Gauteng Education Department Cooks School Nutrition Tenders

Open Tender System

The Gauteng Department of Education has once again bungled the so-called “open tender system”, this time by awarding tenders for the school nutrition programme without following due process.

The department is now being served with a court interdict as one of the service providers has challenged the awarding of the tenders, as well as the fact that the tender was only put out to bid for 15 days.

This is in contravention of the Public Finance Management Act.

According to a reply to a DA question on the matter, Gauteng Education MEC, Panyaza Lesufi, misled the Legislature in stating that he was unaware of any allegations of corruption in awarding the school nutrition tenders.

Click here to view the reply.

Abuse Public Funds

This is an indictment on the department as it is not the first time it is being grilled for bungling the tender processes.

MEC Lesufi must take full responsibility for his department not awarding tenders in line with legislation.

The DA insists that MEC Lesufi investigate the alleged irregular awarding of these tenders and take action against officials who wilfully abuse public funds.

Tenders must be open and transparent.

The DA wants to ensure that learners are provided with quality and balanced nutrition.

 

 

Media enquiries:

Khume Ramulifho MPL

DA Gauteng Education Shadow MEC

082 398 7375

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DA Gauteng Debates Open Tender Motion

Speech by: Adriana Randall

“More room for transparency in Gauteng’s Open Tender system”

  • Key to an open tender process is to constantly document its impact on transparency, accountability and citizen engagement.
  • The successful open tender process needs to ensure that public procurement processes are  available at all times by ensuring that technology is used effectively and that online bidding and computerised supply chain management are accessible and streamlined.
  • On 15 September 2016 the DA mayor in the City of Tshwane Metro announced the opening up of the tender process in the metro after discovering that the previous ANC government awarded multi-million rand contracts illegally to friends and family by ignoring the legal procurement processes in place.
  • It is a pity that Premier Makhura in his speech earlier told delegates that certain municipalities in the province already reneged on their election promises to open up their tender processes. I would appreciate if he could indicate who these municipalities are, as their decisions not to open up their tender processes will only drag down province’s efforts to ensure a responsible and transparent government.

The full speech can be obtained here.

 

Speech by : Ashor Sarupen

“ANC should learn from DA’s tender system”

  • The claim that Gauteng is the first to have implemented the open tender system is neither factual nor a victory. The City of Cape Town opened its bid adjudication committee to public and media scrutiny for all tenders on the first of July 2006.
  • Open tenders are not just about opening the bid adjudication committee to public scrutiny, but it should be about access to information and maximising the number of bids received. It cannot be right that the same firms get government tenders over and over.
  • The ANC in Gauteng has admitted to having paid R30 for a loaf of bread, and ANC municipalities have admitted to being charged R30 for a tungsten lightbulbs. This is because there is a massive racket of corruption happening at the request for quotation system under R30 000, where only those who have access to information put in quotes as the entire process is shrouded in secrecy.
  • I challenge the Premier and MEC Creecy to publicly challenge the Minister of Public Enterprises to make every State-owned enterprise adopt the open tender system

The full speech can be obtained here.

 

Media Enquiries:

Adriana Randall MPL

DA Gauteng Shadow MEC on Finance

060 556 4342

 

Ashor Sarupen

DA Gauteng Spokesperson on Finance

060 558 8303

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ANC Should Learn From DA’s Tender Systems

Let me start with the ANC’s favourite quote: “tell no lies, claim no easy victories.” Often repeated in this house, but contradicted by the ANC frequently.

The claim that Gauteng is the first to have implemented the open tender system is neither factual nor a victory. The City of Cape Town, as Hon. Randall pointed out, opened its bid adjudication committee to public and media scrutiny for all tenders on the first of July 2006, for all tenders. The City of Tshwane has adopted the same system and the City of Johannesburg has announced, due to its structure, that it will be bringing the matter of opening all bid adjudication committee for a vote to full council.

Since its inception in 2006 – R15-billion worth of tenders in the City of Cape Town, every single financial year, have been awarded in an open, fair and transparent manner.

The City of Cape Town also boasts the best figures for awarding tenders to BBBEE compliant firms, since the DA does not continuously empower the same individuals over and over based on party membership and links to the ruling elite.

Despite all of this, the ANC in Gauteng has claimed it is the only government that runs open tenders through its open bid adjudication committee, despite the fact that the DA did it 10 years ago. In fact, at a recent summit, on the day the finance minister was charged by the NPA, the Premier said that the DA did not run open tenders, knowing full well that we do.

But open tenders are not just about opening the bid adjudication committee to public scrutiny, but it should be about access to information and maximising the number of bids received. It cannot be right that the same firms get tenders over and over by government.

The DA takes transparency seriously, as openness is more than just opening meetings to the public.

The ANC in Gauteng has admitted to having paid R30 for a loaf of bread, and ANC municipalities have admitted to being charged R30 for a tungsten lightbulbs. This is because there is a massive racket of corruption happening at the request for quotation system under R30 000, where only those who have access to information put in quotes as the entire process is shrouded in secrecy.

Access to tenders is equally important – all tenders and quotes above R2000 are advertised on the City of Cape Town website and companies registered in a given tender category receive a text message whenever a new tender is listed, to maximise the number of bids received. The DA’s approach is that no tender is reserved for anybody.

I challenge the ANC Government in Gauteng to follow the DA’s approach to openness, by setting up an easily accessible portal where suppliers can register at any time, specify what good or services they are able to supply and make sure that every potential supplier is made aware of requests for quotations and tenders so that a number of quotes and bids are received, and that no companies are continuously favoured in the process.

Futhermore, I challenge the Premier and MEC Creecy to publicly challenge the Minister of Public Enterprises to make every State-owned enterprise adopted the open tender system, instead of falsely claiming the DA does not run open tenders when we do. SOE’s are being fleeced for billons by a crony tender network known as the Zuma-Gupta Axis. I hereafter refer to this axis as Zupta.

In fact, state capture is being driven by the greed for tenders by the Zupta Axis. If the ANC in Gauteng is serious about ridding out country of corruption, they should order every Gauteng ANC Member of Parliament to support the DA’s motion of no confidence in the President, where there will then be enough votes to remove a corrupt president from office.

For as long as the ANC in Gauteng keeps Zuma and the Gupta’s in power, you have no leg to stand on in preaching or grandstanding about anti-corruption measures, when the leader of the ANC violated the constitution

History will judge you for allowing our national nightmare of corruption, from the highest office in the land, to continue.

 

Media enquiries:

Ashor Sarupen

DA Gauteng Spokesperson on Finance

060 558 8303

More Room For Transparency In Gauteng’s Open Tender System

There is an African proverb that reads as follows: “If you think you’re too small to make a difference you haven’t spent a night with a mosquito”.

The mosquito in this government is the extent of corruption and more especially corruption in our procurement processes. Corruption being an enemy to democracy and a stumbling block to effective service delivery and job creation.

Being stuck in damage-control mode for as long as we have been, would eventually catch up with government and force us to consider game changers, such as the opening up of the tender process in Gauteng, which MEC Creecy announced on 12 November 2014 at the launch of the more than R50m upgrade of Cedar road in Fourways .

Now game changers focus either on our greatest challenges or our best opportunities- and sometimes both come together.

With a long term vision of fostering highly skilled, innovation driven, resource efficient, connected, high opportunity for all, the City of Cape Town became the first municipality to open up their tender process in 2006, where the public were invited to attend their bid adjudication committee meetings. They became the example for many other governments to follow, yet the lack of political will and political interference prevented them to be just that.

We therefore wish to commend the Gauteng government for opening up their tender process at a time when economic growth, job creation, and levels of community trust in government is at an all-time low. We also wish to commend you on the 30 % spend of procurement on black business in the 1st six months of the current financial year.

Premier Makhura in his speech delivered at the Open Tender seminar earlier this month referred to 3 points that is crucial to curb corruption – deterrence, prevention and education.  He also said that, and I quote “In surveys, public discourse, corruption and bribery in tender processes have featured prominently as issues of great concern amongst South Africans. People demand accountability and transparency” Close quote.

As a responsible government we must empower our communities on corruption and build a trust relationship Not only is probity auditing one of the critical elements of the open tender process, but social auditing where government and society work together in a strong trust relationship, where we find strong leadership and direction, common goals, and where incompetence is never ever glorified.

Key to an open tender process is to constantly document its impact on transparency, accountability and citizen engagement.

We therefore need to ensure efficiency and transparency in procurement to promote competition among suppliers and contractors and to provide fair and equal treatment between suppliers and contractors by using a fair supplier rotation system.

The successful open tender process needs to also ensure that public procurement processes are  available at all times by ensuring that technology is used effectively and that online bidding and computerised supply chain management is accessible and streamlined; and ensure that vendors are able to be placed on vendor lists. This will speed up response times and access to government information and support as well as access to government officials and managers, and make it easier for small businesses to understand tendering processes and supply governments with the goods and services they need. These small businesses will then also be able to create jobs.

One of the most recent transparency measures in Mexico’s open tender system is the obligation for federal agencies to appoint a ‘social witness’ when the value of the contract to be awarded exceeds a certain threshold amount. Social witnesses are representatives of civil society acting as external observers in public procurement tenders. Social witnesses will participate in all stages of the procurement procedures as overseers without participating in the actual decision-making process and issues a final report compiling a testimonial of all phases of the tender.

To promote transparency, diminish corruption risks and improve the overall efficiency and reliability of public procurement, social witnesses must be honourable persons or companies who are independent from the parties involved in the tender. They are selected through a public bidding process and must meet several requirements, such as not having held public office, not having been sentenced to imprisonment, have an academic degree, work experience and professional or academic recognitions. Furthermore, to be selected, they must submit a written statement under oath that they will refrain from participating in contracts where a conflict of interest may exist. An initiative that we can definitely also benefit from.

Speaker, on the 15th September 2016 the DA mayor in the City of Tshwane Metro announced the opening up of the tender process in the metro after discovering that the previous ANC government awarded multi-million Rand contracts illegally to friends and family by ignoring the legal procurement processes in place. This led to fruitless and wasteful expenditure of public money.

It is a pity that Premier Makhura in his speech mentioned earlier told delegates that certain municipalities in the province already reneged on their election promises to open up their tender processes. I would appreciate if he could indicate who these municipalities are, as their decisions not to open up their tender processes will only drag down province’s efforts to ensure a responsible and transparent government whilst trying to build a strong trust relationship with communities.

Our provincial population is increasing annually in the face of shrinking budgets in real terms. Opening up our tender process is a responsible step, and acknowledging the challenges we face as government as far as curbing corruption, building trust relationships, delivering on services to our communities and creating jobs are concerned.

 

 

Media Enquiries:

Adriana Randall MPL

DA Gauteng Shadow MEC on Finance

060 556 4342

Gauteng Finance MEC Misleading The Public On Open Tender System

Gauteng Finance MEC Barbara Creecy

Gauteng Finance MEC Barbara Creecy has been misleading the public about the Open Tender System, by stating that the province is the only government in the world that has such a system, and challenged the DA to implement such a system.

Her assertions are factually incorrect.

The Open Tender process involves opening up the various committees that award tenders in government departments to public and media scrutiny, in order to improve transparency and minimise the possibility of corruption in the process.

Since MEC Creecy announced this system would be adopted in Gauteng, it has been implemented at a snail’s pace in Gauteng, and eight provincial government tenders have been adjudicated in an open, fair and transparent manner since 2014.

Gauteng government websites provide little detail about where one can attend these meetings to observe – in effect creating an open process only for those who have access to the information.

Bid Adjudication Committee

In contrast, the DA first pioneered the open tender system in the City of Cape Town on 1 July 2006, immediately after taking office – where all meetings of the committees involved in the awarding of tenders (the Bid Adjudication Committee) were opened to the public and media.

Since its inception in 2006 – R15-billion worth of tenders every single financial year have been awarded in an open, fair and transparent manner.

The DA-led Western Cape provincial government followed suit in 2009, and the policy has been a mainstay of the DA’s election manifesto in 2009, 2011, 2014 and 2016 as one of our key corruption-busting measures.

The City of Cape Town also boasts the best figures for awarding tenders to BBBEE compliant firms, since the DA does not continuously empower the same individuals over and over based on party membership and links to the ruling elite.

State capture does not happen under DA administrations.

Transparent, Open Government

The DA takes transparency seriously, as openness is more than just opening meetings to the public.

Access to tenders is equally important – all tenders and quotes above R2000 are advertised on the City of Cape Town website and companies registered in a given tender category receive a text message whenever a new tender is listed, to maximise the number of bids received.

The Western Cape Provincial Government has adopted a similar approach.

If the ANC is serious about transparent, open government, I challenge MEC Creecy to immediately open all the bid adjudication and bid evaluation committees in every Gauteng Government department to the public and media.

No tender should be awarded in secret, unless the ANC in Gauteng still have something to hide.

I further challenge the MEC to be an honest politician and not claim easy victories or bragging rights that she and the ANC do not deserve.

The DA pioneered and maintains the open tender system where we govern and will continue to use it as part of our comprehensive toolkit to combat corruption.

 

Media enquiries:

Ashor Sarupen

DA Gauteng Spokesperson on Finance

060 558 8303

[Image source]