Premier Alan Winde on Coronavirus Covid-19 cases for 30 Jul

As of 1pm on 30 July, the Western Cape had 10 915 active cases of COVID-19, with a total of 92 845 confirmed cases and 78921 recoveries.

Total confirmed COVID-19 cases

92 845

Total recoveries

78921

Total deaths

3009

Total active cases (currently infected patients)

10 915

Tests conducted

411 015

Hospitalisations

1500 with 280 in ICU or high care

 Cape Metro Sub-districts: 

 Sub-district

Cases

 

Recoveries

Western

7812

 

6766

Southern

8104

 

6983

Northern

5344

 

4778

Tygerberg

11419

 

10005

Eastern

8314

 

7338

Klipfontein

8157

 

7146

Mitchells Plain

7274

 

6289

Khayelitsha

7697

 

6984

Total

64121

 

56289

 

Sub-districts:

 

 District

 Sub-district

Cases

Recoveries

Garden Route

Bitou

383

264

Garden Route

Knysna

964

608

Garden Route

George

2419

1728

Garden Route

Hessequa

140

79

Garden Route

Kannaland

49

42

Garden Route

Mossel Bay

1279

824

Garden Route

Oudsthoorn

475

277

Cape Winelands

Stellenbosch

1744

1523

Cape Winelands

Drakenstein

3777

3322

Cape Winelands

Breede Valley

2721

2331

Cape Winelands

Langeberg

958

796

Cape Winelands

Witzenberg

1259

976

Overberg

Overstrand

1336

1164

Overberg

Cape Agulhas

190

142

Overberg

Swellendam

238

196

Overberg

Theewaterskloof

947

784

West Coast

Bergrivier

344

263

West Coast

Cederberg

110

72

West Coast 

Matzikama

222

147

West Coast

Saldanha Bay Municipality

1135

949

West Coast

Swartland

1114

895

Central Karoo

Beaufort West

239

108

Central Karoo

Laingsburg

23

17

Central Karoo

Prince Albert

2

1

Unallocated: 6656 (5124 recovered)

Data note: It is not always possible to check and verify that the address data supplied for each new recorded case is correct, within the time frames required to provide regular and timely updates. This means that in some instances, cases could be allocated to the wrong sub-districts. We are working with the sub-districts to clean and verify the data and where errors are picked up locally, cases will be re-allocated to the correct areas. 

More data is available here: https://coronavirus.westerncape.gov.za/covid-19-dashboard

The Western Cape has recorded an additional 24 deaths, bringing the total number of COVID-19 related deaths in the province to 3009. We send our condolences to their family and friends at this time.

Department of the Premier budget speech:

Earlier today, I delivered the Department of the Premier's budget speech to the Western Cape legislature- detailing the work this department has done over the past four and a half months, and  outlining how it will use the opportunities and lessons presented by this crisis, to lead this government into the new normal.

An excerpt from the speech and a breakdown of the main expenditure are provided below:

COVID-19 has had a significant impact on the people of the Western Cape, on our economy and on how this government conducts its day-to-day business.  This crisis has required us to respond quickly, decisively and innovatively.  

The Department of the Premier has played a major role in our whole of government response, becoming more responsive, and leading the change across the Western Cape Government. 

Since the first case of COVID-19 was detected in South Africa, our first priority has been to the people of this province- whether that is ensuring that they have access to appropriate healthcare, responding to the humanitarian crisis, or ensuring that we continue to deliver government services throughout this period.

This province took the lockdown seriously, and used the time afforded to us by the hard lockdown to prepare our systems for the peak. The DG, Dr Harry Malila and the Department of the Premier have led the way in this regard- and have continued to play an important role in overseeing our hotspot strategy to ensure that as we opened up more of our economy, we did not see a significant spike in new infections.  

As a government, our response to this crisis has been world class- taking the opportunity to learn lessons from around the world, and making use of the exceptional talent that exists in departments across the public service to chart our own way forward. 

We have developed innovative solutions to problems-like creating the Red Dot Taxi service to transport healthcare workers safely, and we have started delivering medicines to people’s homes rather than have them stand in long queues. 

This crisis has also shown us how quickly a government can respond- we built a hospital in four weeks.

The Department of the Premier has received an additional allocation of R6.350 million from the Provincial Treasury , and has repurposed just over R72 million within the vote-R41 million of which has come from savings on compensations, achieved in part, by putting on hold all non-critical vacancies.

Some of the key expenditure items included:

  • R30 million on the biggest communications campaign this province has ever undertaken- aimed at equipping residents with clear, trustworthy information that allows them to protect themselves and their families and bringing about behaviour change. This campaign flighted eight different radio adverts in over 4000 slots, on 4 regional and 29 community radio stations across the province, in three languages. It also included nearly 10 000 street pole posters, loud hailing, newspaper adverts in 34 different newspapers, SMS and please call me messages, social media messaging, posters, flyers, printable posters and material for businesses and branded taxi decals. 
  • R11.158 million to equip the Western Cape Government call centre to deal with increased call volumes for humanitarian food relief. When the province announced that it would be making 50 000 food parcels available to respond to the humanitarian crisis created by the hard lockdown, are call centre was inundated- receiving up to 14 000 calls a day in April. The additional funding was used to increase the available incoming lines into the call centre from 210 to 3000, and develop an online system in an effort to reduce the call drop rate.
  • R6.350 million to equip the Disaster Management Centre and the Provincial Government's Joint Operations Centre with the technology to conduct remote meetings. At the start of the pandemic, this technology enabled us to hold daily meetings to plan and measure our response in the province. We currently hold twice weekly cabinets, including district municipalities, the various hotspot and workstream teams, law enforcement and SAPS to ensure ongoing, coordinated management of all aspects of the pandemic in this province.
     

The Western Cape releases Procurement Disclosure Report:

Today, Minister of Finance and Economic Opportunities, David Maynier published the Western Cape's Procurement Disclosure Report which details all of the PPE procurement and expenditure undertaken in the province. The first report covers the period from 1 April 2020 to 30 June 2020, and will be published monthly, quarterly and annually.

Many South Africans are currently raising questions about how funding is being spent during this pandemic in South Africa. This report serves as a commitment by the Western Cape to operate transparently and openly, in the interests of good governance.

All spheres of government are currently experiencing a tight economic environment in which we must ensure that money is being spent appropriately and responsibly. Corruption is expensive, unaffordable and it thrives in secrecy and obscurity. By putting these reports out into the public domain, we open ourselves and our procurement systems up to the kind of public scrutiny that will not allow corruption to thrive. If, at any point, it emerges that there has been untoward behaviour in the procurement of PPE, we will not hesitate to take action.

Tourism announcements:

We welcome the announcements today by the Minister of Tourism Mmamoloko Kubayi-Ngubane,  allowing for intra-provincial leisure accommodation and extending the curfew to 10pm, allowing restaurants to trade later. The alert level 3 restrictions have placed extreme pressure on some of the leading job creating sectors in the Western Cape- including the tourism and hospitality sector. As a province, we believe that if we do not support businesses and allow them to re-open safely, we will face a second, equally serious, unemployment pandemic.

Today's announcements are a step in the right direction, but we will continue to engage with the national government on this issue because they do not completely address the crisis. I have already written to Ministers Nkosazana Dlamini Zuma and Zweli Mkhize to request an urgent meeting to discuss the impact of some of the alert level 3 restrictions on our major job creation sectors, and I do not intend to cancel that request in light of these new announcements.

We appeal to those tourism establishments who will be opening for trade in light of these new announcements to take all the necessary steps to ensure that they can do so safely.

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