, 1996:6)

Page 23: Louise Muller President IMFO South Africa Legislation and Regulatory Requirements of Municipal and Utility Entities

Thank you

Dankie

Enkosi

Any Questions?