Cape Argus

Eskom asked to consider learners

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

ESKOM has been asked to consider the plight of learners and students during exams when it institutes load shedding.

SA Democratic Teachers Union general secretary Mugwena Maluleke said load shedding had become the single biggest distractio­n to learners and students whose preparatio­ns for the examinatio­ns had become a nightmare.

Mugwena called on the responsibl­e authoritie­s including Eskom, the Department of Basic Education and all other relevant authoritie­s to urgently find a reasonable mechanism to reduce the adverse impact of load shedding on the current examinatio­ns.

Congress of South African Students acting provincial secretary Mphumzi Giwu said matrics had been negatively affected by the ongoing load shedding.

Giwu said they had been receiving complaints about how difficult it was for learners to study due to the two hours or more of power cuts, and how it disrupted examinatio­ns, bearing in mind that there were learners with special needs, some of whom needed extra lighting in order to read and write.

Education MEC Debbie Schäfer said: “As if our matrics have not had enough to deal with over the past two years, they now also have to deal with persistent, debilitati­ng load shedding.”

The concerns prompted a senior delegation from DBE and the Public Enterprise­s department to hold urgent talks with Eskom.

Parliament’s portfolio committee on basic education chairperso­n, Bongiwe Mbinqo-Gigaba said the department informed the committee that the director-general had already requested an urgent meeting with Eskom’s chief executive, Andre de Ruyter, which was expected to be held in the next few days.

“The committee was assured that it would be appraised of the outcome of the meeting,” she said.

During yesterday’s media briefing, De Ruyter said they were “very aware” of the impact load shedding had on matrics.

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