Teacher posts: Western Cape education department quizzed in Parliament

“We’re not retrenching teachers. We’re reducing posts,” says WCED head

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The Western Cape’s plan to cut teacher posts came under scrutiny in Parliament on Tuesday. Graphic: Lisa Nelson

The Western Cape Education Department (WCED) came under fire in Parliament on Tuesday over its plan to reduce teaching posts.

In August, the WCED said the number of teacher posts would be reduced by 2,407 for the 2025 school year due to a R3.8-billion budget shortfall over the next three years. During Tuesday’s meeting, members of Parliament’s Portfolio Committee on Basic Education questioned WCED Head of Department Brent Walters about this reduction.

Walters emphasised that this is not a retrenchment of teachers, but rather a reduction; temporary teacher contracts expiring in December will not be renewed.

“We’re not retrenching teachers. We’re reducing posts. I think that’s a very big difference between these two things,” Walters said.

The WCED has notified affected schools how many posts they are losing. Those schools have until 15 November to say which posts they choose to forfeit.

Walters assured the committee that the WCED had “looked at all expenditure items” before choosing to reduce the basket of teacher posts.

“When you have large cuts to your budget, you’re going to have to go to your salaries, otherwise you’re going to overspend,” he said.

Committee chairperson Khomotjo Maimela asked the WCED representatives why the Western Cape is the only province reducing teacher posts when other provinces are also facing budget cuts.

KwaZulu-Natal is reported to be at risk of losing 11,000 teacher posts, but the provincial education department has not officially announced that. No other provinces plan to reduce teacher posts.

Maimela said she was concerned that township schools which are already overcrowded will be hit by the reduction in posts. She said the WCED was not “pro-poor.”

“I’m saying, you are literally now compromising the provision of quality of education for the poor learners in the province. And you are doing it deliberately.”

Maimela requested a written response from the WCED within seven days detailing how the post reductions will be implemented.

Representatives from the Northern Cape Education Department told the committee they would not reduce teacher posts.

With the R358-million budget shortfall the Northern Cape is experiencing, 663 teachers would have their posts at risk, but Northern Cape education MEC Abraham Vosloo said the education department was working to identify other areas of the budget to cut.

“For us to retrench these teachers would be devastating to the Northern Cape,” Vosloo said.

The medium-term budget will be tabled on Wednesday. Western Cape Minister of Education David Maynier said he hoped the Minister of Finance would announce additional support for education.

TOPICS:  Education

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Letters

Dear Editor

I am a contract technical teacher at a school of skills and have been for four years now. I’ve had to apply for my own position four times, and each time I am the only person who gets shortlisted for the interview. No one else applies for this post because of the low salary. Despite this, I cannot be made permanent because the WCED does not recognise my Grade 12 matric certificate as equivalent to NQF4 or N3.

There are three of us technical teachers whose contracts end this year, and the school doesn’t know what to do. The WCED would rather place academic teachers in these positions than consider my Grade 12 matric certificate, N1, N2, red seal qualification, and 26 years of experience in the field. What kind of education will the students receive with this approach? How is an academic teacher supposed to teach subjects like sheet metal and boiler making? This doesn’t make sense to me, and it will be a huge injustice to the students.

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