After the promises: a practical plan for delivering ECD services at local level

23rd August 2016

After the promises: a practical plan for delivering ECD services at local level

The local government elections, and the subsequent celebratory or remorse hangovers, are now behind us. The newly elected administrations now face the hard work of making the many promises a reality and creating better communities and livelihoods for the people in their constituencies.

This fresh start is a unique opportunity to get Early Childhood Development (ECD) service delivery firmly on the agenda of the new local administrations. ECD is a national priority, with a recently released guiding policy, but with limited implementation so far.

There are 278 municipalities in South Africa – eight metropolitan, 44 district and 226 local municipalities. If well-planned, the ECD sector can make significant shifts happen at local government level but it must use this new space strategically and systematically because engaging with municipalities one at a time is unlikely to unlock change.

These are local government’s responsibilities according to the National Integrated ECD policy:

It is highly unlikely that municipalities will be able to fulfil these responsibilities without an overarching local government plan of action that is supported by adequate resources.  Most municipalities are at very different stages of development with huge variations in capacity, resources and understanding to engage in ECD provisioning.

Realistically, to ensure that all municipalities understand and implement their ECD responsibilities in the election honeymoon period, we need to reach all of them at the same time.  The ECD policy provides a vehicle or mechanism to do just that.

The policy embeds a mechanism for the systemic activation, support, monitoring and oversight of local government’s ECD responsibilities. It assigns an overarching role to the Department of Cooperative Governance and Traditional Affairs (COGTA). 

The policy assigns responsibility to COGTA for:

The bigger, overarching problem is a lack of ECD awareness, capacity, knowledge, and expertise within COGTA. In addition, there is not a well-developed relationship with clear pathways for communication and cooperation between COGTA and the ECD sector. This deficiency must be remedied if local government is to fulfil its ECD potential.

There is an urgent need to unlock this stream of support for local government. This will require the development, by COGTA, of a national local government ECD support plan which identifies the challenges and puts in place the necessary programmes, planning support, as well as monitoring and reporting mechanisms. The plan must be adequately resourced as well.

This step will not be possible unless the ECD planning, human resourcing and monitoring capacity in COGTA is improved. COGTA needs expert ECD leadership, infrastructure and support staff.  The Early Childhood Development sector must mobilise behind this opportunity as a matter of urgency to ensure the current post-election window of opportunity is used strategically.

Written by Patricia Martin, Advocacy Consultant at Ilifa Labantwana and founder of advocacyaid.com