23 May 2024
The Gauteng High Court in Johannesburg handed down an order on Wednesday compelling the provincial Department of Social Development to address the funding crisis faced by non-profit organisations across the province.
In an urgent matter brought before the court by the Gauteng Care Crisis Committee (GCCC), a voluntary organisation of non-profit organisations in the province, Judge Ingrid Opperman ruled that the department must:
The GCCC argued in court that this order is necessary to ensure the department finalises what has been a lengthy and chaotic process for organisations that provide social services to vulnerable people across the province, including child and youth centres, women’s shelters and homes for people with severe disabilities.
The department changed its funding adjudication process this year, appointing external panels to select which organisations should receive funding.
At the same time, a series of forensic audits launched by the department in the past year have contributed to delays in the funding process.
Almost two months into the new financial year, some organisations that have received funding from the department for decades have not yet received confirmation that they will be funded for the 2024/25 financial year.
Several organisations have had to close, others have limited their service offerings, while a number of organisations are on the brink of closure.
Lisa Vetten, chair of the GCCC, said in her founding affidavit that “only a limited number” of organisations have been informed that their funding applications were successful.
Vetten said that organisations were expecting that the adjudication process would be completed by the end of February, but the process was only concluded at the start of April, after the start of the new financial year.
Last Friday, organisations picketed outside the department’s head office, demanding the immediate payment of subsidies and the finalisation of service-level agreements.
The picket took place after Gauteng Premier Panyaza Lesufi, earlier that week, promised to reverse cuts to the department’s budget, pay the subsidies by 24 May, and review complaints about service-level agreements.
Advocate Ori Ben Zeev, arguing for GCCC, told the court on Wednesday that the uncertainty and delays by the department were precisely why a supervisory court order was necessary.