Mail & Guardian

De Lille hastens IDT closure

The Independen­t Developmen­t Trust’s board and the department of public works and infrastruc­ture have agreed to devise an exit plan, which will see the entity closed by early next year

- Thando Maeko

The department of public works and infrastruc­ture and the board of trustees at the Independen­t Developmen­t Trust (IDT) have agreed to expedite the entity’s exit strategy, kick-starting a process that will see the troubled state-owned entity dissolved by March next year.

This follows Public Works Minister Patricia de Lille’s decision in March to dissolve the IDT within the next year because of poor project management and performanc­e, among other factors.

In a letter dated March 31 to the board, De Lille outlined the IDT’S exit strategy. This included an R84-million cash injection from the department to the entity to fund its operationa­l cost shortfall over the next four months.

The department has provided the ailing entity with R500-million in bailouts over the past five years. De Lille initially told the board, which had requested a capital injection from the department, that the fiscal constraint­s the country is facing makes it difficult to justify any further bailouts for the stateowned entity.

But the department has now decided to provide the IDT with additional funding, which will be disbursed in tranches of R21-million a month for four months. The funding will provide a much needed injection to the

IDT, which has been in a precarious financial position over the past few years.

The funding is subject to various conditions including the implementa­tion of cost-saving measures such as halting domestic and internatio­nal travel, no hosting of conference­s, seminars, training or related events and that no consultant­s should be hired during the period.

The payments will be made to the IDT once “a detailed breakdown of all operationa­l costs have been scrutinise­d and assessed by the CFO [chief financial officer] of DPWI [department of public works and infrastruc­ture] or his nominee”, the letter reads.

The seven-member task team appointed by De Lille to oversee the exit strategy includes the IDT caretaker chief executive, Chris Lombard, and the department’s chief financial officer, Mandla Sithole. The team is responsibl­e for developing the exit plan.

The parties have agreed to present the exit plan by June 15, subject to the approval by the interim board, De Lille and Deputy Minister

Noxolo Kievet “before further budget approval [over and above the R84-million] shall be granted”.

Employees of IDT whose contracts expired at the end of March were given a four-month extension, with the option of renewal. The renewed contracts include a caveat recognisin­g that the IDT is embarking on an exit strategy and will be dissolved within a year.

Additional­ly, the parties have agreed that all positions that become vacant over the next four months to July will remain unfilled and that no person will be appointed in an acting position over the course of the exit strategy except for the caretaker chief executive. It is not stated that this will apply after July until March next year.

The National Education, Health and Allied Workers’ Union (Nehawu), which has argued against the dissolutio­n of the IDT pending a parliament­ary process, says it has not yet been consulted regarding the exit strategy.

The union requested a meeting with De Lille at the end of April but Nehawu’s spokespers­on, Khaya Xaba, said this has so far not taken place. Xaba said De Lille had only acknowledg­ed the letter two weeks ago but has not provided the union with a date when the meeting can take place.

Thando Maeko is an Adamela Trust business reporter at the Mail & Guardian

 ?? Photo: Nardus Engelbrech­t/gallo Images ?? Respite: People queue at the department of employment and labour in Cape Town to claim money from the Temporary Employerem­ployee Relief Scheme, establishe­d to assist companies affected by lockdown regulation­s.
Photo: Nardus Engelbrech­t/gallo Images Respite: People queue at the department of employment and labour in Cape Town to claim money from the Temporary Employerem­ployee Relief Scheme, establishe­d to assist companies affected by lockdown regulation­s.
 ?? Photo: David Harrison ?? Cracking the
whip: The minister of public works, Patricia de Lille, has provided an outline of the IDT’S exit strategy.
Photo: David Harrison Cracking the whip: The minister of public works, Patricia de Lille, has provided an outline of the IDT’S exit strategy.

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