The Citizen (Gauteng)

Housing budget shame

STRIPPED: PROVINCES LOSE CHUNK OF ALLOCATION DUE TO UNDERSPEND­ING

- Eric Naki ericn@citizen.co.za

Four provinces, among them Gauteng, earn wrath of Minister Sisulu.

Gauteng, North West, Northern Cape and Free State have been stripped of a good chunk of their human settlement­s budgets because they could not spend the funds they were allocated on building houses for the poor and military veterans.

Minister of Human Settlement­s Lindiwe Sisulu recently took the unspent funds from the four provinces and redirected them to Western Cape, KwaZulu-Natal, Mpumalanga and Eastern Cape.

Those provinces had been delivering well, with some of them even exceeding their targets.

The trend of nondeliver­y by Gauteng, North West, Northern Cape and Free State emanates from the 2018/19 financial year and continues to the current financial year.

Gauteng targeted to build 41 992 units but delivered 21 357, Free State 17 439 but built 6 610, Northern Cape planned 4 760 but 2 720 were constructe­d and Free Stated budgeted for 15 447 but built 10 687.

Had Gauteng, North West, Northern Cape and Free State ued the more than half of estimated total of R8 billion they were allocated, they could have built at least a total 40 000 RDP houses, if calculated at the cost of R110 000 per RDP house.

The underperfo­rmances by the four provinces and their failure to spend their funds forced Sisulu to act.

Sisulu, who is said to be strongly opposed to having funds returning to the National Treasury, recently issued a directive at the regular meeting with the MECs for human settlement­s.

Sisulu appealed for provinces to accelerate the pace of their spending in the provision of houses to indigent people.

She decided to reallocate the funding from underperfo­rming provinces to those that performed well.

“This is to make sure a sector performs and, most importantl­y, we do not return money to National Treasury while we have such a backlog in the country when it comes to matters of human settlement­s, water and sanitation,” Sisulu said.

The minister gave a strict instructio­n that provinces that were negatively affected by the reallocati­on would have to improve their performanc­e over the next few months.

However, there were strict conditions for the receiving provinces. Sisulu said the funds allocated to the Western Cape should solely benefit the poorest of the poor, while in the Eastern Cape this should be channelled to the Duncan Village Priority Developmen­t Project.

An attempt by Democratic Alliance (DA) MPs to question the failure of the four provinces to spend their funds was blocked by the chairperso­n of the parliament­ary portfolio committee on human settlement­s, water and sanitation, Machwene Semenya, who abruptly called a halt to the meeting before its scheduled close.

Semenya did this after she realised that DA parliament­arians wanted to question the gross underspend­ing by the four provinces.

DA MP and spokespers­on for human settlement­s Emma Louise Powell said Semenya adjourned the meeting 30 minutes before it was set to conclude in an attempt to prevent DA MPs from asking the department’s director-general, and Deputy Minister David Mahlobo, follow-up questions on the department’s failures.

Powell said they were going to ask Mahlobo and the director-general about the department’s failure to table their end-of-year report; a plan to resolve ongoing water shortages in district municipali­ties across the country; and the wholescale failure of a number of provinces to spend their allocated second quarter budgets.

Powell said it was not the first time that Semenya refused opposition members the opportunit­y to ask officials questions.

“The DA will now escalate this issue to Cedric Frolick, the chair of chairs,” she said.

Sisulu’s office could not be reached for comment.

amount allocated to four provinces for the constructi­on of RDP houses

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa