Cape Argus

WE DEMAND ANSWERS

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I RECENTLY posed questions to Dr Zahid Badrodien in this column about the abuses allegedly occurring at the City-owned shelter known as “Paint City” in Bellville.

Dr Badrodien has not responded, reminding me of Strandfont­ein: we initially complained to the City about some of its service providers at the camp, but the resultant protection of those errant service providers, putting us at risk in the process, led to us taking the City of Cape Town to court.

I urge Dr Badrodien and Social Developmen­t MEC Sharna Fernandez not to make the same mistake that was made at Strandfont­ein.

Don’t respond to questions being asked and allegation­s being made – not only by myself but also by the homeless people of Cape Town whom you are mandated to protect as, well as the concerned citizens whom you have a mandate to represent – by providing answers being fed to you and untested by your own offices.

This will result in us holding you responsibl­e for the entire disaster.

MEC Fernandez, why are you and your department unaware of the critical shortage of bed spaces in Cape Town?

Or are you aware but just not interested in remedying the situation?

After all, sheltering the homeless is mandated to the provincial government and not the City, is it not?

Despite this, the City decided to address this crisis and its first Safe Space aimed at increasing bed space for the homeless opened in 2018.

A report issued three weeks ago puts Cape Town 11 000 beds short to shelter its homeless.

Of concern is the fact that Safe Spaces are not currently registered, required to comply with, or monitored by the Department of Social Developmen­t (DSD).

This being so, what are the processes in place to ensure that government legislatio­n, policies, standards and practices are being upheld and monitored at all the Safe Spaces, and who is monitoring them?

How is one part of the government failing to comply with or be held accountabl­e to its own standards? It is imperative that this be investigat­ed urgently and transparen­t redress be actioned.

The department has also not responded to numerous calls for investigat­ions into the corrupt nature of the relationsh­ip between some of the organisati­ons it funds with the City of Cape Town’s Social Developmen­t Directorat­e.

Surely as these Safe Spaces are defined by the City in terms of the norms and standards that are applicable to shelters, etc, that the provincial government oversees, then it stands to reason that those norms and standards be applied to Safe Spaces too, or not?

Why is the service provider Matdoc – at Safe Space 1 Culemborg as well as Paint City – not registered as a service provider despite rendering the same services as the shelters funded by Fernandez’s department?

Why are investigat­ions of this magnitude being run internally when the possibilit­y that the corruption – in this case – may have extended its influence to the highest authoritie­s? Why have these investigat­ions not been expedited?

Why, as a service provider, was Matdoc not immediatel­y suspended along with it having been awarded an extension on both its contracts at Culemborg 1 and Paint City valued at millions of rand for a new two-year period?

And please explain the awarding to a similarly placed or even, it seems, related service provider, yet another contract for the second Safe Space at Culemborg valued at R20 million for a two-year period without a clear indication of your motivation in doing so?

SHOCKED? SO AM I!

With special thanks to the Reverend Annie Kirke.

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