
Salga looking for ideas to help municipalities despite solution already offered
Outa have offering a free service delivery reporting app to municipalities for three years, but only one metro accepted.
The largest municipalities across South Africa are on the hunt for new ideas to solve service delivery challenges.
An Intercity Innovation Challenge was launched last week with two core themes in mind — township tech transformation and intelligent service delivery.
Spearheaded by the South African Local Government Association (Salga), assistance with the project will be provided by business incubator specialists and tertiary institutions.
Tech solutions for municipalities
The search for ideas will focus on the Johannesburg, Tshwane, Ekurhuleni, Cape Town, Buffalo City, Mangaung, eThekwini and Nelson Mandela Bay municipalities.
The initiative plans to pair enhanced service delivery and digital technologies with the values and goals of the G20, National Development Plan 2030 and Integrated Urban Development Framework.
'This national initiative aims to chiefly surface community-powered, tech-enabled solutions that promote inclusive development and foster innovation, improve public service delivery and management decision-making,' stated Salga.
The Innovation Hub, Innovate Durban and Wits University's Tshimologong Precinct will be judging the ideas based on challenge-specific criteria.
The innovation challenge is a spin-off of a similar project that has been running in Johannesburg for several years.
Last October, the City of Johannesburg offered R1 million for the best way to fix the city, but no winners have been made public to date.
Two specific challenges
The township tech transformation challenge will be a call for solutions to infrastructure, unemployment and limited digital access in informal settlements.
Submissions must be innovative, original, feasible, scalable and demonstrate the potential for social impact through clear presentation.
Submissions for the intelligent service delivery challenge must meet the same criteria but must address 'reactive, inefficient, or disconnected' service delivery.
'Intelligent service delivery means using real-time data, predictive maintenance, user feedback, and automation to provide services more efficiently, transparently, and sustainably,' stated Salga.
Winning ideas will receive funding and early-stage developmental support, which will include technical and business mentorship.
Existing Outa solution
Organisation Undoing Tax Abuse (Outa) CEO Wayne Duvenage considered the Salga initiative a 'good idea', as he believes the body was mandated to assist local government interests.
'As it is, many municipalities outsource their services to external consultants, due to their incompetence on matters such as finance, engineering, road maintenance, etc,' Duvenage told The Citizen.
However, Duvenage explained that Outa had been offering a free service delivery reporting app to Salga and the same metros for the past three years.
'This was a live, geolocation incident reporting tool which enables residents to report potholes, traffic light malfunctions, water leaks, sewage leaks, signage issues, street lights, etc,' he said.
He added that this data would be fed directly into the municipality's enterprise resource planning systems, but that only 10 small municipalities and the City of Cape Town had taken up the free offer.
'They just didn't want to take it up. I think it may also have something to do with civil society owning the process instead of themselves,' suggested Duvenage.
'The app would have allowed us as civil society to benchmark cities with the best levels of repair times, and we believe the poorly managed cities did not want that, so they simply didn't respond,' he added.
Intellectual property retained
The window for idea submissions will be open between 13 June and 15 August, with an announcement on winning ideas scheduled for November.
Participants retain ownership of their intellectual property, including current government employees whose employment contracts take precedence over the project terms and conditions.
'[We aim] to unlock the under-leveraged innovation ecosystem by supporting low-cost, high-impact solutions that use technology to improve quality of life, generate income, or expand access to essential services,' stated Salga.
Despite the snub, the Outa CEO hoped the innovation initiative would be fruitful and provide results for municipalities.
'Hopefully, Salga's Intercity Innovation Challenge will be able to introduce their own reporting tool or solution in this regard,' Duvenage concluded.
NOW READ: JRA allocated just 1% of amount needed to fix Johannesburg's roads
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

IOL News
16 hours ago
- IOL News
Homeowners rise: Class action against SA banks echoes Erin Brockovich's fight for justice
Advocate Douglas Shaw is spearheading the class action lawsuit against banks. Image: Supplied In what reads like a modern-day David vs. Goliath, more than 100 000 former homeowners are taking on South Africa's 'Big Four' – Absa, Standard Bank, Nedbank and FirstRand – in a R60 billion class-action lawsuit set for February 2026. The reputations of these banks are on the line. For institutions that constantly tout putting the customer first, this legal showdown threatens to take a wrecking ball to that image - one they may struggle to recover from. It's a major headache, and it could very well be a turning point in how banks are held to account in South Africa. This class action is not just about money. It's about power, dignity, and justice. It's a wake-up call to all of us that even the most powerful institutions are fallible - and can be challenged. The applicants in this case have stepped forward, and it's heartbreaking to consider what they've endured. These are people who fell on hard times, couldn't meet their mortgage payments, and had their homes repossessed. But the real scandal lies in what happened next: the homes were sold at auctions, sometimes for as little as R1 000 - often with no reserve price, no regard for actual market value, and no concern for the human cost. This was allowed under pre-2017 rules, when South African courts didn't require a minimum sale price. Thankfully, that loophole has since been closed. But for those who suffered under the old regime, the scars remain. As a homeowner myself, I can't begin to imagine what they went through. How powerless they must have felt going up against the might of the banking system. Blood, sweat, and tears went into trying to keep their homes. In the end, they lost not just property, but dignity. Now, after seven long years, these former homeowners are finally getting their day in court. It's worth remembering that justice in South Africa is not always accessible. Our courts are under-resourced, backlogged, and too expensive for the average person. But in this case, the Lungelo Lethu Human Rights Foundation has taken up the fight, led by Advocate Douglas Shaw. Shaw says banks should have thought about the Constitution before acting - and he's pushing for a criminal investigation into each sale. 'When I go to court, I go up against 27 people,' he told Stephen Grootes on The Money Show. 'Me versus large numbers of people from the top banks in the country. It's a scary thing to do. Most lawyers would say no. It's difficult.' Interestingly, Shaw's research shows that having your house sold for much less than the market value has only happened in South Africa. He is appealing to people to step forward, tell him your story and to get get your case out there. "You can help us help you by filling your case into our class action, which will in turn make you viable for reinbursement of the money you have lost," he says on his website. This isn't just a legal case—it's a moral one. And it's one the country will be watching closely. It brings to mind the story of Erin Brockovich, the woman played by Julia Roberts in the film, who took on a massive corporation in a fight for justice. Brockovich was an ordinary person who refused to be silent, and her courage changed lives. In the film Brockovich, a legal clerk named Erin Brockovich uncovers a massive cover-up by Pacific Gas & Electric (PG&E) involving the contamination of Hinkley, California's water supply with hexavalent chromium. The contamination, linked to a PG&E compressor station, caused serious illnesses among residents. Brockovich, along with her boss Ed Masry, spearheaded a class-action lawsuit against PG&E, culminating in a record-breaking $333 million (R5.9 billion) settlement for the affected residents. The case highlighted the dangers of industrial pollution and brought Brockovich to national attention, later inspiring the 2000 film. That same spirit is alive here. South Africa's former homeowners may not wear suits or command boardrooms, but they are standing up, together, against a system that failed them. If Erin Brockovich marked a moment of reckoning in the US, this could be ours. A moment when ordinary citizens remind powerful institutions that they are not untouchable. And if the banks are found guilty? The implications are massive. Will they absorb the cost or pass it on to consumers? Will trust in the financial system crack even further? It's unlikely the banks will lose their licences—such a move could shake the entire economy—but their reputations may never fully recover. One thing is certain: South Africa's financial sector will not be the same again. Philippa Larkin, is the executive edior of Business Report. Image: Supplied Philippa Larkin in the executive editor of Business Report. If you need help against the banks from Dr Advocate Shaw and his team: contact Dr Advocate Shaw· If your house has already been sold at:banksoldmyhouse@ If your house is about to be sold at:now@ If you want to help the cause at:volunteers@ BUSINESS REPORT


Mail & Guardian
a day ago
- Mail & Guardian
Ireland to make education a focal point at G20 meet in SA
Irish Minister of State for International Development and Diaspora, Neale Richmond, visiting a school in Liberia, April. (Photo supplied) Ireland, invited by current G20 president South Africa as a guest at a series of meetings culminating in November's summit of heads of state, will make education a key point during its participation, its government officials said this week. The G20, a forum of developing and developed countries whose members account for 85% of the global GDP, primarily aims to foster international economic cooperation and address major global economic issues. South Africa's theme during its 2025 presidency is solidarity, equality and sustainability. Ireland is taking the invitation seriously and plans to attend every ministerial meeting held in the run-up to November, officials, including the Irish Minister of State for International Development and Diaspora Neale Richmond, indicated on the sidelines of the Africa Ireland Trade Horzions conference in Dublin. Richmond also confirmed that Ireland — the most educated nation in the world — will push the importance of education and how it can address major global and economic issues. Ireland holds the highest percentage for higher-level education attainment for people aged between 25 and 34 years old at 55.1%, according to data from By contrast, data from Statistics South Africa in 2024 showed that approximately 40% of learners who start grade one in the country drop out before completing their final year of high school. Richmond said having been a poor nation for much of its history, educating its people had contributed to boosting Ireland's economy. 'I don't want to give too much of a history lesson, but it cannot be understated how poor Ireland was. We were a developing country. There's no dispute about that. We had a massive famine, a civil war; we were a new independent state,' he said. 'Our focus on education started in 1967 when the then Irish minister of education made second-level education free. In 1994, third-level education was made free. We now have officially the most educated population in the world and a workforce of 2.8 million people [out of a population of 5 million].' The country is tweaking and tailoring its education system to make sure that it is fit for purpose, he added. 'Over the last decade, we have increased the amount of projects coming out of very specific qualifications in areas relating to the life sciences sector and the tech sector. We work hand in hand with third-level institutions and businesses that want to invest in Ireland.' The life sciences sector — encompassing pharmaceuticals, biotechnology and medical devices — is a major contributor to the Irish economy, generating over €100 billion in exports annually and directly employing over 100 000 people. However, Ireland is facing a housing crisis: 'We need more people working in those areas, not to just construct the houses that we so desperately need, but also the infrastructure, the water, the roads and the healthcare facilities,' he said. Statistics show that Ireland's Richmond reiterated that investing in education was crucial to eradicating poverty. 'When we go to G20, the central plank has to be education' to boost the economy and facilitate development, he said. The journalist's trip to Ireland was sponsored by the Embassy of Ireland in South Africa.

IOL News
2 days ago
- IOL News
Mashatile urges South African youth to seize opportunities for economic transformation
Addressing the G20 Roundtable, Deputy President Paul Mashatile urges investment in youth capabilities, highlighting the need for shared power, digital innovation, and sustainable development driven by Africa's young population. Image: HigherEducationZA / X Deputy President Paul Mashatile has urged South African youth to take advantage of the opportunities provided by the post-1994 democratic breakthrough. Mashatile addressed the high-level G20 intergenerational roundtable on Friday. 'The G20 provides South Africa with a strategic opportunity to frame global policy discussions around the capabilities of young people as agents of inclusive economic transformation and sustainability,' he said. Mashatile said it was necessary for him to acknowledge that youth around the world, including South Africa, are confronted with a complicated terrain of potential and difficulties. Video Player is loading. Play Video Play Unmute Current Time 0:00 / Duration -:- Loaded : 0% Stream Type LIVE Seek to live, currently behind live LIVE Remaining Time - 0:00 This is a modal window. Beginning of dialog window. Escape will cancel and close the window. Text Color White Black Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan Transparency Opaque Semi-Transparent Background Color Black White Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan Transparency Opaque Semi-Transparent Transparent Window Color Black White Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan Transparency Transparent Semi-Transparent Opaque Font Size 50% 75% 100% 125% 150% 175% 200% 300% 400% Text Edge Style None Raised Depressed Uniform Dropshadow Font Family Proportional Sans-Serif Monospace Sans-Serif Proportional Serif Monospace Serif Casual Script Small Caps Reset restore all settings to the default values Done Close Modal Dialog End of dialog window. Advertisement Next Stay Close ✕ Ad loading 'Indeed, we have achieved political freedom, yet economic freedom remains elusive. Hence, the involvement of young people in tackling current issues such as unemployment, inequality, and poverty remains as crucial as during the apartheid era. The question that confronts us, therefore, is how can we further involve young people in addressing these challenges?' he asked. According to Mashatile, the country needs to create opportunities for meaningful participation in solutions and decision-making processes. This involves ensuring that individuals have access to education and opportunities that improve their skills, support youth-led initiatives, and promote inclusive economic growth. 'We need to turn our attention to youth capabilities and development to empower young people to unleash their untapped potential. When we invest in youth development, we tap into this potential and convert it into a force for positive change and sustainable development,' he said. Mashatile was speaking under the theme 'Building Youth Capabilities for a Developmental State: Advancing Solidarity, Equality, and Sustainability', which he stated was an imperative. 'Investing in the capabilities of young people is essential for achieving meaningful solidarity, enduring equality, and sustainable development. This presents an opportunity for the African people to take charge of their development. 'It is a call to reshape the global order toward justice, equity, and sustainability through the leadership and capabilities of our youth,' Mashatile explained. He called on the youth to consistently devise strategies to advocate for change. Mashatile said that in the past, the youth led protests and organised themselves, and frequently opposed the status quo and strived for a more promising future. He promised that the government would anchor youth inclusion in every major pillar of South Africa's G20 presidency. 'As South Africa prepares for the G20 Leaders' Summit in November, we do so with the consciousness that global leadership must be grounded in domestic credibility and continental solidarity. 'The developmental state we seek to build is not a theoretical construct; it must be a living architecture built on the capabilities, aspirations, and contributions of its young people,' said the deputy president.