The Citizen (KZN)

Funds for new schools go to middlemen

- Chisom Jenniffer Okoye

Millions of rands meant for school infrastruc­ture projects were apparently “siphoned” off under the guise of “profession­al fees” to third party consultant­s and “implementi­ng agents” in the Eastern Cape.

The basic education department’s annual report records about R550 million in irregular expenditur­e in the last financial year.

A new report released by Equal Education yesterday, titled Middlemen In Charge of Building Schools, highlighte­d the failure of the state to build 471 schools since 2009, despite being allocated the funds and securing the assistance of “implementa­tion agents” to do the job.

While only 196 schools have been built since 2007 in the Eastern Cape, schools had opened illegally and used inappropri­ate materials, including asbestos, mud and zinc.

Equal Education criticised Finance Minister Tito Mboweni’s 2018 medium-term budget policy statement relating to education, saying it “provided little relief to the already constraine­d basic education budget … allocation­s to infrastruc­ture grants continue to decrease over the medium term and the total basic education budget is growing at a slow rate, when inflation is taken into account”.

However, department of basic education spokespers­on Elijah Mhlanga said: “We appreciate the allocation from the minister of finance. It is not enough but it will assist.”

Commenting on the new report, Equal Education head researcher Rone McFarlene said there was a great need for government to allocate more money to school infrastruc­ture.

“Issues of underspend­ing and poor spending speaks to the complexity of the problem which more money alone cannot solve. Public money meant for school constructi­on was siphoned off for the fees of third party consultant­s, and to management fees of implementi­ng agents whose CEOs make millions of rands a year, while Eastern Cape teachers and pupils are in crisis conditions.

“The Eastern Cape department of education, department of basic education, provincial treasury and National Treasury are failing to adequately monitor what is actually being built on the ground.”

It is not enough but it will assist. Elijah Mhlanga Eastern Cape department of basic education spokespers­on

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa