Showing posts with label rural development. Show all posts
Showing posts with label rural development. Show all posts

moladi establishes construction training skills college


The backlog of houses in South Africa and the huge unemployment rate has prompted moladi to establish moladiCOLLEGE. The focus of moladiCOLLEGE will be to create employment and develop skills, creating an opportunity for Government to make good on its promise to deliver housing and create employment. moladiCOLLEGE has partnered with CETA (Construction Education and Training Authority) and Services SETA to train veterans


For more information visit www.moladiCOLLEGE.co.za

Squatter sites rise - informal settlements double

Squatter sites rise - informal settlements double

Squatter sites rise

The number of informal settlements in South Africa has doubled in the last 10 years.

Just last week about 100 households started erecting shacks across Main Reef Road near the Princess informal settlement in Roodepoort, western Johannesburg.
One of those hard at work was Tlotlo Sejamoholo.
"I was living on a plot but the owner sold it and we had to leave last week," he said. " That is why I am here."
Sejamoholo's neighbour, Josephina Mosulusi, said: "We are under constant threat from Metro police but we have nowhere else to go."
Other residents of the new shanty town said they moved from Princess because they were on a flood plain.
In 2001 there were 1 066 shanty towns nationally. That number has since risen to 2628 informal settlements "as at the 2009-10 financial year".
"This figure does not take into account any new or illegal informal settlements that emerged from the time the study was initiated and concluded. This figure is estimated to be nearer to 2700," said Chris Vick, who speaks for the national Department of Human Settlement.
Only about "721 informal settlements have been identified nationally for formalisation and upgrading with basic services by the various provinces and local municipalities", he said.
Gauteng has the highest number of informal settlements. At least 84 new informal settlements sprang up in the last five years - from 405 settlements in 2005. In January 489 were counted.
"Only 122 lend themselves to formalisation. To date 69 of the settlements have already been formalised and are now legally recognised as townships. That means people have a title deed registered in the name of the beneficiary," said Fred Mokoko, Gauteng spokesperson for housing.
"Settlements can only be formalised if the location of the settlement is complimentary to Provincial and Municipal Planning Policy such as the Spatial Development Framework (SDF) and Integrated Development Plan (IDP) in which municipalities amongst other things make provision for future housing planning.
"Settlements earmarked for formalisation will have to undergo not just an assessment from a planning policy or framework compliance point of view, but also suitability in terms of physical features such as the soil conditions, environmental sensitivities," Mokoko said.
"It would be important to acknowledge that as planning for a particular settlement is completed, and in the absence of stringent growth management measures in place, settlements continue to experience internal growth that often renders approved township plans obsolete. Such township plans will have to be amended or alternative plans must be put in place and often such dense settlements will have to be relocated elsewhere," he said.
Johannesburg municipality is carrying the heaviest burden with 180 shanty towns.
Currently, 25 percent of Johannesburg's citizens fall in the informal category which equates to about 200 000 households.

Keywords - Gauteng, informal settlements, moladi, rural development, concrete homes, backlog, households, Integrated Development Plan, Human settlements, shanty town, Chris Vick, Department of Human Settlement

Ghana Ministers Accused of Misconduct in Housing Deal

Ghana Ministers Accused of Misconduct in Housing Deal General News 2010-07-17

Two cabinet ministers of Ghana are under pressure to resign as they face misconduct accusations in a housing deal between the government and a South Korean-owned firm.The agreement of the deal was suspended indefinitely by the parliament on Thursday on grounds that certain portions of the draft were missing.The ministers involved are Alban Bagbin, minister of water resources, works and housing, and Kwabena Duffuor, minister of finance and economic planning, who worked on the deal before its submission to the parliament.The deal, worth 10 billion U.S. dollars, was negotiated between the government and the STX Engineering and Construction Ghana Limited, and involves construction of affordable housing units in the next five years.Spio Garbrah, vice chairman of the ruling National Democratic Congress (NDC) party, told a local radio on Friday that the suspension proved the officials in charge of the agreement had done a rather "poor job."Edward Ennin, an opposition lawmaker, called for immediate resignation of the two ministers, saying that they had failed to heed advice from some lawmakers that the STX housing deal deserved proper scrutiny before it was brought before the parliament for approval.The Integrity Initiative (GII), Ghana's anti-corruption agency, also called for the dismissal of the ministers whose inaction, it says, led to the suspension of the debate over the deal in the parliament

Keywords - Ghana, Minister, Housing, misconduct, billion dollars, stx, concrete homes, human settlement, Rural Development

Pravin Gordhan-Our response to the economic crisis

Politicsweb - DOCUMENTS - Our response to the economic crisis - Pravin Gordhan

Just a few extracts that echo what moladi has been advocating for many years. Unfortunately no action to date, but then again, maybe tomorrow?

The underlying message - Medium Term Budget Policy Statement 2009Medium Term Budget Policy Statement 2009: - CHANGE

"The recession requires us to make substantial changes to our fiscal projections and plans.
It means that we have to achieve more, with less. We cannot spend money on wasteful extravagances and golf-days, we cannot tolerate unnecessary bureaucratic structures, and we must achieve greater value for money in contracting for goods and services.

The present crisis demands of us to extend our investment in job creation, and to embed it fully in our rural development strategy, social services and local infrastructure programmes.
The crisis calls for a new blend of skills development and renewal of schools and colleges - as Chief Albert Luthuli often emphasised, there is nothing more important than education in building national consciousness and pride, and in meeting the needs of the people and our economy. The crisis challenges us to construct a new deal for our young people, new opportunities for school-leavers, a new partnership between workseekers and employers, and responsible leadership in public service.
Restoring growth and improving financial regulation are the immediate challenges. In addition, Cabinet will ask questions about our longer-term development path:
What kinds of investment will contribute to more rapid poverty reduction, and to a more balanced distribution of income and opportunity?
How should we adapt to changing global trade opportunities, the realignment of east-west and north-south relations and the extraordinary dynamics of product innovation and technology change?
How should we reform our economic regulatory framework - in banking, social security, financial services, health care, agriculture and food security?
How do we address future energy, water and transport needs? How do we reduce our carbon emissions? How do we share the cost burden of these and other investments?

I cannot detail all the changes, but let me share with the House some of the main changes:

J Zuma: Housing South Africa and job creation - moladi support

J Zuma: Black Business Organisations (CBBO) meeting

Address delivered by the President of the Republic of South Africa, His Excellency Jacob Zuma, at the report back meeting with black business and black professionals, Sandton Convention Centre, Sandton, Johannesburg
23 July 2009
Ministers and Deputy MinistersLeadership of organisations representing black professionals and businessBusinesspersons and professionalsLadies and gentlemanGood evening to you all
We meet almost three months after the establishment of a new government following the highly successful and robust elections of April 2009. The transition occurred smoothly and professionally. We have redesigned government in order to improve the capacity to deliver services. We have a number of new Ministries and have also redefined the mandate of others to ensure clarity and focus.
The first few months have been about effecting those changes. It is now all systems go as Ministers are settling in well in their new portfolios. We had to hit the ground running because we have to meet the needs of our people especially the poorest of the poor. And we have not been deterred by the negative global economic climate. Many of our people have lived their entire lives in a recession. They are yet to experience the benefits of economic growth and for their sake, we have to soldier on and do what needs to be done, with the available resources.
International partnerships are important to enhance the achievement of our national goals. I have recently returned from two critical international relations engagements the G8 and the G5 Summits held in Italy, the Non Aligned Movement (NAM) Summit in Egypt and the African Union (AU) Summit in Libya.I was struck and humbled by how South Africa is received in international forums. The respect and confidence that countries of the world bestow on our country is overwhelming.
I came back confident that the leaders of the most powerful economies in the world have applied themselves towards responding to the global economic crisis.At the G8 and G5 meeting, I was reassured that the world is working together to address this economic crisis.
I hope this mark a new era of international co-operation that will also lead to a significant positive outcome to the talks on a common effort to slow down climate change and its deal with its impact. The climate change talks will take place in Copenhagen later this year.
Ladies and gentlemen, although we have fared better than most countries, we are going through the most difficult economic period in recent times. The last time that the economy shrunk as it is now, was in the early 1990s, before the transition to democracy.
It is not likely that the current reversal will last as long as the recession in the early 1990s, but our recovery might not be as strong as we would hope.Even if the economy begins to grow again next year, we will have to wait a little longer for a significant increase in new job creation. It always takes some time, even years, after growth starts, for jobs to be created in significant numbers.
That is why the agreement between government, labour, business and the community sector reached in February this year to respond jointly to the crisis remains so important. I will be meeting with the leaders of the teams developing and implementing the crisis response programmes early next month. That will be the time to assess our progress and consider the way forward.
While we still need to do more to address the impact of the crisis on the poor and low paid workers, I am confident that some of the measures already introduced and others in the pipeline will help to cushion the impact of the crisis for the most vulnerable.
We need to unite and work together to meet the challenges of the economic crisis. Our mission is to make all our people to feel that South Africa belongs to all who live in it, Black and White, and work together to make our country a success.
We will need that unity as we work together to meet our central objective, to provide leadership when it comes to dealing with issues of job creation, eradicating unemployment, ensuring that our people enjoy safety and security as well as accelerating the pace of service delivery.
As indicated in the State of the Nation Address, government will be guided by the ten priorities that we have identified. These are derived from the five African National Congress (ANC) priorities of education, health, rural development, land and agrarian reform, the fight against crime and creating decent jobs.
The issues rose during our last sessions touch on these priorities. We share the concern of black business and black professionals about the need to create an inclusive and transformed economy, and our Broad-Based Black Economic Empowerment (BBBEE) is one of the key tools of addressing this. Our view is that we have a good BBBEE policy. The current BBBEE framework is adequate. It is inclusive and balanced. We may just need to sharpen implementation and communication. The Department of Trade and Industry is attending to this aspect.
The seven elements of the BBBEE scorecard are a response to the initial narrow BEE, which focused only on ownership and management control in enterprises.In addition, very few people realise that the current BBBEE framework provides for co-operatives.
In our view, BBBEE must reinforce:* skills and rural development* enterprise and socio-economic development* job creation through procurement and entrepreneurship.
Access to government procurement opportunities by black firms has been raised as a serious challenge.
Government is working hard to ensure that this is being addressed adequately. Already, the key objectives of the preferential procurement element of the codes of good practice promote the use of black owned professional service providers and entrepreneurs.
In this regard, black owned professional service providers are recognised as value adding enterprises for purposes of the BBBEE scorecard. We need to ensure that state-owned enterprises give effect to this in a meaningful way. This includes ensuring that government departments allocate and implement the targeted procurement services for black professionals. We are planning to hold a national summit on BBBEE on May 2010. This summit will be able to give government a sense of progress on the implementation of BBBEE.
Ladies and gentlemen, we are meeting with you this evening because you have a role to play in the implementation of the country’s programme of action.We need to work together to improve government’s service delivery mechanisms. We appreciate the fact that you constantly inform us of areas where government needs to increase the pace, or improve the quality of service. Remember that this is your government. Working together we can do more to effect the desired improvements!
We noted your concern rose at the last meeting about the unacceptable delays by government departments in paying black businesses and small, medium and micro enterprise (SMMEs) for services rendered.
Treasury regulations state that all payments must be settled within 30 days from the receipt of an invoice or, in the case of civil claims, from the date of settlement or court judgment.
The exception is only in cases where parties have agreed to an alternative arrangement. In addition, the BBBEE codes of good practice have made provision for shorter payment periods in order to assist to alleviate cash flow burdens faced by SMMEs.
The Minister for Performance Monitoring and Evaluation in The Presidency has written to all national and provincial departments and municipalities and urged Ministers, Premiers, MECs and mayors via Premiers, to ensure that heads of departments comply with the regulations. The departments and municipalities are expected to provide feedback to the Minister at the end of July.
Ladies and gentlemen, we are also working hard to promote gender equity in the economic sphere. We want to emphasise greater focus on entrepreneurship development for women, especially in the male dominated construction and property industries amongst others. However, we must add that while the 50 percent gender representation policy of the ANC and government are commendable, there needs to be a way to encourage the private sector to do likewise.
Better enforcement of the provisions of the Employment Equity Act could go a very long way towards achieving this objective. Ladies and gentlemen, I am also aware that the issue of the Construction Industry Development Board (CIDB) Act is of genuine concern to you. We have worked hard to ensure that legislation such as the CIDB Act supports rather than hinders black owned businesses.
It is not acceptable for small and emerging contractors to find it cumbersome to register on the CIDB Register of Contractors or for established contractors to move to higher grading levels. Part of the challenge stems from the inability of lower level contractors to provide audited statements which forms part of the CIDB grading assessment.
However, I agree with the suggestion of the black business caucus in the built environment that the CIDB has to offer the requisite support to emerging contractors through, for example, training and mentorship programmes.I am satisfied that there are open channels of communication between the parties and the fact that CIDB has undertaken to attend to the concerns that have been raised. Task teams have been established to deal with each of the issues raised.
I have also been advised that there would be follow up meetings that would be held in the near future for the task teams to give report backs on their findings. I believe that this is the correct approach of reaching common ground, and would await developments and reports from this front.
Compatriots, during the elections we pledged that the ANC government would have, as one of its key priorities, the fight against crime and corruption in order to ensure safer and more secure communities. To this end, we have begun working to overhaul the criminal justice system and work towards reducing crime levels.
In the next three years the number of police personnel will be significantly increased from 183 180 to 204 860 with more focus being given to increased visibility and enhancing crime detection. Over the next year, the number of detectives will increase by 19 percent and a programme is already underway to train 12 928 detectives.
But the most effective response should come from ordinary South Africans, who should cooperate with the police in the fight against crime. Working together we will do more to fight crime decisively. Ladies and gentlemen, every life is valuable. We are saddened by the death of nine miners who were killed by a fall of ground at Impala Platinum's Rustenburg operations on Monday.
We extend our condolences to the families of all those killed in this disaster.Around 200 miners die each year in South Africa and this is alarming and unacceptable. Government will work more intensively with mining groups and labour to address this issue without delay. On the labour front, it is still bargaining season. Wage negotiations in a number of sectors, including in the public service, have not yet been resolved. Strikes have occurred and more are threatened. Wage negotiations around this time are not an unusual occurrence, nor are the resorting to strike action when agreement is not achieved. This happens every year.
Due to the current economic conditions, these negotiations may be more difficult this year. Employers and workers must negotiate in good faith and should be prepared to understand each other’s positions. We wish all parties that are still negotiating a speedy resolution, so that life can normalise for employers and workers alike. We have also noted with great concern, the protests that have erupted in several parts of the country. This government will listen to people’s concerns, and will work with them to address them. We will always do that; we will govern with our people.
We acknowledge that there are service delivery problems in some areas and that is why we have reconfigured government departments and have instituted some changes that should improve the way government functions. We are putting systems in place to create a more responsive and more effective government.
Our Constitution allows our people the right of freedom of assembly and expression and to protest where they feel they need to, but this must be done within the ambit of the law.
There can be no justification for violence, looting and destruction of property or attacks on foreign nationals residing in our country. The law enforcement agencies will continue to act swiftly and to take action against all who break the law. They have our full support as they carry out their mandate to maintain law and order in our communities. Ladies and gentlemen, let me remind you of what I said the last time we met. We need your talent and expertise in the public service.
You will be moved by how people’s lives will be changed for the better, by the work you perform. Most importantly, you will have the power to implement all the suggestions you are making, once you join the public service! Compatriots, we appreciate the fact that we were able to meet again. Let me thank you for placing your confidence in the ANC government. We will from our side work to formalise the interaction so that our discussions can impact on our policy and implementation processes.
Teams from the Presidency and the organisations represented here will take the matters forward.
I thank you.
Issued by: The Presidency23 July 2009Source: The Presidency (http://www.thepresidency.gov.za//)

moladi supports you in your endevours to get South Africa (Pty) Ltd housed and working

Low cost housing - Bisho spends R360 million to fix broken homes


Daily Dispatch Online

2009/07/30

BHISHO is spending R360 million to fix nearly 20 000 broken homes in the province while the poor live in flimsy cardboard units and ghost towns emerge from the ruins of disastrous housing projects.
In some areas of the province communities have deserted formal housing settlements because the homes were so poorly built they cannot live in them any longer.
The number of homes having to be repaired is more than the total number of 19662 houses delivered in the 2006/2007 financial year.
While the provincial government tries to rein in its backlog of 800 000 RDP homes, a two-month investigation by the Dispatch has revealed how:
Homes were built in areas which people have long since left;
One project in Seymour became State-sponsored “holiday homes” for people who live in other cities and only return in December;
Residents in Burgersdorp were moved into cardboard houses when their RDP homes began falling to the ground, and were then asked to clean up the mess themselves;
One project of 600 homes in Tarkastad has been standing empty, while a waiting list to house people continues to grow;
Depopulation and inferior construction in places like Venterstad has led to the emergence of ghost towns; and
A community near Bhisho is still waiting after five years for electricity and water because the government refuses to provide the services until it has finished the housing project it started eight years ago.
The biggest victims in the province’s housing fiasco are among the most vulnerable in the population.
Like two pensioners, Loki Makeleni and Ngqukuse Nonxaza, who have been living in a flimsy cardboard home for seven months while their shoddy RDP house in Burgersdorp is repaired.
“The government doesn’t care about people who live here. We’re going to die in these houses. I’m just waiting for my coffin right now,” said the elderly Makeleni.
To rub salt into their wounds, the local Gariep Municipality wanted the same residents to clear the tons of rubble lining the streets – for free.
The problems in Burgersdorp are far from unique – in fact, all but one of eight housing projects visited by the Dispatch are being rebuilt .
In many cases inexperienced contractors have been blamed for the problems .
Two weeks ago Housing MEC Nombulelo Mabandla vowed to blacklist incompetent builders and recover funds from them where necessary.
But she said her department would never forsake emerging contractors and would do all they could to mentor them in future.
“ That is why we have developed a training programme for them, called the Emerging Contractors Development Programme,” she said.
Seymour and Venterstad are two examples where RDP homes have been deserted or remain unoccupied because there are no local jobs, or poor workmanship has made the buildings unsafe.
Yet the reverse has happened in Tarkastad, where more than 600 residents are on a waiting list to occupy low- cost homes in a nearby project that is standing empty.
Derek Luyt from the Public Service Accountability Monitor in Grahamstown said the department’s Service Delivery Charter and Service Delivery Plans for 2009 and 2010 highlight its pitfalls.
“Staff shortages and lack of sufficient skills have severely hampered the department in the past, and it will not be able to deliver sufficient houses of adequate quality unless it solves its human resources problems,” Luyt said.
Democratic Alliance spokesperson Pine Pienaar said the huge backlog, lack of monitoring and under-spending in the department was a direct result of the department’s inefficiency to fill critical posts in technical and finance departments. - By GCINA NTSALUBA. Pictures: THEO JEPTHA

MEC N Mabandla to launch housing projects

N Mabandla to launch housing projects, 10 Jul

8 July 2009
Responding to a call to prioritise rural development, MEC for Housing Mrs Nombulelo Mabandla will launch three housing projects in Mbizana local municipality that will provide homes to over a thousand rural beneficiaries in Mbizana over the next two years. She will launch the projects in Mbizana local municipality on Friday, 10 July 2009 as part of her rural housing provision.

The provincial housing backlog is estimated at 797 932.
Of this number
* 26% of the housing backlog represents informal dwellings
* 6% of the housing backlog being backyard shacks
* 68% of the housing backlog entailing traditional dwellings, which according to Statistics South Africa are regarded as inadequate.

Rural households are poorer than urban households with many dependent on the state transfer in the form of pensions, welfare grants and income poverty relief and development projects for survival. These figures will guide the department in executing and accelerating rural housing during this term of government.
The projects to be launched include 800 houses already completed and now installing internal services, 100 under construction and a further 600 houses falling under new projects still to be constructed.
Over R40 million rands has been allocated in all these projects for Mbizana area.
Contact: Lwandile SicwetshaCell: 071 6711770E-mail: lwandileS@echousing.gov.za
Issued by: Department of Housing, Eastern Cape Provincial Government8 July 2009

Invitation sent 16 July 2009

Dear Lwandile

The MEC faces an enormous challenge to address the Housing backlog in the Eastern Cape. We would appreciate the opportunity to present a unique proven approach to the quality delivery of homes, by providing skill training and the prospect of owning their own sustainable business (See attached).

By combining moladi, the huge backlog of housing (“The provincial housing backlog is estimated at 797 932”) and the opportunity of training the local unemployed will result in a “Win Win” scenario for your Department and South Africa.

Our technology, born 23 years ago, is labour intensive, not dependant on skilled labour and a solution to the issues we face today We are passionate in what we do and how we do it - to get South Africa (Pty) Ltd working and create the 500,000 jobs that President Zuma promised - visit www.moladi.net.

As reference to our expertise and track record I have included the invitation received from Habitat for Humanity International to present moladi at the 2nd Asia Pacific Housing Forum to be held at the Asian Institute of Management in the Philippines in September 7-9, 2009.

You are also most welcome to visit our factory here in Port Elizabeth where we export our construction technology to more than 25 countries.

Regards
Hennie BOTES
Mobile: +2784
Office: +27413722152
http://www.moladi.net/