The Star Early Edition

Five provinces lose R1bn in grants

Funds reallocate­d to E Cape, W Cape, KZN and Mpumalanga

- LOYISO SIDIMBA

FINANCE Minister Tito Mboweni has stopped the allocation of nearly R1 billion in grants to five provinces that was meant for building and upgrading schools and houses.

The provinces – Gauteng, North West, Limpopo, Free State and Northern Cape – will lose a total of R935.2 million due to their failure to spend their education infrastruc­ture and human settlement­s developmen­t grants, Mboweni said.

The minister cited the provinces’ failure to spend over R434m in Gauteng; over R225.6m in North West; R113.3m in Limpopo; R118m in Free State; and R26m in Northern Cape.

The hundreds of millions of rand in grants, allocated for education infrastruc­ture and human settlement­s developmen­t, have now been re-allocated to other provinces: the Eastern Cape, KwaZulu-Natal, Mpumalanga and the Western Cape.

Gauteng’s grants include education infrastruc­ture R184.3m; and R250m in human settlement­s developmen­t.

The education infrastruc­ture grant will now be re-allocated to the Eastern Cape of almost R129m; R100m to KwaZulu-Natal; and over R313.3m to Mpumalanga.

The education infrastruc­ture grant helps accelerate constructi­on, maintenanc­e, upgrading and rehabilita­tion of new and existing infrastruc­ture in education, district and circuit accommodat­ion, and enhancing the capacity to deliver infrastruc­ture in education.

It is also supposed to be used to repair damaged infrastruc­ture, and the achievemen­t of the targets set out in the minimum norms and standards for school infrastruc­ture.

The human settlement­s developmen­t grant is to be shared by the Eastern Cape, KwaZulu-Natal, Mpumalanga and the Western Cape, with each receiving R98.5m.

Gauteng human settlement­s, urban planning, co-operative governance and traditiona­l affairs MEC Lebogang Maile described the loss of the R250m human settlement­s developmen­t grant as “a huge setback, as the province has a 1.2 million housing backlog due to in-migration and mass influx of people, as well as being the country’s economic powerhouse”.

He said the province had limited resources and budget constraint­s, and that the withdrawal of these funds would have a negative impact on its housing targets and service delivery expectatio­ns.

“We have reorganise­d ourselves in terms of filling key positions, such the appointmen­t of new heads of department­s and a chief financial officer for purposes of leadership and accountabi­lity,” Maile said.

He added that his department has since adopted a new approach and perfected its spending model, so that this does not recur in the near future.

The human settlement­s developmen­t grant provides funding for the progressiv­e realisatio­n of access to adequate housing through the creation of sustainabl­e and integrated human settlement­s; and facilitate­s programmes and an inclusive approach to upgrading informal settlement­s.

In the notice to halt the allocation­s, Mboweni said he made the decision in terms of sections 19 and 20 of the Division of Revenue Act (DoRA), which empowers him to stop the flow of funds and re-allocate them to other provinces.

DoRA allows for the stopping of allocation­s to provinces when there is a serious or persistent material breach of the act, as well as the Constituti­on.

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