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Tariff hikes in City's draft budget face backlash from civic groups

Tariff hikes in City's draft budget face backlash from civic groups

IOL News22-04-2025

Civic associations are pushing back against the City's 2025/2026 Draft Budget due to steep fixed charges, which they say will impose financial strain on middle income homes.
The public has until May 2 to comment on the R84.1 billion draft budget, which Mayor Geordin Hill-Lewis tabled in last month's Council meeting.
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The infrastructure investments include over R16.5bn for water and sanitation, R5bn for electricity grid upgrades, R3.4bn for roads, and a further R4.5bn for the new MyCiti bus route linking Khayelitsha, Mitchell's Plain and a host of other communities with Wynberg and Claremont.
As part of the City's R6.7bn Safety and Security budget, the mayor said over 700 new municipal police officers will be deployed.
Hill-Lewis announced major tariff restructuring reforms, which are expected to shield lower income households from financial pressures.
In this reform, water and sanitation fixed charges will now be determined by property values rather than connection size; while electricity rates will rise by 2% on average.
Residents will also see a City-Wide Cleaning Tariff explicitly reflected on their bills from July alongside refuse removal.
According to Hill-Lewis, this is not a new expense as customers previously helped fund this via property rates, and the tariff will be fully buffered by the reduction of electricity costs going to other forms of service delivery.
The increases from the tariff restructure have provoked strong opposition from civic associations.
Tokai Residents' Association chairperson, Don Kourie, says they are firmly opposed to the tariff restructure, noting that the City's Tariff Calculator shows a potential 20% increase in monthly rates bills for homeowners.
'The new cleaning tariff is unacceptable — it's based on property value, yet the service benefits all residents equally, not individual homes.
'The water connection tariff will also be based on property value. A fixed fee for every property, as there is for refuse collection, rather than a property value-based mechanism, would be more appropriate,' Kourie says, arguing that the current method is inequitable.
'Rates and refuse charges are going up by 7–8%, well above the current 2.8% inflation rate. These new tariffs fail the City's own promise of equity and fairness. Many residents, especially pensioners on fixed incomes, will face an unfair and disproportionate burden.'
Keith Barton, Bergvliet Meadowridge Ratepayer's Association chairperson, says the draft budget places the burden on middle- and upper-income households with sharp hikes in fixed charges — all tied to property value.
'If approved, this budget will cause financial strain for many middle-income homes.
"A typical R4.2 million property in our suburbs would pay R920 more per month in fixed charges — irrespective of the amount of electricity and water consumed. Households with solar and boreholes using minimal City services could see monthly municipal bills rise by over 30%.
'The City says this new structure ends the past practice of cross-subsidising other municipal services via electricity sales. We do not believe that municipal charges should be so heavily skewed towards a property's value instead of its consumption of services.

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