Sowetan

Budget cuts force children centres to reduce numbers

Government puts kids into cheaper foster care

- By Joseph Bracken

Child protection organisati­ons in KwaZulu-Natal have raised concerns that the provincial department of social developmen­t is placing children in foster care rather than in child and youth care centres (CYCCs), even when it is not in their best interest.

These children are often orphaned and have experience­d traumatic events, and the centres provide more comprehens­ive care.

In some cases, children are being placed far away from their home base because of a lack of space in the care centres. Sometimes siblings are also separated.

The KwaZulu-Natal social developmen­t department’s budget for funding nonprofit organisati­ons was cut from R735m in 2023/24 to R695m in 2024/25.

This has caused many cen tres to reduce the number of beds in their facilities. The Durban Child and Youth Care Centre was able to house 74 children but after the cuts it can house only 70, said its director Mandy Goble. Wylie House also had to reduce its placements from 40 to 38, said general manager Nazli Finch.

It costs the government less to subsidise children placed in foster care than in youth care centres. Foster care subsidies are R1,180/child/month, whereas child and youth care centres receive R4,000/child/ month.

Director of Pietermari­tzburg Child Youth Care Centre, Fiona Balgobind, says this is because centres provide comprehens­ive services, including special care for children suffering from trauma. Staff become the legal guardians of the children and are responsibl­e for their complete care. Foster care often offers only the most basic needs for a child, such as food, shelter and education. Centres provide therapeuti­c services, speech therapy, physiother­apy and other care services according to the child’s needs, says Balgobind.

Social workers and carers at the centres also help with the process of reintegrat­ion into communitie­s once an appropriat­e placement is found, whether foster care, adoption or reunificat­ion with family members. This can prevent children from being bounced from home to home when they’re placed directly into foster care.

Manager of the Child and Family Welfare Society of Pietermari­tzburg, Julie Todd, said that even before the budget cuts were made, the social developmen­t department’s case managers were instructed to place children in foster care rather than in centres.

Mhlabunzim­a Memela, KZN social developmen­t spokespers­on, said it “is not aware of such an allegation”.

But Yvonne van der Galien, director of Rehoboth Children’s Village, believes the department knew it would cut the number of subsidised children. Rehoboth has reduced its care from 80 to 75 children.

Van der Galien said two siblings, aged two and seven, were moved out of the Ugu district and separated, she said.

Memela, responding to why the siblings were moved, said, “The placement of children in funded CYCCs is informed by the availabili­ty of the budget in that financial year.”

Many other centres have struggled with losing placements since the budget cuts kicked in. Lily of the Valley Children’s Village was reduced from 95 to 85, and iKhethelo Children’s Village was reduced from 48 to 45. “If we take any children above these numbers, the department will not pay a child grant to them,” says Graeme Wright, the CEO of both centres.

St Theresa’s CYCC reduced its capacity from 72 to 60 children. They have also had to retrench two of their staff, said Arlene Deborah Bowes, its director.

 ?? /WAVEBREAK MEDIA LTD ?? Child centres provide services such as speech therapy, physiother­apy and other care according to the child’s needs.
/WAVEBREAK MEDIA LTD Child centres provide services such as speech therapy, physiother­apy and other care according to the child’s needs.

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