Lydia Johnson, at the Black Management Forum KwaZulu-Natal Provincial Women's
Day Celebration, Durban, Royal Hotel
3 August 2007
Programme Director
Acting Provincial Chairperson, Mr Bheki Ntshangase
Members of the Provincial Committee
Members of the Black Management Forum
Invited guests
Ladies and gentlemen
The month of August in the South African Calendar is always marked by a
range of activities that are meant to celebrate the achievements that our
country has made in championing women's development since the democracy dawned
in 1994.
Similarly, we are also examining the challenges that confront women of our
country whilst at the same time seeking solutions that can address these varied
problems.
President Mbeki addressing Women Award Dinner in Sun City 1999, said, "there
may be some amongst us who will suggest that there is little reason to
celebrate this day and that we should instead only reflect on violence against
women prevalent in our society".
Today we are able to express our concerns, our fears and ambitions because
of the great women leaders that came before us and sacrificed their own lives
in order for us to attain freedoms and the liberties that come with it. This is
especially true of heroines like Lillian Ngoyi, Helen Joseph and others, who
stormed the Union Buildings in protest against pass laws.
It is for this reason that every year on 9 August we spend some time
reflecting on the heroic deeds of the women of 1956 and those who followed them
because their contribution has given birth to a democratic, non racial, non
sexist and prosperous South Africa.
As we commemorate the heroes who have blased the trail in a range of fields,
we are also looking at what organisations like yours can do to deepen the
success of our women business leaders. I believe that your organisation has
built enough human capital in its 31 years of existence to be able to drive
greater participation for women in the economic life of the country.
In 1994 women were amongst those who took part in the first democratic
elections of our country. These women were also part of the first cohort that
went into the legislatures and Parliament. They have been instrumental in the
setting up of policy and the legislative processes that finally created a
platform for women policy and institutions that support women development such
as the Office on the Status of Women, Commission for Gender Equality as well as
a range of women empowerment organisations on the business front.
Programme Director, we are all aware that challenges that face women cannot
be addressed by interventions of government alone but rather a range of
stakeholders in our society. It is therefore encouraging to note that
organisations like yours are committed to this massive task. We need a lot of
investment in women leadership in the business sector.
At this point, I am also tempted to quote what the late Oliver Tambo, said
during the first conference of the Women's section of the African National
Congress (ANC) 1981, '⦠as revolutionaries, (we) should stop pretending that
women in our movement have the same opportunities as men⦠on the other hand
women should stop behaving as if there was no place for them above the level of
certain categories of involvement. They have a duty to liberate us men from
antique concepts and attitudes about the place and the role of women in
society. The oppressor has at best, a lesser duty to liberate the oppressed
than the oppressed themselves".
A number of private sector companies have invested on issues affecting women
through their Corporate Social Investments. These investments are in the main,
in areas of education, social development and health. Few of the companies have
also invested albeit minimal to enterprise development. A lot more is needed to
really make a difference to women's business leadership and acumen. We also
need to examine the gaps that are there in existing programmes both at the
public sector and private sector.
Acting Chairperson and delegates, you have asked me to share with you on
what are the opportunities in the public works environment. Let me take liberty
to also explain that this portfolio straddles all state assets in built
environment. It comprises of construction and management of state assets. The
role of construction to society is invaluable because it provides
infrastructure, value to those that derive economic benefit and social benefit
from the built environment. Construction creates the foundations of our economy
and the basis for human advancement. In our country growth rates in
construction spend is around ten percent per annum and this is the highest that
it has been in the last 30 years.
In fact construction spend is now growing at higher rates than the Gross
Domestic Product. It is providing much needed employment and dignity to million
of our people. The construction industry operates in a particularly project
specific environment that has its own drawbacks, characterised by a fragmented
delivery process.
The industry is mobile, and every project brings together new combinations
of technology and resources, of professional disciplines, of contractors and
subcontractors, skilled and unskilled workers, plant and equipment.
Construction is therefore a competitive and high risk business for both clients
and the industry.
Our government is determined to increase public sector budgets at an
unprecedented rate of 10 to 15 percent per annum and to raise the Gross
Domestic Fixed Investment from 15 to 25 percent of Gross Domestic Product.
To achieve these levels of infrastructure investment, our construction
industry will need to double its output by 2014. This constitutes a central
challenge of partnership facing industry stakeholders in our country.
The legacy of uneven development and under-development in our country is
well known. It continues to inhibit our capacity to deliver infrastructure that
supports the full participation of developing societies in global economic
endeavour. Our reality ensures that infrastructure development continues to
occupy a central position in government's agenda to roll back the
underdevelopment of decades of apartheid and centuries of colonialism.
The inherited backlog of uneven development coincides with the need for new
levels of infrastructure investment to deliver South African Accelerated and
Shared Growth Initiative (AsgiSA). AsgiSA aims to achieve an economic growth
rate of six percent and to halve poverty and unemployment by 2014 in line with
our commitment to the United Nation Millennium Development Goals.
Our government is therefore determined to increase public sector capital
budgets at an unprecedented rate of 10 to 15% per annum and to raise Gross
Domestic Fixed Investment (GDFI) from 15% to 25% of Gross Domestic Product. To
achieve these levels of infrastructure investment our construction industry
will need to double its output by 2014. This constitutes a central challenge of
partnership facing industry stakeholders in our country.
Ladies and gentlemen, confronted with these challenges our government is
clear in its conviction that the South African construction industry is a
national asset in the strategy to achieve economic growth and improve the
quality of life of the majority of South Africans. Therefore, our role as
government is equally clear, and over the past few years we have worked
relentlessly to facilitate an enabling framework for industry growth and
transformation.
The Register of Contractors established by the CIDB to regulate the industry
now equips government and stakeholders with an important development tool and a
clear understanding of the nature of contracting capacity and empowerment gaps
across the industry.
The CIDB's mandate includes the promotion of client and industry best
practice, an enabling procurement and delivery environment, a national research
agenda and the creation of a knowledge network.
Ladies and gentlemen, construction industry growth cannot be seen in
isolation from the pressing need to transform the industry into one that
performs better in terms of quality, employment, skills safety, health and the
environment. My department is determined to transform the skewed racial
ownership and participation profile of the industry. Giving practical
expression to this determination, we have directed public procurement towards
the empowerment of historically marginalised population groups and the creation
of productive employment. Realising fewer numbers of women in the construction
industry in this province, the Women in Construction Programme was developed.
This Programme contends that 40% of contract work must be awarded to women:
* youth: Twenty percent
* priority population group: Thirty five percent
* people with physical disabilities: Five percent.
The total value of contracts awarded to women by the Department of Public
Works countrywide in 2006/07 financial year was approximately R184 million,
which is approximately 30% of all contracts awarded. In this financial year,
2007/08, the department has set a target to award 40% of all contracts to
women.
An increasing number of black and women-owned companies are now competing
effectively in this sector of the economy. The established industry has also
responded positively to this aspect of transformation and last year signed the
Construction Charter, which commits the industry to concrete targets in terms
of Black Economic Empowerment.
I am pleased to say that most of the major companies have made progress
towards these targets, encouraging us to believe that together we can address
many outstanding challenges. In my Department, we have programmes that speak
and seek to address the economic challenges of not only faced by women, but
youth as well.
In response to address issues of Broad Based Black Economic Empowerment
(BBBEE) the provincial Department of Public Works has opted to come up with a
structured Emerging Contractor Development Programme (ECDP) called "Masakhe"
meaning "let us build". This programme focuses on the empowerment of small,
medium and micro enterprises (SMMEs) in construction. Projects up to the value
of R5 million per project will be set aside for this programme.
The Expanded Public Works Programme (EPWP) is also proving to be a great
lever for us in providing opportunities for small contractors to develop. We
are currently developing plans to expand this national focus on contractor
development and sustainable enterprises. Sustainable enterprises perform
better. The EPWP aims at creating labour intensive construction; the department
set a target of creating 13 000 jobs in 2006/07 but has exceeded that target as
more than 16 000 jobs have been created by the end of the financial year.
One of the challenges the Department is grappling with is the participation
of women and youth in the construction industry, which historically has been
dominated by men. The department has awarded work to women to the value of R178
028 332 19 and youth to value of R104 007 131 83. This is an effort we are
making to advance women economic empowerment and to deal with the challenge of
youth unemployment.
My department will hold Women in Property and Construction Summits during
the women month, to sensitise and encourage them to participate in
opportunities in the department. The Independent Development Trust, which is an
entity that reports to National Department, will also intensify its focus on
women in construction, ensuring that women are employed and developed as
contractors.
Construction skills are critical to the goals of Asgisa and Joint Initiative
on Priority Skills Acquisition (Jipsa). As part of the National Youth Service
that we launched in April this year, Public Works has identified a range of
interventions to support the industry in developing both artisan and
professional skills.
In this context my department, through the National Youth Service (NYS), is
undertaking to train 600 youth on its maintenance programme and to ensure that
these exit into permanent employment or entrepreneurial job opportunities.
Acting Chairperson and delegates, the creation of assets in the construction
sector does not only relate to physical infrastructure such as roads, railway
lines, dams or even power states. It is also about the creation of buildings
for office space, retail and residential. These assets are what we use for our
varied needs. These assets require maintenance and management for them to
realise revenue.
We do have facilities which can assist us to fulfil this task, however in
certain instances and localities we do not have such facilities and therefore
rely on what we can get available from the private sector.
Every year government spend about R10 billion in leases. We also do not have
enough capacity in managing all the facilities that we own. What this means is
that there is a space for entrepreneurs to participate in this industry.
In facilitating this process at a government level we have worked with the
industry in the development of the property sector charter because we realise
that not only can we rely on the portfolio that the state owns if we seek to
empower those who were historically disenfranchised, but the private sector
itself must and should create space for inclusion.
I wish you well in your endeavours to provide skills and entrepreneurial
leadership for women in our province. I hope that women will use all the
opportunities that have been afforded to them in this sector.
Building communities through construction
Sithuthukisa imiphakathi ngokwakha
I thank you.
Issued by: Department of Public Works, KwaZulu-Natal Provincial
Government
3 August 2007
Source: KwaZulu-Natal Provincial Government (http://www.kwazulunatal.gov.za)