Some crèches never got the promised Covid relief funds, and now it’s too late
The R496-million programme for ECD Centres to mitigate the effects of the Covid-19 pandemic has come to an end.
Helen Diedericks runs an Early Childhood Development Centre from her home in Heideveld, Cape Town. Though she says her application for Covid relief funding was approved, she never received the money, and now the programme has come to an end. Photo: Mary-Anne Gontsana
It is a cold and quiet Monday morning out on the streets of Heideveld, but when you walk into the Little Footsteps Educare, you are greeted by warmth, children’s cries, singing and dancing.
Teacher and owner Helen Diedericks mutes the sing-along on the TV and tells her little learners to sit down and prepare themselves for snack time. They jostle and shout. Some sit on the floor and a few run around before finally settling down for a snack.
Covid-19 impact
Diedericks is one of many early childhood development (ECD) educators who has been left disappointed by the ECD Stimulus Relief Fund. The fund was launched in February 2021, by the national Department of Social Development (DSD), as a measure to cushion the impact of the Covid pandemic on early childhood development programmes.
The DSD received R496-million to assist ECD centres, which were offered a maximum once-off payment of R4,186 per staff member.
ALSO READ: Covid-19 Ters scheme extended, Ramaphosa announces
But applying for funding proved to be a nightmare for some ECD centres. The process had to be done online through a government portal and the centres had to be part of government’s central supplier database.
“I applied in 2021, a little after this initiative was announced,” said Diedericks. “I went through the nightmare of the application and verification process. It was so frustrating it had me in tears. But after much difficulty and back and forth, I was ultimately verified before the end of 2021. After that all I did was wait, but nothing came.”
Complaints of non-payment
As 2021 went by, complaints about non-payment of funds started. In May 2021, staff of ECD centres embarked on a three-day national protest over what they called the “appalling and virtually non-existent roll out of the employment stimulus relief fund”.
ALSO READ: Covid-19 Ters fraudsters nabbed after stealing over R600,000
Protests and complaints continued through 2021 and 2022, even as early childhood development was switched from the DSD to the Department of Basic Education in April 2022.
Now the ECD Employment Stimulus Relief Fund project has closed.
Western Cape Education Department spokesperson Bronagh Hammond said after excluding duplicate applications and verification of sites, applications at 2,286 ECD sites in the province were considered.
“Of the 2,286 ECD sites, 2,149 sites (94%) have been paid. The project has now ended. It closed in March 2023.”
“Some sites could not be paid due to unverified staff applications, and invalid banking details or closed accounts.”
She said applicants had been contacted and an audit company appointed to do site visits as part of the verification process.
ALSO READ: Return to school will help migration of early childhood development – Motshekga
But Diedericks, who operates from her home, with 15 learners aged between three months and five years, said she was never contacted by anyone after her application was verified.
“If we had got the funds it would have helped a lot, because I would’ve been able to pay salaries and buy some groceries for the crèche. Now we depend solely on fees that sometimes the parents cannot even afford. When I started this crèche in 2017, it wasn’t for gain, it was to service the community, which is why even if parents can’t pay school fees sometimes, I will never turn the child away,” said Diedericks.
Another applicant, Boniswa Mxhakaza, principal of the Khanyisa Educare in Makhaza, Khayelitsha, said the last time she dealt with the application process was last year.
“Every time I would apply for myself or the staff, I would get a response wanting more information or saying there’s incorrect or outstanding information. And each time I would go back and fix these problems. But here I am today – no communication about where my application ended up,” said a frustrated Mxhakaza.
ALSO READ: Move to migrate early childhood development to DBE applauded
Khanyisa Educare was established in 2005, and has 130 learners, aged one to six years.
The Centre for Early Childhood Development (CECD) said the rollout of the relief fund was “the perfect example of how the government should not administer emergency relief funds to the country’s most vulnerable”.
Yusrah Ehrenreich, advocacy and social justice manager at the CECD, said national government was responsible for receiving, verifying and approving applications and approved applicants were paid by the provinces. Some provinces, like the Western Cape, also ran their own verification process before making payments.
Covid casualities
Ehrenreich said the national government had failed to pay all eligible ECD workers the promised relief funds.
“The reasons for non-payment given by government are weak, inadequate, and unacceptable; we are shocked that blame is being shifted onto the ECD applicants, when it has always been clear that the reason thousands of ECD principals, managers, teachers, cooks and other staff have not been paid is because of a government application process that was not fit for purpose, fraught with complications and complex technical problems; with poor communication from DSD/DBE to the ECD sector. If their system did not allow applicants to apply effectively, that is the fault of DSD’s system, not of the applicants,” said Ehrenreich.
She said the relief fund was intended to alleviate the effects of the pandemic and national lockdowns on ECD centres and their workforce, but due to government’s mishandling of the funds, most of the workers had not received any relief and the sector would take years to recover from the pandemic.
“ECD centres closed, ECD staff left the sector to find more sustainable employment, and children are left without quality care and education, whilst their caregivers struggle to put food on the table.”
“Frankly, DSD, DBE and the government at large, should be ashamed. The children of South Africa cannot afford to have their government fail them.”
GroundUp sent questions to the DBE on 8 June and followed up on 9 June and 12 June but no response has been received.
This article originally appeared on GroundUp and was republished with permission.
Read the original article here.
For more news your way
Download our app and read this and other great stories on the move. Available for Android and iOS.