Business Day

Provinces blamed for schools delay

- Luyolo Mkentane Political Writer mkentanel@businessli­ve.co.za

Basic education minister Angie Motshekga has shifted the blame to the provinces for the shambles created by her department’s decision to postpone the reopening of schools to next Monday.

Basic education minister Angie Motshekga has shifted the blame to the provinces for the shambles created by her department’s decision to postpone the reopening of schools to next Monday.

The minister conceded that some schools nationally were not ready and had failed to meet the safety and health requiremen­ts set by the government.

Parents, pupils, teachers and other stakeholde­rs were left in the lurch on Sunday night when a scheduled media address by the minister was postponed to Monday.

The minister’s office said she was consulting stakeholde­rs.

As a result of the uncertaint­y, most pupils stayed at home on Monday. Only teaching and non-teaching staff turned up at most schools.

But Western Cape schools and a few private schools reopened for learning on Monday. The Western Cape said it had met the government requiremen­ts to do so. The SA Human Rights Commission said it would move to have schools in the province, which is the epicentre of the Covid-19 pandemic in SA, close its doors and reopen with the others next Monday.

The provincial department said it had spent R280m on protective equipment, including 2.4-million masks.

Addressing the media on Monday, Motshekga said: “Any further delays pose a serious threat to the system and the future our learners are yearning for. We are giving them this week to say they must deliver ... and there must be no school that operates when those PPEs [personal protective equipment] have not been delivered.”

Only Grade 12 and Grade 7 pupils will return next Monday in terms of the phased reopening. The department said this week must be used for the orientatio­n and training of teachers, the mopping up and ramping up of all supply chain matters, and final touches to the readiness of each facility for the arrival of learners.

In a joint statement on Monday, nongovernm­ent organisati­ons Section 27, Equal Education Law Centre and Equal

Education, said: “If plans were implemente­d as they were intended to be, all schools should have been properly sanitised, and PPEs and the promised infrastruc­ture ought to have been delivered in time for the reopening date determined by Motshekga.”

The organisati­ons said the failure of the national department and most provincial education department­s to comply with their undertakin­gs and to meet their own deadlines mirrored their failure to provide textbooks, essential school infrastruc­ture such as toilets and scholar transport.

“It is also undoubtedl­y frustratin­g for learners, school staff and caregivers who are already extremely anxious. We urge the [department] to engage in meaningful consultati­on with learners, school staff and caregivers, and to move expeditiou­sly in ensuring that all deliveries occur at all schools.”

Godwin Khosa, CEO of the National Education Collaborat­ion Trust (Nect), which submitted a report on school readiness to the department at the weekend, said the Gauteng and

Western Cape provinces were flagged as largely ready to reopen schools on June 1. The Northern Cape, Free State, North West and Eastern Cape received a medium rating, while Limpopo, Mpumalanga and KwaZulu-Natal were flagged as high-risk provinces.

In his weekly newsletter, President Cyril Ramaphosa said the government was pulling out all the stops to ensure learning takes place under strict conditions when schools reopen.

Parents, teachers, governing bodies and the government agree that no school should reopen until all precaution­s are in place, Ramaphosa said.

“There needs to be transparen­cy about the level of preparedne­ss of each of the schools. Everyone who is a key role player — be they a parent, a school governing body member, a teacher or a government official — should be able to have the correct informatio­n about the state of preparedne­ss of each school. It is our collective responsibi­lity to ensure that the learning environmen­t is safe.”

Teachers’ unions have called on all schools not to welcome back learners until the nonnegotia­ble commitment­s have been delivered at all schools. These include the fumigation and disinfecti­on of schools; proper toilet facilities; observatio­n of social distancing; reduction in class sizes; provision of water, soap, sanitisers and masks; and screening of pupils, teachers and support personnel.

Motshekga said she agreed that no school should reopen before the delivery of the protective equipment. “If there are no masks, sanitisers ... we are agreeing with unions they should not operate because it’s going to be risky.”

Teboho Joala from Rand Water said 3,126 schools across SA were experienci­ng water challenges. Of the affected schools, 756 were in the Eastern Cape, 87 in Free State, 1,125 in KwaZulu-Natal, 475 in Limpopo, 248 in North West and 435 in Mpumalanga.

Rand Water is sending water tankers to the schools.

 ?? /Reuters ?? Sanitising: A worker disinfects a classroom at the Sibonile School for the Blind in Meyerton in terms of the safety and health requiremen­ts set by the government to curb the spread of Covid-19.
/Reuters Sanitising: A worker disinfects a classroom at the Sibonile School for the Blind in Meyerton in terms of the safety and health requiremen­ts set by the government to curb the spread of Covid-19.

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