SETAs aim to reach skills development targets
SETAs aim to reach skills development targets
Released by Department of Labour on 27 January 2004
The Sectoral Education and Training Authorities (SETA) CEO Forum
meeting held in Woodmead, Johannesburg from 22 to 23
January ended on a high note with a renewed commitment from SETAs
to redouble their efforts towards meeting the Skills Development
Strategy targets and drawing up a new strategy for 2005 to 2009.
The meeting, which centred on accelerating learnership
implementation, discussed among others draft regulations emerging from
the Skills Development Amendment Act as an intervention to strengthen
SETAs? performances to meet the National Skills Development Strategy
targets.
Written public comments for the draft Service Level Agreement and
the amended Skills Development Funding Regulations have already been
invited and will reach the Minister of Labour in the first
part of February.
The two regulations set mechanisms to deal with the standards and
criteria for the evaluation and measuring of SETAs? service delivery in
meeting targets and financial prudence.
The meeting also dealt extensively with regulations of the Act that
guides the establishment of the 20 Employment and Skills Development
Lead Employer Pilot Projects - a precursor to the Employment and Skills
Development Agencies (ESDAs).
The Lead Employer Project -to be funded by the sectors - will start
operating in March to assist small business to actively participate in
structural training and learnerships.
Each of the 20 pilots will manage approximately 550 learners and it
is anticipated that approximately 11 000 young unemployed learners will
benefit from these pilots.
"The establishment of ESDAs will remove the administrative
burden from the employers. Employers will have no reason for
not taking young and unemployed learners into their workplaces for
skills development and on the job training. As government we now
appeal to employers to open doors for the unemployed youth. If one
employer can take one learner for training, about 200 000 young people
will be in learnership programmes,? the Minister of Labour Membathisi
Mdladlana said.
ESDAs will only be launched later in the year, once legislation
allows for it.
SETAs were also reminded to heed the deadline for applications for
the re-establishment of the 25 operating institutions for the new phase
of the National Skills Development Strategy.
The current phase expires in March 2005 and SETAs are to apply to
the Ministry for the renewal of their certifications of establishment
before the end of March 2004.
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