Title: EXPANDED PUBLIC WORKS PROGRAMME
1CONTRACTOR DEVELOPMENT IN THE EPWP 11 October
2005
21. BACKGROUND
3Projected growth in construction
- At least double construction output over 10 years
- Likely to be shortage of contractors, supervisors
and skilled workers
4CIDB Contractors Register grading value ranges
5CIDB register equity statistics to date
6The register as a tool for contractor development
- Inequity reflected by register is the legacy of
apartheid - CIDB register is a mirror of society
- Challenge is to use the register as a tool to
promote greater equity in the industry
72. CONTRACTOR DEVELOPMENT IN THE EPWP
8Labour intensive contractor learnership programme
- DPW and CETA designed learnership programme
- Is a support mechanism to provinces and
municipalities participation is optional - Participation based on province/municipality
signing an MOU with DPW and the CETA
9- How it works
- Open advert for companies (a contractor and two
supervisors) to apply go onto the programme - Selection according to pre-determined criteria
(preference for people with experience in
construction and managing a business) - Selected learners go on 2 3 year full-time CCO2
learnership, consisting of series of classroom
training and practical training projects - Contractors must exit after maximum 3 years,
compete on open market
10LI CONTRACTOR LEARNERSHIP PROGRAMME
IDT
CETA
DPW
DOL
Mentors for training providers
Trainers of trainers
Programme Management support
Community Facilitation Support
Training providers for learnerships
Province / municipality
Mentors for learners
Training projects
Training providers for workers
Learner contractor 2 learner supervisors
Access to credit
ABSA
Unemployed EPWP beneficiaries
11Programme for learnerships
Year 1
Year 2
Training
Project 1
Training
Project 2
Training
Project 3
Mentorship (DPW)
12- Contractors registered at levels 1 and 2 at start
of learnership, will qualify to register at
levels 3, 4 and 5 when graduate - 33 provincial departments and municipalities
signed up for 1848 learnerships to date - Target of 1000 emerging contractors and 2000
supervisors on learnerships by July 2006 - As part of their learnerships, the learners will
implement 1500 EPWP projects to the value of
approximately R1.5 billion
13Other EPWP contractor development programmes
- Building contractors (with CETA)
- 120 contractors on similar learnerships in
Limpopo - School class-room blocks provided as training
projects - 40 graduated recently, moved to levels 3, 4 and 5
- 30 building contractors being recruited onto
similar programme in Eastern Cape - Electrical contractors
- Energy SETA allocating 12 learnerships
- Will be implemented by DPW
- Potential for further expansion
14CONCLUSIONS
- Need to analyse equity statistics on register by
class of works - Need to focus more on contractor development
programmes in classes with worst equity
statistics, eg ME, EE, SW - Need to formulate more second round contractor
development programmes, to assist black
contractors to move from levels 3,4 and 5 up to
levels 6, 7, 8 and 9.
15Website www.epwp.gov.za Email
epwp_at_dpw.gov.za Tel 012 337 3115