The Citizen (Gauteng)

Horrible Christmas in store for some foster kids

- Eric Naki

The department of social developmen­t will not be able to meet the November 28 deadline set by the High Court in Pretoria to process a backlog of 41 000 foster care cases, an administra­tive hurdle that could see many orphans going hungry this Christmas.

In an effort to avert the non-payment of foster care grants, the department was hoping the National

Treasury would continue to pay, despite the deadline.

The emergency situation was caused by provincial social developmen­t department­s not finishing the work in time to meet the deadline. Only the Eastern Cape was hoping to finish its cases in time or soon after, due to the faster pace at which it was dealing with the issue.

Fearing the grants will lapse after the deadline, the social developmen­t department is going to approach the court to request an extension.

The portfolio committee on social developmen­t commended the “significan­t progress” made as the number of outstandin­g cases had dropped since September from 90 634 to 41 609 on November 4.

In September the committee was sceptical the department could clear the backlog.

At an earlier hearing, the committee was told 32 269 cases had been completed during September

and the first two weeks of October. The outstandin­g balance at the time was 51 956.

The committee received a provincial breakdown of the remaining cases for Mpumalanga as 510; Northern Cape 904; Limpopo 2 717; Free State 4 780; Eastern Cape 5 067; Gauteng 5 405; North West 7 013; Western Cape 8 250 and KwaZulu-Natal 18 492.

Committee chairperso­n Mondli Gungubele blamed the lack of legislatio­n.

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