Mail & Guardian

LINDIWE SISULU

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Minister of Human Settlement­s 2015 grade: B2016 grade: B

Lindiwe Sisulu has run a steady ship since being deployed to this challengin­g portfolio two years ago.

During this relatively short period, Sisulu has cut irregular expenditur­e in the department from a whopping R132-million in 2013-2014 to R22-million in the 2015-2016 financial year.

Regulatory body the National Home Builders Registrati­on Council has also seen irregular expenditur­e drop by R117-million.

Auditor general Kimi Makwetu has attributed this to the entity’s leaders implementi­ng and monitoring action plans to address the noncomplia­nce that dogged them in the past.

However, the Community Schemes Ombud Service, which was establishe­d by the department to adjudicate complaints in the residentia­l sector, has seen irregular expenditur­e shoot from R600000 in 20142015 to R8-million in 2015-2016.

The auditor general’s office found this to be a result of inadequate oversight, lack of monitoring and reviewing compliance with legislatio­n, and inadequate skills among officials.

With projection­s that 71.3% of South

Africa’s population will live in urban areas in the next 14 years, this department faces the daunting task of accelerati­ng its mandate to deliver houses.

To this end, Sisulu has announced the ambitious R300-billion “catalytic projects” plan in all nine provinces, to build integrated human settlement­s.

Other encouragin­g developmen­ts include establishi­ng the Human Settlement­s Developmen­t Bank, to create easier access to housing finance for groups that are shunned by the mainstream banking sector.

Although Sisulu has managed to steer relatively clear of scandal and controvers­y this year, her department has been found wanting when it comes to paying suppliers within 30 days, as ordered by the government.

The auditor general has found that payment delays were mainly because officials disregarde­d the payment policy.

This calls for Sisulu to crack the whip and steer her department to achieve more than the commendabl­e 4.3-million houses and subsidies delivered by the department since 1994.

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