The Citizen (Gauteng)

Public (doesn’t) Works

PUBLIC WORKS: CONFIDENTI­AL REPORT DETAILS SERIOUS PROBLEMS IN DEPARTMENT

- Charles Cilliers charlesc@citizen.co.za

The Public Service Commission is looking into several procuremen­t and appointmen­t allegation­s in Thulas Nxesi’s department, with the minister himself asking for 684 ‘dodgy’ posts to be probed.

Minister Nxesi asked for probe of at least 684 ‘tainted’ posts, irregulari­ties.

Aconfident­ial report sent to Public Works Minister Thulas Nxesi on Friday, detailing all the current allegation­s of corruption in the department under investigat­ion, poses serious questions about the state of the department, which appears to be awash in appointmen­t and procuremen­t irregulari­ties.

The lack of skilled and qualified appointees casts further doubt on its competence among those who have to use its buildings and consider their safety to be a matter of life and death.

According to the report, nearly 700 irregular appointmen­ts are under investigat­ion.

The report was accompanie­d by a signed letter to Nxesi from Public Service Commission (PSC) chairperso­n RK Sizani, promising to keep Nxesi in the loop on ongoing investigat­ions.

The oldest complaint dates from November 2016, with the most recent from last month.

Nxesi himself requested an investigat­ion of his department in June, related to 684 posts at public works that were allegedly tainted by irregulari­ties. Minister Ayanda Dlodlo’s department of public service and administra­tion did not have the resources to handle the matter – according to the PSC – and asked the PSC to review the appointmen­ts. It began to look into it in July.

The PSC has already investigat­ed an anonymous complaint from November 2016, that includes an allegation that most of the employees responsibl­e for leasing and acquisitio­n at public works do not have the required qualificat­ions.

“The current stats indicate there are about 50 employees in leasing [of whom] less than 10% are in possession of qualificat­ions [an appropriat­e degree], about 70% have irrelevant qualificat­ions and 20% have Grade 12 [only],” reads the complaint.

These staff members are responsibl­e for negotiatin­g and sourcing accommodat­ion for government department­s, which raised eyebrows this weekend after the Sunday Times reported that ministers are allowed to pay as little as R1 200 a month for lavish multimilli­on-rand apartments in Cape Town, while other state workers can snap up rentals for even less. Cape Town mayor Patricia de Lille described the deals as “ridiculous”.

A further allegation that the PSC was asked to investigat­e was that the minister in 2014 or 2015 attempted to create an organisati­onal structure that included 28 deputy directors-general, which the department of public service and administra­tion is believed to have rejected as being “excessive”.

Public works spokespers­on Sabelo Mali confirmed receipt of The Citizen’s questions about how public works is dealing with appointmen­t and procuremen­t problems, which will be dealt with in a follow-up article.

“As I indicated to you, some questions are HR-related and as such will need more time to respond.” –

Employees responsibl­e for leasing ‘not qualified’

 ?? Picture: Gallo Images ?? Thulas Nxesi.
Picture: Gallo Images Thulas Nxesi.

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