Sowetan

100k people yet to renew Sassa cards

Many have yet to switch to new cards

- By Isaac Mahlangu

The SA Social Security Agency (Sassa) is racing against time to register about 100,000 beneficiar­ies who risk losing their grants and pensions if they don’t renew their cards. The most affected provinces are Gauteng, Eastern Cape and KZN, which have a large number of social grant beneficiar­ies yet to switch to the new gold Sassa cards, the agency said yesterday.

The agency has warned that beneficiar­ies who have not yet migrated to the new cards may lose their benefits.

The agency completed the switch over to its new cards in December and managed to swap more than seven million old cards, with some beneficiar­ies opting to receive their grants directly in their private bank accounts. However, about 100,000 beneficiar­ies had not yet presented themselves to the agency’s offices or the Post Offices for new applicatio­ns. Abraham Mahlangu, Sassa acting CEO, said this was “quite concerning as this looked set to deny these recipients their “constituti­onal right to social security”.

Sassa spokespers­on Paseka Letsatsi urged beneficiar­ies to come forward and make the switch as soon as possible. Sassa, however, did not rule out the possibilit­y of the nonactivat­ion of the new cards as a result of fraud, or beneficiar­ies not residing in the country or being deceased. Letsatsi said the grants have

to be collected every month and the law discourage­d noncollect­ion for three consecutiv­e months.

If social grants were not collected

in three successive months, it can mean that the beneficiar­y had perhaps found a source of income and felt they no longer qualify for the grants, Sassa said. Hoodah Abrahams-Fayker from human rights organisati­on Black Sash said they were concerned that there was a significan­t number of beneficiar­ies that have not migrated to the new Sassa/Sapo card. “This implies that there may be beneficiar­ies who are not receiving grants, which begs the questions as to how they are surviving as they depend on grants as a lifeline to meet their daily needs,” she said. Abrahams-Fayker said beneficiar­ies may therefore resort to opening commercial bank accounts to access their grants. “This option is not ideal for beneficiar­ies because they then incur costs through bank charges and services, whereas the Sassa/Sapo card has a special disburseme­nt account which provides basket-free services. By accessing their grants through a commercial bank account, it reduces the cash value of their grants.” In its report to parliament last month, Sassa indicated that 71% of its beneficiar­ies, amounting to 7.8m, were paid through the Post Bank while 2.1m (19.5%) were paid through other banks. About 9.5%, or just more than one million, were paid by Grindrod Bank’s Easy Pay account.

 ?? /SANDILE NDLOVU ?? Many grant beneficiar­ies who have not yet migrated to the new Sassa cards system may lose their benefits.
/SANDILE NDLOVU Many grant beneficiar­ies who have not yet migrated to the new Sassa cards system may lose their benefits.

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