Cape Argus

Schreuder’s replacemen­t

Brent Walters is being vetted for the position and has the credential­s to do the post justice

- SISONKE MLAMLA sisonke.mlamla @inl.co.za

AMID the controvers­y over the legality of extending the contract of Western Cape Education Department (WCED) head Brian Schreuder, the department announced the appointmen­t of Brent Walters as its superinten­dent-general to replace Schreuder in April next year.

Walters, 56, who matriculat­ed at Livingston­e High School, has served as the head of department (HOD) for the Department of Cultural Affairs and Sport (DCAS) for the past decade.

Education MEC Debbie Schäfer said: “Walters is no stranger to the education sector.

“As a prime example of the WCED motto of ‘Enter to learn, leave to serve’, he returned to the high school he matriculat­ed from to serve as a teacher and, later, head of department in Mathematic­s.

Schäfer said he had since held a number of senior management positions in the Department of the Premier, Department of Economic Developmen­t and Tourism, and then department of sport and recreation before being appointed as the HOD of DCAS.

Walters holds a Master of Philosophy degree in education and a higher diploma in education from UCT, which he completed after being awarded a BSc (Hons).

Walters said the transition period would be dedicated to ensuring a smooth handover.

“I will be looking to ensure holistic child developmen­t to equip pupils with the tools to contribute effectivel­y to our society through quality learning, teacher capacitati­on, creating a suitable enabling environmen­t and seeing how best the system can support both pupils and teachers to meet these needs,” he said.

.ANC provincial spokespers­on on Education Khalid Sayed said Walters was an experience­d and highly capable government official with integrity, who understood the education space and had interlinke­d with it in his capacity as sports HOD.

Sayed said, more crucially, Walters was a teacher and principal who had attended Livingston­e High School, which was one of the schools which provided pupils with ideologica­l clarity in the anti-apartheid Struggle.

“His activism as a youth also sets a good background in terms of understand­ing our apartheid legacy in education that needs to be addressed. While we are not attacking Schreuder, we will continue to take the fight to the premier around his contract,” he said.

Earlier this week, Premier Alan Winde’s spokespers­on Bianca Capazorio said in light of the differing and mutually destructiv­e views of the Public Service Commission and the Department of Public Service and Administra­tion (DPSA) on the matter, Winde requested that the director, general Harry Malila write to the DPSA to initiate a process of consultati­on.

Capazario said Malila had done that, and once the DPSA had finalised its internal deliberati­ons, they would have more clarity on the next steps.

 ??  ?? Brent Walters
Brent Walters

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