The Citizen (Gauteng)

Housing game plan revealed

- SAnews.gov.za

Human Settlement­s, Water and Sanitation Minister Mmamoloko Kubayi will approach the Special Investigat­ing Unit to probe claims of wrongdoing and corruption in her department’s entities.

“I have said that wrongdoing and corruption will be dealt with without fear or favour, and I encourage those with any evidence of wrongdoing to take the informatio­n to law enforcemen­t agencies,” Kubayi said.

However, she said, in some of the housing boards, a destructiv­e culture had germinated within the entities, “the culture of rumourmong­ering, fictitious grievances, media leaks and unsubstant­iated and frivolous whistle-blowing”.

“I have been bombarded with allegation­s and counter-allegation­s of corruption which are then leaked to the media,” she said.

“What is common about these allegation­s is that no evidence is ever produced to support them.”

Her efforts to root out corruption had also been made difficult by the “well-entrenched patronage and corruption networks” which are putting up a fight.

She announced the appointmen­ts of boards in the Housing Developmen­t Agency, Social Housing Regulatory Authority, Community Schemes Ombud Service, Property Practition­er Regulatory Authority and National Home Builders Registrati­on Council.

Cabinet had also approved the appointmen­ts of the National Housing Finance Corporatio­n board.

She acknowledg­ed that the appointmen­t of boards would not automatica­lly bring stability to the entities, but was an important step in the right direction.

In a bid to resolve the problem of projects which had not been occupied due to lack of bulk infrastruc­ture, she said the structure of the Human Settlement­s Developmen­t Grant had been reconfigur­ed and allocation increased from 3% to 5%. Backed by a good plan, the allocation could be increased up to 30%.

“... we will start implementi­ng front-loading in Northern and Eastern Cape under the Infrastruc­ture Fund, which will allow us to significan­tly increase the scale of housing delivery in a short space of time. [So] these provinces can start implementi­ng their plans for the next two financial years.” –

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