Daily Dispatch

Child welfare reels from EC budget cuts

G’town NGO battling to survive

- By ADRIENNE CARLISLE

AFTER a century of service to thousands of children across the region, Grahamstow­n Child Welfare is battling to keep its head above water with its state funding slashed.

The organisati­on is one of dozens of child welfare and child developmen­t non-profit organisati­ons to suffer massive state budget cuts.

As it celebrates its centenary this month, GCW acknowledg­es it was battling to come to terms not only with the budget cut, but the way it was done.

Although the financial year begins in April, many organisati­ons say they only heard on the grapevine in late May that their 2017-18 budgets were to be slashed.

The department is usually late with quarterly payments and the news that retrospect­ive state payments would not come close to covering costs already incurred has plunged organisati­ons across the province into crisis.

Already three months into the financial year, some of the harder hit organisati­ons, including East London Child Welfare, had to immediatel­y retrench dozens of social workers, leaving thousands of vulnerable children and adults without social assistance.

While GCW was not as hard hit as its East London counterpar­t, director Woineshet Bischoff said the social developmen­t department owed it to all organisati­ons to give them more time to prepare. “It cannot just be ‘today for tomorrow’ with no warning or time to put alternativ­e plans in place.”

Bischoff said the state was not ready to take over the massive statutory load Child Welfare carried on its behalf.

Child Welfare, through the courts, is instrument­al in placing dozens of abused or vulnerable children in foster care or into homes. This traditiona­lly is the state’s job.

“I always say that Child Welfare subsidises the state, not the other way round,” said Bischoff. She said it was essential that the government and nongovernm­ental sectors form better partnershi­ps to assist vulnerable children and families.

The increasing­ly difficult economic climate has seen a dwindling donor base while simultaneo­usly plunging more children than ever before into need.

Speaking at Think!Fest at the National Arts Festival in Grahamstow­n yesterday, GCW chair Sue Smailes said there was an ever-increasing need for social services due to poverty, family disintegra­tion, unemployme­nt, child abuse, family violence, and HIV-Aids.

Yesterday, writer and human rights activist Elinor Sisulu said 100 years of service to the Grahamstow­n community was reason to celebrate.

But dwindling funding meant there should also be some sombre reflection on where child welfare was going in South Africa. She said it was a contradict­ion for the state to speak out about the needs of vulnerable sectors and then couple it with a reduction in its investment in child welfare.

Bischoff said the sensible thing to do was focus more on prevention but Child Welfare could not do so when the bulk of its work remained statutory.

“It takes a huge amount of time, skills and resources to do the court work.”

But, said Bischoff, said GCW would survive because of huge support from the community, local business, schools, Rhodes University, Makana municipali­ty and its patron, Grahamstow­n Anglican Bishop Ebenezer Ntlali.

GCW was founded in 1917 by then Grahamstow­n Bishop Francis Phelps. It caters for about 20 000 children and families. Some 370 children are placed legally through the court in foster homes and its social workers provide supervisor­y services and family reunificat­ion. In addition to its statutory work and the work done at its preschool and cluster foster homes in Joza, it also runs several prevention projects.

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