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MR.LEEPO TSOAI

PORTFOLIO COMMITTEE ON HUMAN SETTLEMENTS: AN ORIENTATION PAPER FOR THE FIFTH PARLIAMENT. MR.LEEPO TSOAI. 01 JULY 2014. OUTLINE OF THE PRESENTATION. THE ROLE OF THE PC ON HUMAN SETTLEMENTS KEY PIECES OF LEGISLATION THAT COMMITTEE OVERSEES NATIONAL POLICIES THAT THE COMMITTEE HAS TO OVERSEE

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MR.LEEPO TSOAI

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  1. PORTFOLIO COMMITTEE ON HUMAN SETTLEMENTS: AN ORIENTATION PAPER FOR THE FIFTH PARLIAMENT MR.LEEPO TSOAI 01 JULY 2014

  2. OUTLINE OF THE PRESENTATION • THE ROLE OF THE PC ON HUMAN SETTLEMENTS • KEY PIECES OF LEGISLATION THAT COMMITTEE OVERSEES • NATIONAL POLICIES THAT THE COMMITTEE HAS TO OVERSEE • KEY INTERNATIONAL INSTRUMENTS/AGREEMENTS • KEY ISSUES THAT HAVE EMERGED FROM STAKEHOLDERS

  3. THE ROLE OF PC ON HUMAN SETTLEMENTS STRATEGIC ROLES • In the South African context, oversight is a constitutionally mandated function of legislative organs of state to scrutinise and oversee executive action and any organ of state. • Therefore, the appropriate mechanism for Parliament to conduct oversight over any organ of state will be through Parliamentary Committees • One of the most important aspects of oversight function is the consideration by committees of annual reports of organs of state, including reports from chapter 9 institutions, e.g AG, PSC etc • The committee would either request a briefing from an organ of state or visit the organ of state for fact-finding, depending on the purpose of the oversight • The role of the committee include, among others, to: • Consider bills; • Considers legislation referred to it; • Initiate and amend legislation; • Considers, scrutinise and maintain oversight budget of department and entities falling within its • portfolio; and etc

  4. KEY PIECES OF LEGISLATION

  5. NATIONAL POLICIES THAT THE PC HAS TO OVERSEE • The National Development Plan • Proposes a National focus on spatial transformation across all geographic scales. Policies, plans and instruments are needed to reduce travel distances and costs, especially for poor households • 2. Breaking New Ground (BNG) • This is a comprehensive housing plan that provides for sustainable human settlements. Communities should live in a safe and secure environment and have access to economic opportunities, reliable and affordable basic services, educational, entertainment and cultural activities, and health, welfare, and police services. • 3. Accreditation and Assignment Framework • The framework provides for accredited municipalities to manage the full range of housing instruments within • their areas of jurisdiction. Accreditation involves the delegated authority to exercise functions relating to the • administration of National Housing Programmes at the municipal sphere. To be assigned functions, • municipalities have to demonstrate their capacity to plan, implement, and maintain both projects and • programmes that are well integrated • 4. Finance Linked Individual Subsidy Programme (FLISP • Typically, there are households that earn too little to qualify for mortgage finance, on the one hand, and, on the other, their monthly income exceeds the maximum income limit applicable to Government’s “free basic house”. This particular market segment is generally referred to as the “affordable” or the “gap market • Loremipsum dolor sit amet, consectetueradipiscingelit. • •

  6. THE INTERNATIONAL AGREEMENTS • 1. United Nations Millennium Development Goals (MDG), 2000 • Government has adopted 12 Outcomes as its key focus of work by 2015. • Outcome 8: • Access to adequate accommodation that is suitable, relevant, appropriately • located, affordable and fiscally sustainable. • Access to basic services (water, sanitation, refuse removal and electricity). • Security of tenure irrespective of ownership or rental, formal or informal structures. • Access to social services and economic opportunity within reasonable distance. • 2. The Vancouver Declaration on Human Settlements, 31 May to 11 June 1976 • The Conference’s resolutions include, among others that human settlements policies and programmes should define and strive for progressive minimum standards for acceptable quality of life. • 3. Istanbul Declaration on Human Settlements, 1996 • The conference resolved that it shall seek the active participation of the public, private and non-governmental partners at all levels to ensure legal security of tenure, protection from discrimination and equal access to affordable, adequate housing for all persons and their families

  7. ISSUES ARISING FROM STAKEHOLDERS 1. Service delivery impediments . Expenditure management had been a challenge for the Department. The Financial and Fiscal Commission (FFC) highlighted that while there has been an increase in the budget over the years, this increase is not aligned to the delivery on the ground. In fact, the FFC stated that the delivery in units is decreasing contrary to the increase in budget. 2. Special needs housing A coalition of non-governmental organisations (NGOs) is arguing in favour of access to a variant of the institutional housing subsidy for persons with special needs. A concern was noted that overarching focus with respect to special needs housing (SNH) appears to be on persons with disabilities. 3. Housing demand and allocation The study conducted by the Community Law Centre , found that there is a challenge in the management of housing demand databases or waiting lists through-out the country. The system is prone to manipulation, people are able to jump the queue, beneficiaries are not properly screened, people such as the elderly, are not prioritized as required by law. 4. Service delivery performance T The Auditor General stated that the Department of Human Settlements (DHS) had achieved an unqualified audit opinion, with matters of emphasis during the 2012/13 financial year. This was the same as the year before. The Department was financially unqualified but with findings on predetermined objectives and compliance.

  8. ISSUES ARISING FROM STAKEHOLDERS conti…. The Public Service Commission (PSC) found that the Department faced a lack of oversight from its leadership to ensure that financial performance and operations at entities happened without hiccups.  Annually, departments and entities compiled action plans, but often these did not comprehensively address the findings. These action plans were implemented quite late in the financial year, thereby resulting in the same findings recurring. The Auditor General (AG) raised a concern that an audit executive had been acting for six months at the DHS. The challenge with appointing people in an acting capacity was that positions still remained vacant. The AG stated that in achieving targets, entities required resources and personnel. The filling of vacant post, particularly the funded ones, has been a recurring challenge that the department is grappling with

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