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1. Introduction 2. LGTAS- Its Origin3. Aims and Objectives of LGTAS4. Original targets of LGTAS5. A period of non activity-the lull6. LGTAS today-the revival7. Achievements8. Operation Clean Audit: Background9. Operation Clean Audit: Development of an Action Plan. 10. Operation Clean Audit: Refinement of Action Plan. 11. What have we done to support municipalities?12. Actions by other role players to improve municipal audit
outcomes13. Conclusion
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The Local Government Turnaround Strategy (LGTAS) was approved by Cabinet during December 2009.
It was intended as the overarching strategy that includes flagship projects such as Operation Clean Audit (OPCA), Business-Adopt-a-Municipality, Revenue Enhancement as well as the Special Purpose Vehicle (SPV), now the Municipal Infrastructure Support Agency (MISA) and Clean Cities Clean Towns.
The objectives of LGTAS was to Build Confidence between the people and Government; Build a model Municipality characterised by the ability to provide
quality services,
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The purpose of the presentation is to present to the Select Committee the status of LGTAS since its inception to date.
An attempt will be made to present the details of what has been achieved in pursuit of the objectives set in 2009
The presentation will not dwell much on all the components of LGTAS but will focus on Operation Clean Audit (OPCA).
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Guiding vision: By 2014, all 278 municipalities achieve unqualified
audit opinion on their Annual Financial StatementsStrategic goal: To provide assistance to all municipalities to achieve
sustainable improvement of systems for maintaining quality financial and information management
Strategic purpose: To address all issues raised by the Auditor General
and reduce the vulnerability to risks in the municipal financial management and governance process through targeted interventions
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Between 2010 and 2011, no municipality achieving Adverse and Disclaimer Audit opinions. o Not achieved: According to preliminary results,
disclaimers – 50 and adverse opinions – 7. At least 60% of the all municipalities achieving
unqualified audit opinion by 2012o According to preliminary results, now at 44.5% (2010-11)
At least 75% of all municipalities achieving unqualified audit opinions by 2013
100% of all municipalities achieving unqualified audit opinions by 2014.
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As a result of restructuring in the department there was a state of paralysis for approximately 18 months (from 2011 to mid 2012) and with uncertainty at the political and administrative levels
The original LGTAS team was disbanded at the beginning of 2011.
The impetus of the LGTAS had so much buy in and Provinces and municipalities continued implementing some components of the strategy; e.g.
establishment Provincial Coordinating Committees of OPCAs
Institunalization of the LGTAS units in the Provinces, Appointment of staff for LGTAS support.
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With the arrival of the new Minister there was a renewed focus and emphasis created on the acceleration of the LGTAS.
LGTAS was revived with a refined focus on 108 targeted municipalities. These were approved by MINMEC of 25 May 2012.
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The renewed focus in terms of which LGTAS is accelerated up to 2014 is through the following priority areas:
1.Accelerating service delivery 2.Enhancing Good Governance 3.Promoting sound financial management 4.Fighting corruption 5.Facilitating sustainable infrastructure development.
These five focus areas are mutually reinforcing and directly play a critical role in improving the audit outcomes of municipalities.
Aligning the OPCA vision with 5 areas
Visits we conducted to all Provinces from July to end of August 2012 to discuss the Provincial LGTAS Action Plans for the 108 identified LGTAS municipalities;
Finalised the action plans in respect of the 108 municipalities and
A report on the profile of at least the 108 municipalities in relation to the 5 LGTAS focus areas will be concluded by the end of November
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The slides that follow provide information with regard to the progress in municipal audit outcomes from 2008/09 to 2010/11 and the provincial breakdown of the 2010/11 Municipal Audit Outcomes
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Audit Opinion 2010/11 2009/10 2008/09
Clean 5% 2% 0,3%
Financially unqualified with findings 41% 43% 41%
Financially unqualified financial statements
46% 45% 42%
Qualified 20% 26% 17%
Adverse 5% 3% 4%
Disclaimer 23% 25% 37%
Audits not issued 6% 2% 0,3%
Total municipalities 278 278 278
AFS submission outstanding 3% 2% 0,3%
Notes: Based on information as of 27 July 2012.
What the above figures tell us
The figures above tell a story of improvement in the municipalities that received a financially unqualified opinion without findings and those with findings from 42% to 46%.
It shows a fluctuation in numbers of those that received a qualified opinion
In the two previous financial years there was no improvement in municipalities that received adverse and disclaimer opinion
These figures serve as a point of reference regarding our intervention and support actions.
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Audit Opinion
Nat EC FS GP KZN LP MP NC NW WC
Clean 5% 0% 0% 0% 8% 6% 19% 0% 0% 6%
Financially unqualified with findings
41% 28% 21% 67% 77% 10% 33% 25% 9% 73%
Financially unqualified financial statements
46% 28% 21% 67% 85% 17% 52% 25% 9% 80%
Qualified 20% 29% 13% 33% 11% 43% 14% 19% 13% 10%
Adverse 5% 4% 8% 0% 2% 13% 0% 0% 0% 0%
Disclaimer 23% 38% 54% 0% 2% 27% 33% 53% 26% 0%
Audits not issued
6% n/a 4% n/a n/a n/a n/a 3% 52% 10%
Total munics 278 45 24 12 61 30 21 32 23 30
AFS sub outstanding
3% n/a 4% n/a n/a n/a n/a 3% 2% n/a
Notes: Based on information as of 27 July 2012. GP, KZN and WC have achieved the 2012 target of 60% unqualified opinion
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Audit Opinion EC 10/11
EC09/10
EC08/09
FS10/11
FS09/10
FS08/09
GP10/11
GP09/10
GP08/09
Clean 0% 0% 0% 0% 0% 0% 0% 0% 8%
Fin unqualified with findings
28% 20% 20% 21% 13% 13% 67% 75% 67%
Fin unqualified fin statements
28% 20% 20% 21% 13% 13% 67% 75% 75%
Qualified 28% 31% 28% 13% 25% 4% 33% 25% 25%
Adverse 4% 7% 16% 8% 4% 8% 0% 0% 0%
Disclaimer 38% 42% 36% 54% 54% 75% 0% 0% 0%
Audits not issued
n/a n/a n/a 4% 4% n/a n/a n/a n/a
Total munics 45 45 45 24 24 24 12 12 12
AFS sub outstanding
n/a n/a n/a 4% 4% n/a n/a n/a n/a
Notes: Based on information as of 27 July 2012.
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Audit Opinion KZN 10/11
KZN09/10
KZN08/09
LP10/11
LP09/10
LP08/09
MP10/11
MP09/10
MP08/09
Clean 8% 0% 0% 7% 3% 0% 19% 14% 0%
Fin unqualified with findings
77% 85% 72% 10% 27% 27% 33% 38% 43%
Fin unqualified fin statements
85% 85% 72% 17% 30% 27% 52% 52% 43%
Qualified 11% 11% 13% 43% 40% 27% 14% 14% 29%
Adverse 2% 2% 0% 13% 0% 0% 0% 0% 0%
Disclaimer 2% 2% 15% 27% 30% 47% 33% 33% 29%
Audits not issued
n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a
Total munics 61 61 61 30 30 30 21 21 21
AFS sub outstanding
n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a
Notes: Based on information as of 27 July 2012.
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Audit Opinion NC 10/11
NC09/10
NC08/09
NW10/11
NW09/10
NW08/09
WC10/11
WC09/10
WC08/09
Clean 0% 3% 0% 0% 0% 0% 7% 3% 0%
Fin unqualified with findings
25% 22% 19% 9% 9% 17% 73% 70% 80%
Fin unqualified fin statements
25% 25% 19% 9% 9% 17% 80% 73% 80%
Qualified 19% 53% 13% 13% 22% 13% 10% 13% 3%
Adverse 0% 0% 0% 26% 0% 4% 0% 7% 0%
Disclaimer 53% 22% 69% 0% 49% 61% 0% 7% 17%
Audits not issued
3% n/a n/a 52% 22% 4% 10% n/a n/a
Total munics 32 32 32 23 23 23 30 30 30
AFS sub outstanding
3% n/a n/a 26% 22% 4% n/a n/a n/a
Notes: Based on information as of 27 July 2012.
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The Municipal Audit outcomes are instructive for us to work harder if we are to succeed in realising the objectives we set ourselves as Government, of achieving audit ratings that will speak of a model Municipality.
The identified three critical areas from the Auditor-General’s report to be looked at if the vision is:
Leadership (both political and administrative); Governance; and Financial management.
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Developed an action plan (attached hereto) that clusters activities to be undertaken up to 2014 within the context of the three areas mentioned above.
The action plan identifies the stakeholders responsible for particular actions in the drive to support municipalities to achieve a favourable audit opinion.
The plan itself is a collaborative effort that draws from roles played by specific stakeholders in support of municipalities
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Convened a LG MinMec in September 2012 and invited municipalities that consistently achieved a clean audit; consistently never submitted Annual Financial Statements; and municipalities that showed significant improvement to share with MinMEC what are issues to be looked at
This was to take a cue from success stories in municipalities that are doing well and to appreciate the challenges that some municipalities are experiencing.
Refined the action plan accordingly
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Municipalities that achieved clean audits indicated the key drivers for clean administration that lead to good financial management which include the following:
The leadership taking ownership of key controls Consistently implementing audit recommendations; Functional governance structures- MPACs, Finance
Portfolio Committees, Audit Committees, Internal Audit units’ Risk management Committees;
Development and proper implementation of action plan; Proper financial management skills; and Proper record keeping.
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Factors that may negate the achievement of Clean Audit include, but are not limited to:
Lack of ownership by political leadership and management; Lack of financial management skills; Repeat findings that are not addressed properly; Availability of critical staff during the audit; and None functional governance structures.
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GOVERNANCE
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Leadership We have supported the appointment of Municipal
Managers and CFOs. The statistics regarding the filling of these posts are:
219 out of 278 Municipal Managers posts were filled as at end September 2012; and
278 CFO posts were filled as at the end of September 2012.
Draft Regulations for Municipal Senior Managers have been developed governing the appointment and conditions of service of municipal managers and section 56 managers.
It served before the LG MinMEC of 16 September 2012; Consultations pursuant to the LG MinMEC decisions are being finalised.
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Leadership supported municipalities to develop and
implement recruitment and retention strategies: Work is being conducted in a pilot municipality with the intent - to roll out to 69 municipalities based on lessons learnt.
Supporting municipalities to develop technical skills and in this regard: 2 HR officials from 35 municipalities were subjected to a 3 day programme hosted by the Institute of Municipal personnel Practitioners.
Partnered with the Department of Social Development to develop a programme for the 35 municipalities for IDP interventions.
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Guidelines on the Establishment of MPACs have been put in place (joint DCoG-National Treasury Guideline issued on 17 August 2011).
Supported the establishment of MPACs. 87% of MPACs are currently established (see next
slide for a provincial breakdown). DCOG monitors governance structures such as
Audit Committees and Internal Audit Units
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Province MPACs Audit Committees Internal Audit units
EC 100% 98% 67%
FS 42% 100% 100%
GP 100% 100% 75%
KZN 100% 100% 100%
LP 100% 100% 100%
MP 100% 100% 95%
NC 97% 91% 28%
NW 100% 75% 61%
WC 33% 97% 77%
National 87% 96% 79%
Stats is as of 30 September 2012 for MPACs whilst for Audit Committees and Internal Audit Units is as of 29th March 2012.Note: With respect to Internal Audit Units, the established units may not meet the Office of Accountant General’s desirable maturity levels.
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Province % of municipalities with Municipal Audit remedial Action Plans
Info as of
EC 100% 17 July 2012
FS 96% 20 July 2012
GP 100% 23 March 2012
KZN 100% 16 July 2012
LP 90% 4 April 2012
MP 95% 9 May 2012
NC 53% 2 April 2012
NW 43%% 24 May 2012
WC 83% 16 July 2012
National 86% 20 July 2012
Note: Stats takes into account information from provinces & the National Treasury.
FIGHTING CORRUPTION
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Continue to train municipal officials on ethics management: The following Four district municipalities and their local municipalities have been trained and are establishing Ethics Committees:
Cacadu DM (Koega LM, Makana LM, Kougama LM, Camdeboo LM)
Alfred Nzo DM (Matatiele LM, Umzimvubu LM). OR Tambo DM (Mhlontlo LM, Nyandeni LM,
Ngquza Hill LM, King Sabata Dalindyebo) Overberg DM (Mosselbay LM).
Financial Management
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Supported municipalities on credit control and debt collection policies:
• 39 municipalities have been supported in KwaZulu-Natal and 18 in the Northern Cape
• Developed a programme to roll this out to municipalities in other provinces.
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Coordination of effort by all relevant stakeholders at national and provincial level is important in order to avoid duplication
In order to improve municipal audit outcomes, the following is also being done:
• Municipalities have been prevailed upon to timely develop and implement municipal audit remedial action plans (by the 20th July 2012, 89% of municipalities had audit remedial action plans developed
• Provinces (CoGTAs and Treasuries) monitor the implementation of the municipal audit remedial action plans.
.
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Confident that the impact of our support interventions will become evident in the next 2011/2012 Audit Outcomes
The target that all municipalities shall achieve a Clean Audit opinion by 2014 is unlikely to be achieved
However, through combined effort and commitment seen in KZN we believe on average, our actions and interventions will result in 70% of municipalities achieving a Clean Audit opinion by 2014.
We wish to also bring to the attention of the committee that the recent capacity assessment report by the Municipal Demarcation Board has given us the new impetus to accelerate the approval of regulations so that competent personnel are appointed in this sphere of government