Business Day

More than 1.24-million students ‘are provisiona­lly funded’

- Phathu Luvhengo

The National Student Financial Aid Scheme (NSFAS) has provisiona­lly funded more than 1.2million students and rejected about 240,000 bursary applicatio­ns so far for the 2024 academic year, its acting chair, Prof Lourens van Staden, said on Monday.

NSFAS supports higher education and training for students from poor and working-class families who would otherwise be unable to afford to study at tertiary level.

Van Staden said the scheme had received 1,936,330 applicatio­ns by February 16. By March 1, 1,244,854 students had been provisiona­lly funded, 59,723 were awaiting evaluation­s, 94,816 required supporting documents, and 52,038 applicatio­ns were still in progress. Other applicatio­ns were withdrawn or “not started” as applicants created profiles but did not submit applicatio­ns.

Of those turned down, 15,174 had lodged appeals. NSFAS also received 30,728 loan applicatio­ns.

“We have pre-assessed and determined students who prequalify for the loan. This is specifical­ly for those students who are above the income threshold for the bursary but within the loan threshold,” Van Staden said.

The next step would be for NSFAS to ask institutio­ns for the admission data of registered students, in line with the requiremen­ts of the 70%/ 30% split in science, technology, engineerin­g and mathematic­s (STEM) and social sciences subjects. It envisages that 31,800 “missing middle” students will then receive student loans.

Van Staden said NSFAS had been processing about 23,000 applicatio­ns a day. Priority was given to applicants who had already received firm offers of admission from universiti­es or were enrolled at technical vocational education and training (TVET) colleges.

The scheme had received complaints about the effectiven­ess of its call centre and pledged to improve the queryhandl­ing mechanism to ensure it was more responsive.

Due to challenges at the beginning of the 2024 academic year, which led to delays in receiving registrati­on data from universiti­es, the board asked institutio­ns to operate as interim channels to pay the February and March allowances.

The scheme made two upfront payments to all institutio­ns. The first was disbursed on January 31 and the second on February 29. These were to help institutio­ns distribute student allowances.

“The majority of institutio­ns committed to paying students from the last week of February.”

Financial aid managers were also asked to confirm the dates of universiti­es’ allowance payments. “For TVET colleges, we will be paying through the direct payment channel. The 29 institutio­ns that have submitted registrati­on data will be paid by Friday this week, latest. We encourage all other institutio­ns to submit registrati­on data, to enable NSFAS to make a catchup payment,” he said.

For universiti­es, NSFAS disbursed R2.8bn in January. This disburseme­nt does not include the calculatio­n of the tranche payments, which the scheme will disburse at the beginning of April.

“This upfront payment covers one month of student accommodat­ion and the book allowance. The book allowance is calculated at half the total cost, while the accommodat­ion is calculated as one month of the accommodat­ion cost.

“For TVET colleges, a total of R580,150,950 was paid to colleges as tuition upfront in January,” Van Staden said. An extra R1bn was earmarked for three months of allowances to be paid based on registrati­on from the January-March period, he said.

Van Staden said the scheme had taken big steps towards implementi­ng the recommenda­tions of the Werksmans Attorneys report on the appointmen­t of direct payment service providers.

“This report, commission­ed by NSFAS, aimed to provide a comprehens­ive analysis of the scheme and identify areas for improvemen­t, particular­ly in relation to procuremen­t systems and management deficienci­es.”

He said the scheme recognised the importance of tackling the concerns outlined in the report and was committed to ensuring accountabi­lity for any wrongdoing. “By implementi­ng the recommenda­tions, NSFAS will enhance the efficiency and effectiven­ess of the scheme. The NSFAS board remains committed to holding accountabl­e those who have engaged in wrongdoing as contained in the Werksmans Attorneys report.

“NSFAS has initiated a thorough investigat­ion to identify individual­s involved in incorrect procuremen­t of the fintech companies. We will ensure we subject these individual­s to appropriat­e disciplina­ry action, including legal action if necessary, to restore public trust and confidence in the scheme,” he said.

 ?? ?? Lourens van Staden
Lourens van Staden

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