PERSPECTIVES

Yes to skills development

BUTI MANAMELA

Youth Employment Services (YES) is a national initiative that seeks to create opportunities for young people.

By partnering with the private sector, state-owned companies and other socio-economic partners, YES will ensure that training in Technical and Vocational Education and Training (TVET) colleges is suited to the requirements of the companies

that seek these skills and that TVET graduates will find positions in these companies.

As President Ramaphosa affirmed during the launch of YES, government and the private sector are investing more effort and resources into TVET colleges, which have the potential to produce the technical skills that will underpin the industrialisation of our economy.

By providing paid work experience to thousands of these unemployed young people, these companies will not only significantly improve their prospects of finding future employment but will also help to build a more inclusive and sustainable economy.

One of the country’s state-owned companies that is acutely aware of this national imperative is the South African National Roads Agency SOC Limited (SANRAL).

The agency continues to support the next generation of engineers and artisans at tertiary institutions across the country and also awards scholarships to high school learners.

SANRAL’s ongoing partnerships with institutions of higher education and training promotes interest in science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM) subjects.

Through its sponsorship of Chairs in Pavement Engineering at the University of Stellenbosch and Transport Planning at the University of Cape Town, for example, SANRAL contributes greatly to knowledge generation and training of young people in these sectors.

The agency’s continued support of programmes like the University of the Free State’s Family Math & Family Science initiative continues to expand into communities that are outside of the Free State. A total of 176 primary schools from predominantly rural communities in the Northern Cape, Eastern Cape and Gauteng were actively involved in this initiative during the last financial year.

Moreover, a total of 133 students, including 32 young women, were awarded bursaries and 194 learners were recipients of SANRAL scholarships.

SANRAL’s Technical Excellence Academy (TEA) in Port Elizabeth also made it possible for 27 candidate engineers, 10 of whom are women, to undergo training in 2016/17.
The academy provides dedicated training and work exposure to civil engineering

graduates, the majority of whom have been beneficiaries of SANRAL bursaries. In line with YES, the provision of basic skills training, as well as job opportunities, has been one of the apex priorities of the Department of Higher Education and Training since its establishment.

Taking its cue from the national government, the department committed itself to ‘Outcome 5: a skilled and capable workforce to support an inclusive growth path’, as part of its efforts to implement the government’s Programme of Action (POA).

Outcome 5 stipulates that graduates of South African universities and TVET colleges should have the skills and knowledge necessary to meet the present and future needs of the country’s economy.

We are fortunate to have SOEs such as SANRAL, which wholeheartedly say “Yes!” to YES and continue to do their part to help alleviate youth unemployment in South Africa.

Buti Manamela is the Deputy Minister of Higher Education and Training

Road construction and maintenance programmes across the country contribute greatly to socio-economic transformation, job creation and poverty reduction in communities.

At all its projects the agency ensures that its construction activities add social value to communities living in proximity to the road.

Black-owned small, medium and micro enterprises are prioritised for sub-contracts on all construction and road maintenance projects while preference is also being given to local companies for the supply of materials and services.

Moreover, SANRAL creates social value to society through:

  • Community development projects which enhance infrastructure in areas located close to the primary network
  • Road safety programmes that combine education, effective responses to incidents and the engineering of safer roads

  • Support to universities to train engineering professionals, conduct research and develop initiatives to improve outcomes in maths and science teaching.

In the past year SANRAL provided 1 886 opportunities for SMMEs to participate in road construction, rehabilitation and maintenance projects. Black-owned enterprises received 77% of the R3 087m allocated for such projects.

This created 36 678 work opportunities of which 57% of positions were filled by young people under the age of 35. One in four of the jobs were taken up by women.

Construction activities undertaken by SANRAL are always accompanied by training and skills development opportunities for the workers that are employed. The intention is to equip individuals with skills that can later be used to find employment in the wider construction and engineering sectors.

In 2017/18 some 3 421 workers benefited from 6 237 training courses offered.

Through these initiatives SANRAL makes valuable contributions to the alleviation of major social and economic challenges in the country.

Social transformation is part of SANRAL’s core business and its activities contribute to the national efforts to address widespread poverty, high unemployment and extreme inequality.

Empowerment in numbers

Contracts deliver value

Routine road maintenance contracts offer valuable opportunities for black-owned companies and enterprises owned by women and the youth to get experience in the construction sector.

In 2017/18 SANRAL issued contracts for such work to the value of R2.16bn:

FEB/MAR '19 | ISSUE 24