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(AsgiSA) Annual Report 2008 - South African Government Information

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Accelerated and Shared Growth Initiative for <strong>South</strong> Africa<br />

ANNUAL REPORT<br />

<strong>2008</strong><br />

• from <strong>2008</strong>, National Treasury intended to adopt a differentiated approach towards different sized<br />

municipalities, increasingly targeting smaller and weaker municipalities, with greater infrastructure<br />

backlogs and lower capacities through a differentiated MIG programme<br />

• expanding capacity-support measures such as the DBSA’s Siyenza Manje, which deploys expert teams<br />

into municipalities requiring technical support, together with initiatives to increase the capacity of<br />

municipalities to sustain the short-term gains made during the Siyenza Manje initiative<br />

• the National Integrated Maintenance Strategy (NIMS) is being implemented by the Department of<br />

Public Works (DPW)<br />

• implementing recommendations emerging from the National Spatial Development Perspective, particularly<br />

in defining the district level as the base planning unit<br />

• implementing the Water Services Regulation Strategy, aimed at providing a uniform framework<br />

across diversely capacitated municipalities<br />

• significantly increasing MIG funding (the bulk of which has been allocated to water and sanitation<br />

projects in recent years).<br />

Municipal capability issues impeding water and sanitation infrastructure service delivery apply equally<br />

to other infrastructure types, and the mitigating measures listed above are aimed at removing such<br />

impediments from all infrastructure sectors that are the responsibility of local government.<br />

The next MTEF phase will require water and sanitation services to be delivered as part of a more coordinated<br />

and integrated effort around the built environment, particularly targeting the informal settlement<br />

process.<br />

Over the MTEF period, water and sanitation service provision in informal settlements will become intertwined<br />

and integrated with the national housing programme, with the objective of providing a basic<br />

water supply and functioning basic sanitation by 2014. Informal settlement bucket systems (largely<br />

eradicated in formal settlements) will be addressed through the housing process.<br />

Notwithstanding the significant gains made, the policy approach of targeting infrastructure “backlogs”<br />

is changing, given that the backlogs are a moving target, particularly in view of rapid urbanisation and<br />

decreasing average size of family units. Water policy-makers are increasingly focusing on the sustainability<br />

and efficiency of new water and sanitation infrastructure addition and the capacity to sustain<br />

49

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