Education Department dismisses misleading report about ASIDI school delivery
24 Aug 2014
The Department of Basic Education has dismissed a report that claims it would take nine years to eradicate mud schools. The report entitled "Mud to Bricks: A review of school. Infrastructure spending and delivery" dated January 2014, but released last week, is inaccurate, misleading and unhelpful. Some of the content is outdated and has, in fact, been overtaken by events. Most of the challenges they raise have since been addressed (see here).
The authors, Carmen Abdoll and Conrad Barberton on behalf of the Centre for Child Law - University of Pretoria, did not contact the department to obtain the very latest information on progress made to address school infrastructure. The report relied on disparate sources of data and opinion to produce an adverse finding. An engagement with the DBE and provinces could have contributed to a more balanced set of findings and recommendations.
Firstly, it is disingenuous for them to claim that the Accelerated School Infrastructure Delivery Initiative (ASIDI) was born as a result of court action. The fact is that the DBE, upon a request from Minister Angie Motshekga for a priority list for her first term of office, started working on the ASIDI concept in 2009 and sent its first concept note for the initiative to National Treasury as early as 2010.
Secondly, the capacity to manage the ASIDI programme has since been beefed up with the appointment of a Programme Manager in October 2011. Since then 70 mud schools have been replaced in the Eastern Cape and 4 in the Western Cape out of the target of the target of 510 schools, including those built entirely from inappropriate material.