HealthPREMIUM

Home for mentally handicapped not paid by Gauteng health department

The Takalani facility relies on government subsidies and, now, public donations, with the DA saying such payment delays are detrimental to many similar NGOs

Family members gather outside the Gauteng health department in Johannesburg at a vigil on October 27 2016 for patients who died after the department moved them from Life Esidimeni facilities to community-based care centres.    Picture: SOWETAN
Family members gather outside the Gauteng health department in Johannesburg at a vigil on October 27 2016 for patients who died after the department moved them from Life Esidimeni facilities to community-based care centres. Picture: SOWETAN

The Takalani Home for the Mentally Handicapped in Soweto has still not been paid its subsidies due to it by the Gauteng health department.

The Diepkloof home‚ which houses 110 patients and relies on subsidies from the Gauteng departments of social development and health‚ warned last week that it might run out of food this week.

DA Gauteng spokesperson Jack Bloom confirmed on Tuesday that the home had not been paid its subsidies last week. He said the home now relied on donations from the public to keep the home running. "I spoke to Takalani. [ [It has] not been paid this week. We are going there tomorrow with food and basic supplies."

Bloom said the home houses 58 profoundly mentally disabled people who are subsidised by the health department‚ while 52 people are subsidised by the Gauteng department of social development. "When we went there last week‚ people employed by the home had not been paid."

The home was left bankrupt by officials who were managing it during the time of the Life Esidimeni tragedy, in which a number of patients that were transferred from Esidimeni’s care to Takalani, died due to lack of appropriate care.

On Monday‚ the DA walked out of the provincial social development department portfolio committee meeting in solidarity with non-governmental organisations (NGOs) that had not been paid their grants.

The DA said delays in the payment of grant subsidies by the department have had a significant impact on the operations of NGOs as they solely depend on these grants for their sustainability. Some NGOs have been forced to close their doors while others do not have food to feed their beneficiaries, nor money to pay salaries.

Would you like to comment on this article?
Sign up (it's quick and free) or sign in now.

Comment icon