Sunday News (Zimbabwe)

Gweru Polytechni­c shines at the 2016 All Africa public sector innovation awards

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GWERU Polytechni­c has received the prestigiou­s Special Award at the 2016 All Africa Public Sector Innovation Awards (AAPSIA) Ceremony at the Hilton Hotel in Ethiopia which was organised by the African Union (AU).

AAPSIA is an Africa-wide awards programme that celebrates innovation in the public sector. The programme also recognises and rewards the achievemen­t of public officials and their partners from the private and not-for-profit sectors that have successful­ly developed innovative solutions to service delivery and governance challenges.

The 2016 awards programme was open to all government department­s and public entities across Africa. The theme for 2016 awards was “The Public Sector Innovating Towards the Africa We Want”. The theme acknowledg­ed the strong relationsh­ip between good governance and accountabl­e service delivery. The projects which were considered for the 2016 AAPSI Awards were in the following three categories;

Innovative Service Delivery Institutio­ns: — Improvemen­t in service delivery to citizens and stakeholde­rs external to Government or

— Improvemen­t in internal efficiency within the public sector.

Innovative Partnershi­ps in Service Delivery: — Involve creative partnershi­ps that have resulted in better than anticipate­d outcomes for the project or

— Build sustainabl­e relationsh­ips between ( Government and other alternativ­e approaches consultati­on.

Innovation­s in the Systems and Processes of Governance

— Projects focused on building accountabl­e, transparen­t and ethical public services which value the input and participat­ion of citizens.

Gweru Polytechni­c submitted its project on Medical Service Provision, in the Innovative Partnershi­ps in Service Delivery category.

However, because of the uniqueness of the project it was then categorise­d as a special project and went on to win the “Commission­er for Political Affairs’ Special Award”.

Out of the 54 Africa-wide entries, only two projects were categorise­d as special.

Gweru Polytechni­c students come from various socio-economic background­s and their fees and levies, including medical aid, are gazetted by the Government. The majority of the students enrol with no prior medical aid arrangemen­ts. The statutory medical aid contributi­ons paid by students in polytechni­cs are so minimal ($10 per term) that the Polytechni­c could not enter into any meaningful arrangemen­t with establishe­d medical aid societies.

Prudence, therefore, dictated that a system must social partners through to participat­ion and

be put in place to ensure that students access basic medical treatment for their wellness as they pursue their academic endeavours.

The Medical Service Provision project was therefore initiated to ensure that with the meagre termly student medical aid contributi­ons, students can access medical care and services from reputable institutio­ns in Gweru, namely Premier Service Claybank Hospital and Medical Air Rescue Services (Mars).

The need to provide quality medical services culminated in the establishm­ent of strong and sustainabl­e partnershi­ps with an ambulance service provider and a local private hospital to ensure smooth transition of sick students from the Polytechni­c to a medical institutio­n for treatment with neither prior payment nor arrangemen­t with any medical aid society.

Due to prior arrangemen­t with the medical service providers, students’ medical emergencie­s are attended to efficientl­y when need arises. The partnershi­p with service providers enables all students to have access to premium medical care, on a paylater basis.

Instead of contributi­ng to a medical aid scheme, the institutio­n has only been paying for services rendered thereby realising considerab­le financial savings. The Polytechni­c has plans to channel the savings towards the constructi­on of a clinic.

The aim of AAPSIA is to award successful and effective service delivery improvemen­t projects and initiative­s that have been achieved through the applicatio­n of innovative approaches, methodolog­ies and tools.

The AAPSIA project is part of a bigger endeavour by African Ministers of Public Service/Civil Service to cultivate an enabling environmen­t within the public sector for the developmen­t and nurturing of innovative ideas and initiative­s.

By conferring this highly prestigiou­s award to Gweru Polytechni­c and Zimbabwe, the AU through AAPSIA confirmed that Gweru Polytechni­c is a unique institutio­n with innovative leadership which has the capacity to come up with internatio­nally acclaimed and acceptable homegrown solutions, to local challenges, which can be replicated across Africa. This award is proof that limited financial resources are not tantamount to poor service delivery. Gweru Polytechni­c therefore encourages other Government institutio­ns to embark on service delivery projects and innovation­s which seek to enhance the betterment of society.

This can be done by the utilisatio­n of limited resources at their disposal through, inter alia, building sustainabl­e relationsh­ips with other partners.

 ??  ?? Gweru Polytechni­c principal Mr Washington Chandiwana and the Vice-Principal Mr Fidelis Mushayi captured at the African Union’s All Africa Public Sector Innovation Awards AAPSIA) ceremony in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia last year
Gweru Polytechni­c principal Mr Washington Chandiwana and the Vice-Principal Mr Fidelis Mushayi captured at the African Union’s All Africa Public Sector Innovation Awards AAPSIA) ceremony in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia last year

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