Sunday World (South Africa)

PROVINCE BIDS FAREWELL TO TOP OFFICIAL

Fund to deal with shortage of accommodat­ion

- By Kabelo Khumalo

It was a bitterswee­t moment for Lesufi as he bid farewell to Hilda Kekana, the district director for Tshwane South. For two consecutiv­e years, the district retained the number one position in both the country and province as the best performing district.

Gauteng Premier David Makhura also acknowledg­ed that Kekana’s retirement will leave a void in the system.

Lesufi said he was also proud of the Tshwane South district being “the country’s number one district” in the 2020 examinatio­n, which obtained an 89.6% pass rate despite difficult circumstan­ces under Covid-19.

“We want to thank Tshwane for leading us because the region has made us proud. To the schools that obtained a 100% pass rate, thank you for giving [us] what we call quality education,” he said.

Kekana was honoured by the provincial government and received the Harry Gwala Education Award. She was modest with her achievemen­t.

“Whatever we achieved boils down to teamwork and visionary leadership from the top. I have made my little contributi­ons towards educating the nation as education knows no district or provincial walls,” said Kekana.

I am only alive to my abilities and not disabiliti­es

Omphile Makhanya (Prinshof Skool)

Eight South African higher education institutio­ns could soon be home to new residentia­l facilities should various feasibilit­y studies by the government pan out.

This was revealed in the budget preview document released by the National Treasury this week.

Walter Sisulu University in Eastern Cape would add 3 200 new beds should the feasibilit­y study make a strong case.

The University of Johannesbu­rg is earmarked for 2 048 new beds, Lephalale TVET College 1 200, Sekhukhune TVET College 1 500 and Central

University of Technology 2 000 new beds.

Cape Peninsula University of Technology is in line to get 2 150 new beds and Northlink TVET College could soon be able to house 1 500 more students. The Treasury has put the price tag of the mooted projects at R3.2-billion.

Feasibilit­y studies on other projects have already been concluded. This include a study on Tshwane University of Technology, which could see the institutio­n open doors to 3 500 more students; the University of Kwazulu-natal’s 3 000 newbeds project; Gert Sibande’s 1 500 beds infrastruc­ture plan and Majuba TVET College is in line to be home to 1 500 new beds.

The Treasury said the bulk of the funding for the projects will come from the Student Housing Infrastruc­ture Programme.

“The programme aims to address the acute backlog of student housing in higher education. As part of the R400-million allocated to the Developmen­t Bank of South Africa, R30-million will be used for project planning and preparatio­n. The infrastruc­ture fund will assist with structurin­g, financing and fundraisin­g for phase two,” the budget review reads.

South African higher education institutio­ns have been moving with speed to meet the ever-increasing needs for additional beds.

The North-west University (NWU) a few months ago conducted a site handover and briefed successful contractor­s on expectatio­ns ahead of the start of a two-year constructi­on project for a 1 728-bed facility on its Mahikeng Campus.

The NWU Mahikeng student housing project will comprise six student residence units with guard houses and recreation­al areas.

Currently, the NWU accredits off-campus accommodat­ion providers to ensure suitable housing for its students. The institutio­n said it will continue to do so because the student accommodat­ion need is great.

The government has acknowledg­ed that an additional 300 000 beds are required to accommodat­e the nation’s students, though industry experts consider this a conservati­ve figure.

For universiti­es, the biggest challenge to providing student housing is the cost of building and maintenanc­e.

Programme aims to address acute backlog in higher education

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 ??  ?? Top: Class of 2020 achievers listen attentivel­y to department officials during the awards ceremony earlier this week. Bottom left: Education MEC Panyaza Lesufi congratula­tes Omphile Makhanya on her achievemen­ts. Bottom Right: Honorary guest Gauteng Premier David Makhura.
Top: Class of 2020 achievers listen attentivel­y to department officials during the awards ceremony earlier this week. Bottom left: Education MEC Panyaza Lesufi congratula­tes Omphile Makhanya on her achievemen­ts. Bottom Right: Honorary guest Gauteng Premier David Makhura.
 ??  ?? Hilda Kekana
Hilda Kekana
 ?? /Gallo Images ??
/Gallo Images
 ?? /NWU ?? NWU is one of the universiti­es that are upgrading their student accomodati­on.
/NWU NWU is one of the universiti­es that are upgrading their student accomodati­on.

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