Cape Argus E-dition

WCED lambasted over appointment of retiree, 69

BULELWA PAYI bulelwa.payi@inl.co.za

THE Public Service Commission (PSC) has rapped the Western Cape Education Department (WCED) over the knuckles for the appointment of a 69-year-old retiree.

The commission found the department already knew that it wanted to employ Brian Schreuder, who was singled out as the sole shortlisted candidate out of 19 applicants, despite his retirement status and concerns raised by officials in the department.

The commission launched an investigation into the appointment of Schreuder after a complaint was made in December.

Schreuder was appointed to the position on a one-year contract in June shortly after he retired at the age of 69.

The PSC said it found the department’s claim that it had no idea who would be applying for the position implausible.

“Given the very serious need identified by the HOD (head of department) and the weight of the risk of the departure of key officials posed for the department, why allow a narrow window period of five calendar days to fill such a critical role?

“A reasonable assumption is that the department already knew who would be applying and who it wanted to employ,” the report said.

The post was created at the request of the new head of department, Brent Walters, who had shadowed Schreuder between January and March last year after senior managers dealing with examinations and assessments all left the department in succession.

The post was advertised on April, 7 with a closing date on April 12.

Officials told the commission that the three working days deadline had never happened before in the department.

The advert also excluded a requirement for a South African Council of Educators (Sace) registration.

Schreuder was interviewed on May 17 and was given a rating of 78% by the internal interview panel of four officials.

However, a recruitment and selection official did not support the short-list based on the process and best practice while another from Corporate Services red-flagged Schreuder’s age as a potential liability to the department.

But the commission found that the motivation for the creation of the post was plausible even though the process followed lacked proper consultation.

“The fast time-line raises suspicion that the likely candidate was ready and waiting and that the obligation to fulfil a requirement process was done in a perfunctory manner,” read the report.

The commission noted that it was an indictment on the department’s human resources planning and leadership succession planning that it found itself in a stop-gap situation where Schreuder was employed at the age of 69.

But it found the decision to deviate from the Sace requirement not illegal.

Schreuder told the Weekend Argus he was appointed by the department after due process and declined to comment further.

Education MEC David Maynier said the department noted the commissions findings and was considering the recommendations made. The recommendations included:

• The WCED undertake a proper analysis of its critical staffing requirements so as to ensure proper succession planning.

• The creation of posts to benefit from a proper analysis of needs, competencies required, and assessment of the likely pool of candidates available in the market.

• That line managers be involved as far as possible in the process of needs identification.

• That the outcome of the report to be made available to the political and administrative leadership of the department as part of a commitment to transparency and openness.

METRO

en-za

2022-08-14T07:00:00.0000000Z

2022-08-14T07:00:00.0000000Z

http://capeargus.pressreader.com/article/281676848692288

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