Awards' presentation ceremony held at the Hotel School, Mafikeng
29 August 2007
Programme Director,
Honourable Premier, Edna Molewa,
Head of Department (DDG), Obakeng Mongale,
Members of the Executive Council (MECs) present,
Members of Portfolio Committee on Public Works,
All Senior Management of the Department present here,
Colleagues from Head Office and our four regions,
Distinguished guest,
Ladies and Gentlemen
Let me take this opportunity to welcome and pass on my warmest greetings to
all of you gathered here tonight.
I am indeed honoured to be present at this evening's 'MEC Excellence Awards
Presentation Ceremony' organised by our wonderful department.
It is indeed a big event for all of us in Public Works and I am glad to join
you all, to say my congratulations to participants and well done to the
recipients of the various awards who will be ascending the podium later on.
Public Servants, on the frontline or in the back office co-ordinate their
efforts in providing multifarious quality services to the public every day.
Faced with the rising expectations of our people from various communities,
one of the many challenges we face as the department is, to actively promote a
customer-orientated service culture among ourselves as public servants, at all
ranks, in order to meet our people and client's aspirations in service
attitudes, efficiency and quality.
It is once again time for us to look back, reward excellence and honour
those in our midst who have made it their priority to go beyond the call of
duty.
Those who have as individuals or as a collective actively pulled all stops
to ensure efficiency, quality with the sole objective of ensuring that we as a
department and as government deliver quality services to our people.
Programme Director
When we talk of rewarding excellence, we recognise among others the high
level of devotion, innovation, commitment and loyalty to the public service. To
be devoted, innovative, committed and loyal is not an easy task. The
improvement of service delivery in the public sector continues to be a
challenge that requires the pledge of all public servants. Very often, we tend
to limit the scope thinking this is only about meeting government's objectives
but it is most importantly about satisfying the aspirations of members of the
public for access to quality services and a better life.
Nothing should, therefore, justify our failure to respond to these
expectations.
As government we may have very limited resources at our disposal but that
should not be an excuse for not delivering. Every single one of us in the
public service, whether in the frontline or in the back office, needs to play
their part and serve our people with the highest degree of dedication. For this
to be achievable, we need to put 'People First - Batho Pele!'
Programme Director
Just in May this year North West was rated the second best performing
province after Eastern Cape following a survey by Markinor, a leading and
independent market research solutions provider in the country. As part of this
biannual 'Government Performance Barometer' study, respondents, who in our case
were North West residents, had to rate their provincial government's
performance on scales ranging from:
* very well
* fairly well
* not very well
* not at all well.
Interestingly, the survey results indicated that our province performed
better than all the other eight provinces in areas relating to education
provision and basic health services.
As the custodian of building infrastructure including schools, clinics,
hospitals and health centres among others, the contribution of the Public Works
department to these results can therefore not be over emphasised. It is for
reasons like these that we have gathered here tonight, to recognise, honour and
reward the outstanding performance show-cased by our hardworking men and
women.
Recognising the critical role played by public servants in the
reconstruction and development of our country is a key to the achievements of
our provincial growth and development strategy.
Through this strategy, our province aims to halve unemployment by 2014 and
realise a 6% economic growth. This bodes well with the targets of the
Accelerated and Shared Growth Initiative for South Africa (AsgiSA).
Tonight we will be honouring teams that have shown devotion, innovation
commitment and loyalty in their work in the following categories:
* Best performing project
* Best performing directorate
* Best performing chief directorate
* MEC's recognition awards.
I am informed that in total, 15 nominations were received from head office,
regions as well as from our various directorates. Only three withdrew, not
because of lack of interest, but because of the very strict criteria we used
this year in order to align all that we were doing to the Premier's Public
Service Excellence Awards later this year.
I am also informed that assessors were still at work by midday today
(Wednesday) having started their assessment on Monday. This should serve as
confirmation to all of us, that the outcome of this process is more than
credible, transparent and fair. I would not be in a position to tell if any of
the entries were disqualified or not.
We will also be awarding some of the 'Long Service Awards' to those
individuals who have been selflessly serving this department for many
years.
Let me emphasise that we could never award such accolades in abstract. For a
collective to ascend this stage to receive an award, they must have made a
significant contribution towards the achievements of our department's programme
of action. These awards, which will feed into the provincial event where the
Premier will honour departments in her 'Public Service Excellence Awards,' are
central to building and maintaining a culture of selflessness and dedication to
the work of building a better South Africa.
Programme Director
We believe that in order to bring the best out of an individual, one has to
show appreciation on what has already been achieved. On that note tonight's
event is a simple pat on the shoulder for these individuals and a morale
booster for all those still trailing behind to outdo themselves.
We therefore call on those who will go home empty-handed tonight not to be
discouraged but rather go back to the drawing board to re-double their efforts.
However this should not just be done to win awards but to improve the lives of
ordinary South Africans.
As our Honourable Premier Edna Molewa put it, following the revelation of
the Markinor Survey results: "Despite the (North West) province's impressive
record of delivery, more work still needs to be done to address the remaining
challenges so that all the people can taste a better life."
In conclusion
Colleagues, ladies and gentlemen let us roll up your sleeves, get our hands
dirty and work even harder in the spirit of 'Batho Pele' to help change the
lives of our people for the better.
To all those who took their precious time to enter for the awards and the
pain of having to fill-in that voluminous questionnaire and written
motivations, this was no time wasted at all.
Unfortunately there is no short-cut. If we set uniform standards for
ourselves let us follow the rules to the latter. To all those who will receive
awards immediately when I step down from this podium, may your light shine the
world.
I thank you
Issued by: Department of Public Works, North West Provincial
Government
29 August 2007