The Citizen (Gauteng)

Sassa to clear grants backlog in W Cape

- Mary-Anne Gontsana

The SA Social Security Agency (Sassa) has assured the Western Cape legislatur­e that applicatio­ns from the more than 52 000 people whose temporary disability grants lapsed last year will all be processed by the end of March.

Sassa regional executive manager Bandile Maqetuka said extra doctors had been brought in to help assess the applicatio­ns.

Temporary disability and care dependency grants were due to lapse in February 2020 but due to the lockdown, were extended to 31 December by Social Developmen­t Minister Lindiwe Zulu.

Sassa has said it cannot afford to extend all grants further, urging beneficiar­ies to report to their offices with a detailed referral report from their treating doctor confirming their condition.

Sassa offices have been inundated with applicants, with long queues of people wanting to renew their grants, some even sleeping outside the offices.

Asked why Sassa had not been prepared for the sudden influx of applicants, Maqetuka told the committee that grants had not all lapsed at once. “Grants lapsed in February, March, April and May, but we managed to continue to pay until December,” he said.

“The problem is as long as a grant shows as active on the system, you cannot start a new process of applicatio­ns.”

According to Maqetuka, the extension of the lapsed temporary disability and care dependency grants from February to December last year cost approximat­ely R1.8 billion. “The resources at our disposal are not sufficient to continue to cover everyone. We are therefore required in terms of the law to conduct new assessment­s in order to ensure that only qualifying beneficiar­ies are considered and paid,” he said.

For the remainder of the financial year which ends in March, the extension of the temporary disability grant will cost approximat­ely R1.2 billion. But Sassa only had R411 million available for the rest of the financial year.

“This current budget is being considered for utilisatio­n to support where necessary. This is based on an assumption of an 80% return of lapsed temporary disability grants after an assessment process.

“Should the rate of return for the lapsed grants be 50%, the possible funds available for utilisatio­n would increase to R817 million,” said Maqetuka.

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