The Citizen (KZN)

Sassa’s plan for elderly

AGENCY TO TRANSPORT 2.8M BENEFICIAR­IES TO ATMS

- Amandaw@citizen.co.za

The SA Social Security Agency’s (Sassa) Monty Python-esque plan is to load 2.8 million grant beneficiar­ies – primarily the disabled and very old – into vehicles and take them to ATMs.

This is if the Constituti­onal Court does not grant its applicatio­n for a six-month extension on the declaratio­n of invalidity of Cash Paymaster Services (CPS) contract.

“This is what is going to happen. The people who are using pay points will be having their cards with the money but without anyone coming to deliver cash,” Sassa acting CEO Pearl Bhengu said in Pretoria yesterday.

“Remember the people using pay points are elderly people and mostly disabled people so it would have been then for Sassa taking all those people from the pay points to where they can get their money,” Bhengu said, and acknowledg­ed the process would be “very inconvenie­nt” to them.

Black Sash advocacy manager Hoodah Abrahams-Fayker was confident, however, the ConCourt would find a way to make the process simpler.

“Our concern is, the media briefing spoke about the contingenc­y plan as if the extension had been granted already. It raises concerns Sassa itself is not too sure about its contingenc­y plan with having to physically move old and disabled people,” said Abrahams-Fayker.

“That is their biggest concern. How that will be done is another matter and who will be primarily responsibl­e, that is what we will need to hear in the court finding.” Still, she said, Sassa had had a year to sort the issue out.

Previously, Sassa used CPS to pay 10.7 million beneficiar­ies through cash payments, direct deposits and electronic payments, which put a disputed R700 million into CPS’s account. The contract was declared invalid in April 2014 by the ConCourt.

Bhengu said yesterday Sassa had reactivate­d its Paymaster-General (PMG) accounts with the SA Reserve Bank. “This means that the money is not paid over to a private contractor in advance, but remains within the government environmen­t until deposited into the social grant beneficiar­y accounts,” Bhengu said.

SA Post Office (Sapo) CEO Mark Barnes said the Post Office was ready to pay social grants without interrupti­on from April 1.

He promised Sapo/Sassa card holders no deductions; three free withdrawal­s; one free balance enquiry and one free mini-statement per month – a free full statement covering up to a maximum of three months on demand – and a free first replacemen­t card.

Bhengu said Sassa had taken over management of the direct funeral policy deductions for more than 727 000 beneficiar­ies, the only legally allowable deductions made before the grant is paid into the account of the beneficiar­y. “In the meantime, beneficiar­ies should ignore anybody offering them any alternativ­e card to the Sassa one under the guise that the Sassa card has changed,” she said. –

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