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6th Annual Service Delivery Learning Academy

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Title: 6th Annual Service Delivery Learning Academy


1
6th Annual Service Delivery Learning Academy
  • Presentation Highlights
  • Building a Professional and Competent Public
    Service for Improved Local Delivery

2
An ideal public servant
  • Presenter Richard Baloyi MP, Member of the
    Portfolio Committee on Public Service
    Administration
  • Need for balance between theory and reality
  • Reflected on the importance of Batho Pele
  • Putting ourselves in the shoes of the citizens
  • Policies and implementation (service delivery, BP
    Principles turnaround)
  • Ideal Public Servant
  • Able to break new ground (innovation, service
    delivery)
  • Self motivated
  • Raise the standard (giving his/her best)
  • Nothing is impossible (turnaround strategies
  • Making a difference
  • Work in a collective
  • On board
  • Internationalist in action
  • How responsive are we to the above mentioned
    attributes?

3
Knowledge for Development and Public Service
Delivery
  • Presenter Robert Hawkins (World Bank)
  • Priorities for Africas knowledge economy
    knowledge and innovation is a life blood for
    development
  • building and instituting integrated policies
  • mobilizing leadership
  • ICT as an enabler
  • Need for innovation by local communities,
    especially harnessing indigenous knowledge)
  • Education reform to respond to the demands of the
    knowledge economy (problem solving, communication
    etc)
  • Open development processes (communities of
    practice/interest)
  • Strategic monitoring and evaluation (focusing on
    culture of learning and risk management as
    opposed to the culture of blame needs to be
    cultivated).

4
Realising our dreams for a competent professional
development Public Service
  • Presenter Prof. Chris Tapscott (UWC)
  • Challenges of the Public Service
    inter-governmental co-ordination, shortfalls in
    service delivery, public frustration and anger
  • A failure to deliver lack of professionalism
    leadership especially mid-management skills
    shortages and capacity to deliver problems of
    accountability and corruption lack of urgency.
  • Challenges of local government coordination with
    national and provincial government lack of
    skills and capacity failure of front line
    service delivery poor separation of powers
    political promises and loss of public trust

5
Realising our dreams for a competent professional
development Public Service
  • Presenter Prof. Chris Tapscott (UWC) Cont
  • Also important in the improvement of the delivery
    of services are the following
  • Local Government reform reconfiguration of local
    politics, increase local accountability,
    increased support (Project Consolidate)
  • Leadership development of a leadership cadre
    skills training improve accountability of
    leadership improve the ethos of professionalism
    analyses best practices in SA
  • Accountability for state actions set realistic
    delivery targets ensure budget and auditing
    standards ensure civil servants are accountable
    to pol leadership promote accountability of
    political leaders.
  • Civil servants not civil masters public to be
    treated with respect and courtesy (Batho Pele)
    train staff ensure that action is timeous
    ensure that administrative systems are easy
    ensure that expected standards are known redress
    measures should be in place.

6
Building a competent Public ServiceThe Case of
Botswana
  • Presenter Eric Molale, Cabinet Secretary,
    Botswana
  • Changing of mindsets is central to improving
    service delivery
  • Behavioral change
  • Emphasis on competency and professionalism
  • The ideal public servant should
  • Be aware of bigger state issues such as Batho
    Pele when they go about doing their daily duties
  • Be aware of governments Programme of Action and
    keep it in mind when implementing their own
    programmes
  • We need to change our negative behaviors now
    because we might not have enough time if we
    delay

7
Building a Professional Competent Public
Service for Improved Delivery
  • Presenter Vic Van Vuuren (Business Unity of
    South Africa)
  • Pillars of strategic leadership
  • Strategic plan
  • translated into business plans
  • Branding
  • product and employment branding
  • Leadership
  • recruitment, retention, succession planning, high
    flyers
  • PPP
  • learning from each other and encourage thinking
    out of the box
  • If you are not going to change your mind-set and
    understand it will be difficult to improve on
    service delivery

8
Rethinking the Public Service Performance
Framework
  • Presenter Kuben Naidoo National Treasury
  • Can we justify the R500 bil spend by the public
    service annually?
  • Value for Money
  • Emphasis on accountability
  • Poor service delivery due to
  • Not allowing managers to manage
  • Problems with accountability cycle
  • Need to encompass outcomes

9
Building Financial Managerial Competence in
support of Service Delivery
  • Presenter Dr Iraj Abedian
  • Outputs and outcomes are interlinked
  • Financial competence and non-financial skills is
    crucial in sustaining service delivery
  • Systemic issues perpetuating poor financial
    management practices
  • Training with week financial management
  • Process control focused
  • Lack of performance budgeting system
  • Institutional challenges
  • Lack of commitment to a long-term improvement
    programme
  • Top structures are short-term oriented
  • Line managers not responsible for the budget
  • Little attention paid to operational efficiency
    COO
  • Ill-defined processes and structures

10
Quality and Development Service for the Poor
  • Presenter Oupa Bodibe
  • Emphasis on Service Delivery paradigm shift
  • Quality of services vs quantity
  • Realignment of the state in the context of
    developmental needs
  • Move towards long-term planning
  • Case study Baragwanath Hospital

11
Day 2
  • Summary of morning session
  • Reflection on developmental goals
  • Social Accountability
  • Balancing of rights (Public Servants vs Citizens)
  • Building of trust
  • Importance of ethics within the Public Service
  • Minister
  • 2 events Public Service Strike Vienna
    Austria Global Forum
  • How do we restore the trust and professionalism
    in the public service

12
A reflection on the States developmental targets
citizen participation
  • Presenter Trevor Fowler
  • Targets are based on the Governments electoral
    mandate it received in 2004
  • Developmental agenda
  • Status on delivery
  • Feb 2005 Nov 2006 110 000 bucket eradication
  • Access to free basic water
  • Role of Public Servants in the developmental
    state
  • Improving life of communities
  • Serve with higher standard of professionalism

13
Building confidence in the public service
  • Presenter Derick Luyt
  • Social Accountability
  • Citizens are not passive consumers of services
    but active right holders
  • Eastern Cape example
  • Recommendations
  • Improvement in planning and resource allocation
  • Publish performance agreements of HODs senior
    manager
  • Dont let the media find the bad news, give the
    bad news (Redress)
  • Confidence in the public service can only be
    built through evidence not spin

14
Building confidence in the public service
  • Presenter Min Fraser-Moleketi
  • Our reputation dented by some unfortunate
    behaviour during strike action defended the
    constitutional right to strike but in process
    some trampled on the rights of others (esp. for
    essential services)
  • Asked for balance
  • Need for building trust (also lesson from Global
    Forum 7)
  • Need to work together to better life for all
  • Re-emphasised the Constitution as the basis for
    professionalism

15
Workshop1Sustainability and Local Delivery
  • Eve Annecke
  • Life is different from all the nice (strategic)
    plans we make because it happens whilst you are
    doing.
  • Steven Friedman
  • Citizens do not judge govt by the number of
    goodies that are delivered to them listen to
    what citizens is saying
  • Prof Zach Chuenyane
  • Work with the poor, not for the poor
  • Zanele Nxumalo
  • Home and Community based care

16
Workshop 2 Building a Culture of continuous
improvement and competence
  • Prof Nick Binedell
  • Nations need to cooperate over and above
    competing
  • Anything is possible and time is not on our side
  • John Phatshwe Tebogo Kesupile
  • Intervention Methodology
  • PMS driven performance improvement cycle
  • Prof Vincent Maphai
  • Leaders inspire and teams deliver
  • Formal qualifications are enables
  • As a leader provide the team with resources then
    hold them accountable
  • Best practice in South Africa
  • Walk the talk

17
Workshop 3 Integration to leverage competencies
for optimal local delivery
  • Malcolm Simpson
  • Intergovernmental coordination
  • Impact of 2010
  • Sibusiso Mhlongo and Samuel Gcaba
  • Inter-sphere coordinated projects promote public
    trust
  • People centered development
  • Christine Fortuin
  • Assisting other cooperatives from other areas in
    the Eastern Cape to establish themselves

18
Workshop 4 Accountability and building confidence
  • Tini Laubscher Office of the Auditor General
  • The link between service delivery and auditing.
  • Auditing is about turning our well-acknowledged
    good policies into our day-today activities which
    make a difference in peoples lives.
  • In the above context, internal or external
    auditing should not be seen as the enemy. It
    should be viewed as a tool for public
    accountability.
  • Rogier van der BRINK, World Bank
  • Commended SA govts policies and efforts
  • lack of integration across the spheres of govt,
    particularly with regard to service delivery at
    grassroots level.
  • Ithembalethu case study to illustrate, as an
    example of a land reform project which never took
    off because of govt depts inability to integrate
    their interventions
  • Russel Wildeman, IDASA
  • Said while SA budget processes are the most
    transparent compared to other parts of the
    continent, there is little local or civil society
    input in the final budget as people rarely act on
    the available information from treasury and other
    sources.
  • Chad for example, where civil society
    mobilisation led to a reform in that countrys
    budget processes.

19
Thank You together let us beat the drum for
service delivery because WE BELONG, WE CARE, WE
SERVE to make A BETTER LIFE FOR ALL.
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