logo
Children's homes, rehabs and shelters face closure once again as Gauteng govt fails to pay

Children's homes, rehabs and shelters face closure once again as Gauteng govt fails to pay

Eyewitness News3 days ago

Two months into the financial year, which started in April, hundreds of non-profit organisations in Gauteng have not yet received their subsidies from the provincial Department of Social Development.
'These organisations include domestic violence shelters, child and youth care centres, inpatient substance abuse treatment facilities, and residential facilities for persons with disabilities,' the Gauteng Care Crisis Committee said in a statement on Friday.
Organisations GroundUp spoke to say they only have enough reserve funds to last them two or three months before they will have to shut down.
This echoes similar chaos last year, when organisations funded by the Gauteng Department of Social Development went unfunded for months. Many had to go into debt, from which they have not yet recovered.
Premier Panyaza Lesufi intervened last year and a new MEC, Faith Mazibuko, has since taken the helm. But despite promises to restore the department's relationship with the organisations, problems with service agreements and late payments have not been curbed.
At least 40 of the crisis committee's 114 member organisations have not been paid and 14 are still waiting for service level agreements (SLAs). According to a statement by the department on Monday, of the 1,640 SLAs issued to organisations, 1,424 have been signed and 818 payments have been made. That leaves more than 600 payments outstanding. And this excludes organisations who have not yet received SLAs, says committee chair Lisa Vetten.
Department spokesperson Motsamai Motlhaolwa told GroundUp that late payments were due to challenges with the payment system. He also said some organisations had not signed the SLAs in time, and others were 'non-compliant' with municipalities and in some cases with the Children's Act.
CHILDREN'S HOMES FACE CLOSURE
Jacaranda Kinderhuis and Louis Botha Children's Home are two of the largest Child and Youth Care Centres in Gauteng and house more than 250 children.
Neither centre has received an SLA for the new financial year, says Charlene Grobbelaar, CEO for both Louis Botha and Jacaranda. The subsidies received from the department usually cover 40% of their expenses.
The SLA delays are apparently because the department said it requires a J738 form from the Department of Justice (DOJ) to show that no staff members are on the sex offender registry.
The department initially accepted proof that the centres had applied for the form from the DOJ on 13 March. But since the start of May, they have received no update from the department.
Without funding from the department, both homes are now running on reserve funds, which are quickly running dry. If the funding does not come through soon, the homes can only keep going for 'maximum a month', says Grobbelaar.
Operations at both centres have been pared down, reserving the little funds available for food and salaries. Field trips and extracurricular activities have been cancelled.
The centres have recently taken in children from small nearby centres that have closed their doors due to funding cuts.
'It's ridiculous, these are children's lives,' said Grobbelaar.
Paul Kruger Kinderhuis in Gauteng with room for 63 children, which the department has funded for decades, received verbal indication from the adjudication panel that it would be funded but has not received anything in writing, despite repeated follow-ups. Manager Kobus Vorster said they have enough funds for another two months.
Mothaolwa told GroundUp that all funded youth centres that have not received SLAs 'have been appraised on the reasons for the delays'.
'We would also like to bring to your attention that all the [organisations] that have worked with [the department] know our teams at regional offices … We are not sure why they asking us through the media, where we wont even give out information about them, because we respect the working relationship we have with them.'
PAST UNDERSPENDING
GroundUp previously reported that last year's funding crisis led several organisations to take the department to court over non-payments. Some have still not been paid despite having signed SLAs for the 2024/25 financial year and are still busy fighting for their money in court.
The department has said that the reason it could not pay all NPOs was that it had run out of money and overcommitted its budget. GroundUp previously reported that organisations were dissatisfied with this answer. And on Monday, News24 reported that the department will have to return R102-million to the national treasury due to underspending in the 2024/25 financial year.
Mothaolwa has previously said that underspending is mainly due to 'compliance' issues.
This article first appeared on GroundUp. Read the original article here.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Gauteng DSD: No jobs in HIV and AIDS programme will be lost despite R108m budget shortfall
Gauteng DSD: No jobs in HIV and AIDS programme will be lost despite R108m budget shortfall

Eyewitness News

time6 hours ago

  • Eyewitness News

Gauteng DSD: No jobs in HIV and AIDS programme will be lost despite R108m budget shortfall

JOHANNESBURG - Gauteng's Department of Social Development is facing a R108 million shortfall in its HIV and AIDS programme budget, but officials insist no jobs will be lost. Treasury has slashed funding to R332 million in 2025, down from R440 million, forcing the department to restructure operations while trying to protect services for vulnerable groups. The commitment? To keep social workers, community carers and child and youth care workers employed and to continue funding non-profits supporting those affected by HIV. The department said all psycho-social services — including those offered to orphans, vulnerable children and HIV-positive households — will continue uninterrupted. Those who deliver them — including auxiliary social workers and registered community carers — will remain on payroll. Food relief, however, will now be handled centrally through distribution centres run by the sustainable livelihoods unit as part of a move to streamline resources. The department argues this shift will still prioritise households with no income and is part of a longer-term strategy to capacitate communities instead of relying on ongoing aid. And while incentive grant funding for work opportunities through the Expanded Public Works Programme (EPWP) has dropped dramatically since 2023, social development says job numbers have been maintained, thanks to reallocation from its main budget.

Meet the new faces of South Africa's Social Development: Netshipale and Matlou
Meet the new faces of South Africa's Social Development: Netshipale and Matlou

IOL News

timea day ago

  • IOL News

Meet the new faces of South Africa's Social Development: Netshipale and Matlou

Incoming CEO of Sassa Themba Matlou, left, and recently appointed Director-General of the Department of Social Development Peter Netshipale. Image: Compiled with supplied images Minister of Social Development Sisisi Tolashe extended a warm welcome on Friday to newly appointed Director-General Peter Netshipale and Themba Matlou, the incoming CEO of the South African Social Security Agency (Sassa). Tolashe extended best wishes to the new appointees in their roles and expressed deep gratitude to them and their families for their commitment to serving the South African people. Recently appointed Director-General of the Department of Social Development, Peter Netshipale. Image: Supplied Taking up his new role two months ago, Netshipale said South Africa is faced with persistent poverty, joblessness, and inequality that remain a challenge. However, he said the department is hard at work to provide social grants to the sum of R19 million each month to more than 2.9 million people. 'The task which is in front of us is massive, and I've got a responsibility to ensure that the department becomes the best department in South Africa,' he said. Netshipale said with extensive footprints in all 52 districts of the country, the department has good policies and programmes that need to be implemented robustly by its highly skilled staff. 'As the new director-general of the department, I will enhance our coordination and our delivery of services. We are going to optimise our resources and ensure that we live within the austerity that we have, build the capacity of the communities, and promote innovation,' he said. He also highlighted the fact that the department has to modernise systems for efficiency. 'We have a mandate as a department to ensure that we optimise what we are doing; our role is to ensure that every person receives grants at the right time in the right places all the time,' he said. Netshipale added that the Department of Social Development will endeavour to reduce the level of poverty and ensure that people are empowered and communities sustained. He said in the last nine months, since the minister was appointed, she has taken the reins and led the department. 'I want South Africans to watch and see what this department will do.' Matlou, who was appointed as Sassa CEO this week, said it is an honour that comes with enormous responsibility and expectations to lead the organisation of this magnitude. 'This is a responsibility that I've accepted with heartfelt humility, mindful of the steep road I have, but equal to the task at hand to steer Sassa in the right direction, to meet its expectations,' he said. Themba Matlou, the incoming CEO of Sassa. Image: Supplied Having worked as a regional executive manager at Sassa in four provinces for 13 years, Matlou said he has gained the necessary knowledge and expectations of clients. He said Sassa is going to invest in systems that will enable migration from minor business processes to more automation, called a self-application channel, for people in different provinces to improve service delivery and manage fraud. He said different alternative payment and service delivery models will be explored. 'We are going to improve our efficiency, which includes modernising our call centre,' said Matlou, adding that the call centre has a lot of challenges. With regard to some officials linked to fraudulent activities, Matlou said Sassa is working hard to roll out its anti-fraud management strategy with different departments and law enforcement. He announced that engagements with staff have been completed regarding the implementation of the much-awaited biometric enrolment verification system that will assist in fraud prevention. 'We have successfully piloted this system in four provinces, and we are now ready to fully implement this.' He said Sassa must be taken back to where it belongs, 'to the people of South Africa'. 'We've also engaged our staff members in many of our provinces in seeking to understand what the challenges they are facing are, and what new ideas we can bring in to build a better organisation,' said Matlou. [email protected]

Basic Income Grant implementation postponed again
Basic Income Grant implementation postponed again

The Citizen

timea day ago

  • The Citizen

Basic Income Grant implementation postponed again

The department's target for the current financial year is to table the Basic Income Support policy to Cabinet for approval. The implementation of South Africa's Basic Income Grant has been delayed once again, with the Department of Social Development announcing that further consultations are required before the policy can be finalised. The department presented its progress report to the portfolio committee on social development on Wednesday, outlining the ongoing challenges and next steps in developing the Basic Income Support policy. Despite more than two decades of policy development, the Basic Income Grant remains elusive, with approximately 9.2 million people currently dependent on the Covid-19 Social Relief of Distress Grant and 19.2 million beneficiaries across the South African Social Security Agency's (Sassa) other programs. The department has been working to create opportunities for grant-dependent individuals while navigating concerns about affordability and sustainability. Latest Basic Income Grant policy developments The Department of Social Development has been actively working on the Basic Income Support policy, with the first draft presented to the social protection, community and human development cluster Cabinet committee on 26 November 2024. However, the committee directed that additional consultations be conducted with internal members, with a particular focus on the policy's affordability and its linkages to economic opportunities. Following this directive, an interdepartmental workshop was organised on 31 March 2025 to discuss the revised document. During this meeting, all members agreed on the necessity of identifying ways to connect the grant with employment and sustainable livelihood opportunities targeted at the economically active population. The meeting acknowledged that the labour market, especially public employment initiatives, would not be able to absorb all current Social Relief of Distress beneficiaries. Deputy director-general Brenda Sibeko informed members of parliament (MPs) that the policy has been revised again and could potentially be approved within a year. 'If the policy is approved in the current financial year, then it means that after that, we have to write the law that makes the basic income support to be a permanent income support policy like the other grants,' she explained. ALSO READ: Sassa CEO's multimillion-rand package revealed amid suspension and grant hikes Ongoing consultations and timeline A second interdepartmental workshop is planned for the end of June 2025, which will be followed by bilateral meetings with the Presidency, Department of Labour, and National Treasury. The department intends to approach the committee in the second quarter of the 2025/26 financial year to request Cabinet consideration of the revised draft Basic Income Support policy. 'Once the consultations are concluded, the department will approach the SPCHD Cabinet Committee again in the second quarter of the 2025/26 financial year, to request Cabinet to consider the revised policy, and if approved, publish it for public comments,' the department explained. ALSO READ: Sassa SRD grant to be 'converted' to basic income grant – Mbalula says [VIDEO] Parliamentary frustration mounts MPs expressed growing frustration with the prolonged delays in developing a comprehensive Basic Income Grant policy. EFF MP, Noluvuyo Tafeni, voiced this concern directly, asking: 'When was the Basic Income Grant policy proposal first made? It was about some 30 years back, and there is still no progress.' The Basic Income Grant has indeed been on the country's policy agenda for more than 20 years, with the first proposal dating back to 1998. A technical proposal was subsequently drafted in 2002, but it failed to gain Cabinet approval. Financial challenges and sustainability concerns National Treasury has expressed significant concerns about the affordability and sustainability of introducing a Basic Income Support policy, given the country's high unemployment rate and current fiscal position. The department is working with various stakeholders to identify alternative ways to strengthen the implementation of the current Social Relief of Distress grant while creating pathways for beneficiaries to transition to other economic opportunities. Despite these challenges, the committee heard that the department has received approval to extend the Social Relief of Distress provision until the end of March 2026, with a budget of R35 billion. The department has proposed that the Social Relief of Distress grant be made permanent, with a phased approach to increase benefits progressively. The proposed entry-level Basic Income Support grant would be set at the Lower Bound Poverty Line, with long-term plans to eliminate poverty at the Upper Bound Poverty Line. ALSO READ: Sassa problems and glitches this year, will we get a basic income grant in 2025? Basic income grant supporting infrastructure and pilot programs While policy development continues, the Department of Social Development is working on several parallel initiatives to support the eventual implementation of the Basic Income Support policy. The department said it was collaborating with stakeholders to assist the South African Social Security Agency in enhancing system interoperability to improve efficiency in data-sharing for both eligibility assessment and economic linkages. Additionally, the department, along with Sassa and partners, is piloting ways to link grant beneficiaries to employment activities. An interdepartmental task team, including key departments such as National Treasury, the Presidency, Higher Education and Training, and Public Works, is working on various pathways to improve access to training, employment, and entrepreneurship support to reduce reliance on social grants as the only pathway out of poverty. ALSO READ: Ramaphosa hints again at expanding SRD grant – and will Treasury go 'BIG' this time? Next steps and legislative process The department's target for the current financial year is to table the Basic Income Support policy to Cabinet for approval. Should such approval be granted, the department will need to amend the Social Assistance Act to introduce a new social grant category. While the formulation of the amendment can be done relatively quickly, the timing of the legislation and its passage will depend on how rapidly Cabinet approves the draft bill, which will then be tabled to Parliament for processing. During this legislative process, it will be necessary for the Social Relief of Distress grant to be extended beyond March 2026 to ensure the continuation of income support. 'In order to ensure stability during this consultation period, the department will consult National Treasury for the SRD provision to be extended until the legislative process is complete, to ensure that its beneficiaries are protected from extreme poverty and vulnerability,' the department stated. NOW READ: Household food basket shows food prices still increasing

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store