Monday 8 June 2015

KZN job-creation projects lie abandoned

8 June 2015
Release: immediate


Note to editors: The following remarks follow an oversight visit today by the DA’s Shadow Minister of Small Business Development, Toby Chance MP, to several industrial and business parks in the City of eThekwini. 


Two major job creation projects meant to support small businesses in eThekwini are lying abandoned and derelict, a DA oversight visit to the metro has found today.

Both the Jabulani Business Park in Verulam and a Mushroom-growing plant near King Shaka International have fallen out of use for years, despite 383 000 eThekwini residents being unable to find work. 


First I visited the Jabulani business park in Verulam. Built in the 1980s to house and train crafters and other small black-owned businesses, it now lies abandoned and derelict. Locals say it was overrun by people escaping the outbreaks of violence before the first democratic elections in 1994 and never recovered.

It is owned by the eThekwini metro who have questions to answer: what happened to the businesses that used to occupy the site, why is it abandoned, why has the city not renovated it, and how many jobs have been lost?

A few kilometres from King Shaka International Airport is the Cottonlands township where in 2008 the eThekwini local government invested millions of rands in a mushroom growing enterprise.  This was supposed to grow valuable shiitake mushrooms which are mostly imported from Japan. It too now lies abandoned.


According to local residents, the facility only operated for a year before it was closed down. It consists of a large shade-cloth covered growing shed, air-conditioned storage containers, cool rooms for processing and packing the mushrooms as well as offices and an ablution block. Judging by the state of the interiors and fittings, the facility appears to have been hardly used at all.


 Business and industrial parks have the potential to create jobs and address racially based economic exclusion. The DA believes that support for small business should be at a top priority for government.


However, a long history of under-investment and neglect has left many job creation projects in a dire state.


It is inconceivable that millions of rands have been wasted on these two projects, with nothing to show except lost job opportunities. Minister Zulu cannot watch from the sidelines anymore – she must intervene.

Following my recent oversight visit to the Gauteng township industrial parks, which uncovered inexcusable government neglect and disdain for black-owned small businesses, I was hoping for a different story in KZN. Sadly, that was not the case.


I will therefore today be writing to Minister of Small Business Development, Lindiwe Zulu, requesting she investigate these two projects and take steps to bring those responsible to book. Furthermore I will be presenting this, along with the findings of further oversight visits in other provinces, to Parliament’s Portfolio Committee on Small Business Development in due course.


 The DA believes it is possible to ensure that more South Africans are afforded the opportunity to start and grow their own businesses. Urgent action is required, however, from government to address the many abandoned job creation projects which promise so much but deliver so little.


Media Enquiries:  


Toby Chance MP
DA Shadow Minister of Small Business Development
083 251 5613

Graham Charters
Media Officer
072 635 0440


1 comment:

  1. It is high time that someone got the message out - to the world at large - that it is education, not race, that empowers. In that regard, the early European settlers in the Cape had the equivalent of a light-year's start on the indigenous San and Hottentots, as well as on the Bantu who were coming south. The resulting inequality is wrongly recognised as being due to race / skin colour, whereas it is all a matter of education / know how.

    No amount of "transformation" (as defined by the ANC) will ever close that gap. The masses disadvantaged by lack of education will have to get educated if they want to compete successfully. That task is too great to be fixed through conventional schooling as we know it - because of the scale, and the manpower, financial cost of school buildings and facilities and the time it would take - but there is the hope that high-quality lessons recorded on DVD's and /or memory sticks could be made available very inexpensively to those keen on improving their lot. The successful learners would still have somehow to contend with the African culture, with the have-nots believing that the "lucky" haves should share the fruits of their labours with them.

    This concept might best be communicated to, and understood by Africans, by using a game of soccer by way of an analogy. The idea is to win. If you were in the team that was winning hands down, would you hold back and give the losing side every chance to draw level with you? Not bloody likely!

    Asian peoples don't suffer from that problem.

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