CPS talks hinge on Treasury agreement

Sassa has field court papers in response to an application by Freedom Under Law, the second rights group to petition the Constitutional Court over the welfare grant crisis. File picture: David Ritchie

Sassa has field court papers in response to an application by Freedom Under Law, the second rights group to petition the Constitutional Court over the welfare grant crisis. File picture: David Ritchie

Published Mar 14, 2017

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Cape Town - A task team of ministers has decided that talks between the SA Social Security Agency (Sassa) and Cash Paymaster Services (CPS) must be started afresh, and only once the National Treasury agreed to entertain talks with a single bidder.

This has emerged from court papers filed by Sassa in response to an application by Freedom Under Law, the second rights group to petition the Constitutional Court over the welfare grant crisis.

Sassa disclosed that the task team ordered it to prepare a request to the National Treasury to allow a deviation from normal public finance rules that would legitimise 11th hour negotiations with CPS.

The drafting of the request will be overseen by senior advocate Wim Trengove and will then be submitted at the instruction of Social Development Minister Bathabile Dlamini, according to Wiseman Magasela, who served as acting chief executive of Sassa last week.

The task team comprises Dlamini, Finance Minister Pravin Gordhan, Minister in the Presidency Jeff Radebe and the ministers of state security, telecommunications, home affairs and science and technology.

Magasela confirmed in the submission to the court that Sassa and CPS had, in three days of talks earlier this month, agreed in principle to a new

two-year contract to allow the Net1 ­subsidiary to continue disbursing more than 17 million pensions and welfare grants every month.

However, the ministerial task team “decided that the current negotiations with CPS should be terminated and fresh negotiations should start only if and when the National Treasury gave its prior written approval for a deviation”.

Read also:  ConCourt demands clarity on welfare deal

Dlamini and Gordhan have disagreed in recent weeks as to who should take over grant payment after March 31, when the current contract with CPS expires.

Dlamini maintains that CPS is the only sound option and that she would expect Gordhan to make an exception to the rules and approve the contract, though no other company was allowed to bid.

The National Treasury has indicated it could not, and Dlamini’s critics have accused her of engineering a crisis that puts at risk the poor to force the embattled finance minister into a corner. 

AFRICAN NEWS AGENCY

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