Water, Sewage & Effluent January February 2019 | Page 3
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the province as a whole has seen big declines
in resident satisfaction. This includes declines
in satisfaction with costs of services and billing
in Johannesburg and Tshwane. By contrast,
residents of Ekurhuleni are much more satisfied
with costs, billing, and waste than in the last
survey.”
Previous iterations of the survey have shown
that overall satisfaction with government
is typically lower than satisfaction with the
essential services that government provides.
According to Dr Moore, it is a feature of public
sentiment that attitudes to local government
are coloured by a range of factors beyond basic
service delivery. This is a general condition
where government is often held accountable
for issues or conditions that are beyond its
immediate mandate or control.
While the overall trend is positive, quality
of life differs significantly across racial
groups. White respondents indicate a fairly
substantial improvement in overall quality of
life, while African respondents experienced a
substantially smaller improvement in quality
of life. Dr Moore noted, “While the overall
improvement in measured quality of life is
encouraging, this disparity demonstrates the
high levels of inequality that continue to plague
the Gauteng City-Region.”
Commenting on the value of the QoL data
in assisting policymakers to tackle socio-
economic challenges, Dr Moore observed, “As
an independent, trusted, and respected survey,
the QoL data is highly valued by government,
civil society, and academic researchers. The
data is both demographically and spatially
representative.” Dr Moore believes that
this allows local, provincial, and national
government to use the data for policy and
decision-making, target setting, and to gauge
success in their implementation of initiatives.
Both provincial and local government are
increasingly making use of this data to respond
proactively to different issues that arise in
particular places.
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Water Sewage & Effluent January/February 2019
3
T
he results of the Gauteng City-Region
Observatory’s 5th Quality of Life Survey
(QoL) – 2017/18, show that, despite very
challenging economic conditions, overall
quality of life in the province continues to
improve.
The survey interviewed 24 889 respondents
across Gauteng. The results were launched
at a high-profile event, attended by Gauteng
Premier David Makhura, held in November 2018
at the University of Johannesburg. It is one of
the biggest social-attitudes surveys in sub-
Saharan Africa, and takes a multidimensional
approach to defining what constitutes quality of
life and provides data on a wide range of topics,
including access to, and satisfaction with,
basic services; satisfaction with government;
transport and mobility; livelihoods; migration;
neighbourhood,
community
and
family
dynamics; race and gender relations; health
and well-being; and political and social values
and attitudes.
According to GCRO executive director, Dr
Rob Moore, despite challenging economic
conditions and with GDP per person lower than
what it was 10 years ago and unemployment
nearing 30%, the survey indicated steady
improvement in overall quality of life over time.
Dr Moore added that it was clear that
satisfaction with government has improved
since the last time the survey was run in 2015/16,
in particular with provincial government.
Despite continued high levels of population
and household growth in Gauteng, the QoL
survey shows that levels of access to services
have remained stable. “Access to piped water
to homes and yards has remained above 90%
over the decade that the survey has been
conducted,” Dr Moore said. “This tells us
that government is broadly keeping pace with
increases in demand for service connections.
However, there are signs that provision of
services has deteriorated significantly in some
municipalities, while delivery has improved
in others. This reflects in different levels of
satisfaction with local government. For example,
some 86% of respondents across Gauteng are
satisfied with their water services, up from 83%
in the last survey.”
However, Dr Moore pointed out that
Ekurhuleni is outperforming the other metros on
most service measures. “In important areas like
cost of municipal services, billing, and waste,
Quality of Life