Riebeek East’s boreholes are almost exhausted and residents have very limited access to a throttled water supply. But, help is on the way. Makana Democratic Alliance councillor Carolynn Clark, who lives in the town, said that an R810 00 drought disaster relief grant was made available to the Makana Municipality earlier this year to fix the town’s water supply, which is currently reliant on four exhausted boreholes. A Gauteng-based contractor visited the town recently to identify where there was a better water supply and then sunk four new boreholes on the outskirts of the town, Clark said. But, those boreholes have…
Author: Rod Amner
Gadra Education’s new Whistle Stop School (WSS) is succeeding where no-fees schools are failing. In just one year the school raised the literacy levels of a Grade 3 class by two years – a reminder, if we needed one, that all South African children are equally teachable. The WSS is a resource-intensive literacy intervention that has no obligations to the formal CAPS curriculum. Instead, it relies on highly qualified staff and, most crucially, strong relationships between small groups of learners and their teacher. ALICE DRAPER reports. The sound of approaching laughter and chattering can be heard in the brightly-decorated Whistle…
Local civil society organisations that attended a recent NGO workshop held at the National English Literary Museum have committed to work together more closely to achieve greater impact in Makhanda/Grahamstown. The workshop was convened by a funder, the HCI Foundation, to share and celebrate good practice, encourage collaboration, and emphasise monitoring and evaluation. Of the 31 HCI-funded NGOs that attended the workshop, nine are based in Makhanda/Grahamstown. They affirmed their commitment to working together to provide essential services in the face of funding shortages and the breakdown of many public services due to corruption, mismanagement, and patronage. At the workshop,…
By Rod Amner and Sphume Ndlovu Civil society organisations are feeling the funding pinch. This was revealed in a recent survey conducted by a concerned funder, the HCI Foundation. Of the 126 non-governmental organisations that responded to the survey, the majority reported that “fundraising” and “insufficient funds” were, by some distance, their biggest challenges. The survey results were presented at an HCI stakeholder workshop with 26 Eastern Cape non-governmental organisations (NGOs) at the New English Literary Museum in Makhanda last week. The Foundation, which funds dozens of Eastern Cape NGOs, is the corporate social investment arm of HCI, a black empowerment…
A few years ago, a kindly retiree in the KZN Midlands decided to get out of his La-Z-Boy and start an innovative education project. After receiving Rotary funding, he set up TV sets and some instruction videos in nine schools. The impact on matric results has been spectacular. His grand-daughter, Alice Draper, tells his story. Rows and rows of almost identical houses sit parallel to one another in Amber Valley, a retirement village in Howick, a small KZN town. In one such house, a man called Pat Draper, rocks backward in his brown La-Z-Boy chair. The chair is one of…
By Sphume Ndlovu, Rod Amner, and Jessica Evans* There has been no public internet service in any of the Eastern Cape libraries since September last year. According to provincial Department of Sports, Recreation, Arts and Culture (DSRAC) spokesperson, Andile Nduna, this is due to a failure to make provision for these services in the 2017-18 DSRAC budget and a breakdown in the relationship with the existing service provider. Free internet services are still available to users in libraries in all the other eight provinces. However, Nduna promised that internet access would be restored to libraries by November this year. Free internet…