Title: BRIEFING REPORT:
1BRIEFING REPORT SOUTH AFRICAN COUNCIL FOR
SOCIAL SERVICE PROFESSIONS (SACSSP) TO THE
PORTFOLIO COMMITTEE FOR SOCIAL DEVELOPMENT Pres
ident- Ms. Marilyn Setlalentoa
2INTRODUCTION
- Topics to be discussed
- Introduction
- Objectives and Role of the Council
- Role and Functions of Professional Boards
- Transformation Agenda of the Council
- Activities of the Council
- CEOS/REGISTRARS OFFICE
- EDUCATION AND DEVELOPMENT
- POLICY AND ADVOCACY
- PROFESSIONAL CONDUCT
- Partnering with the Department of Social
Development and other social service partners - Challenges
- Conclusion
3INTRODUCTION
- The Council is indeed very grateful for the
recognition given the social work profession in
the budget speech of Minister Trevor Manuel, as
this is the oldest profession of the social
service professions. As psycho-social problems
in our country increase, so is the demand for
more social service professionals, especially
social workers that are in the coal face of
services to vulnerable groups. - The Council noted with concern a decrease in the
number of newly qualified social workers and
others leaving the country. Some of the reasons
expressed are
4INTRODUCTION (Conti
- Salaries for government are still not attractive,
in spite of recent increases in the salaries and
improvement in opportunities for a career path
for the profession - NGOs are paying far less than government
- Working conditions are not conducive
- The challenge however is for all social services
professions and stakeholders to work together
towards ensuring the achievement of social
cohesion and human solidarity.
5INTRODUCTION (Conti
- The mere fact that Minister Trevor Manuel
repeated the statement made by the former
President Nelson Mandela that peoples lives
hold equal value. The 2007 budget placed the
people of South Africa therefore in the centre.
The challenge however, is for all social
services stakeholders to work together towards
ensuring the achievement of social cohesion and
human solidarity. - By its nature social development is concerned
about bringing people together. Because human
life has equal worth, Government is building the
social work profession to contribute in assisting
people in achieving social and economic
development. - The Department of Social Development is at the
centre to reach vulnerable group and the need for
more social service professionals is well
addressed in the budget speech.
6INTRODUCTION (Conti
- As poverty remains still one of the challenges in
our country, social security and social welfare
services are of paramount importance to improve
the social functioning of our people. - Involving communities in developmental programmes
would reduce dependency on the state and would
contribute to economic growth because the
approach will provide job opportunities. - Social service professionals should be trained in
a way that would contribute economic development
of our people, hence the critical role Continued
Professional Development (CPD) would play. - Multi-disciplinary approach of is critical in
the rendering of holistic services to
communities.
7OBJECTIVES AND ROLE OF THE COUNCIL
- In terms of the Act the Councils comprehensive
role can be summarised as follows - Council is the determining, guiding and
regulating body in South Africa. Council
therefore fulfils this role by setting the
standards for education and training of
practitioners and by taking policy resolutions as
guidelines for the practice of social service
professions under its auspices. - Council is the protector of the interests of the
clients. This role is executed by Council,
leading the social service practitioners, in
maintaining the ethical standards of practice (by
giving guidance and by taking disciplinary action
when necessary, in terms of the Act). - Council also promotes the interests of those who
are registered with it, for instance,
practitioners may obtain advice from the Council
regarding the handling of situations in their
practise.
8 Role and functions of Professional Boards
- The role and functions of the professional boards
are as follows - Establish registers for the practitioners under
their auspices - Establish the criteria for their registration
- Determine the acts or omissions which shall
constitute unprofessional conduct - Formulate the code of ethics to be followed in
the practising of the profession concerned.
9Transformation Agenda of Council
- The Council appointed a Transformation Committee
to - attend to transformation matters including the
ff - Restructuring of the structure of the Council to
address equity and operations to promote
efficiency and responsiveness to the sector - Demarcation of the fields of services i.e.
Professionalisation vs Specialisation - Review of the Social Service Professions Act, 110
of 1978, jointly with the Department
10STATISTICS OF REGISTERED PERSONS
STATISTICS STATISTICS STATISTICS STATISTICS STATISTICS
Registered persons 2003/2004 2005/2005 2005/2006 2006/2007
Social workers 10645 10676 11414 11525
Student- Social workers 1591 1848 2189 1045
Student- Social workers 976 976 1126 1063- registration in progress- closing date June 2007
Student Social Auxiliary workers Student numbers incorporated in above statistic, June 2006 Council no longer provide its own training course and SAWs register in the FET training programme offered by the HWseta, Student numbers incorporated in above statistic, June 2006 Council no longer provide its own training course and SAWs register in the FET training programme offered by the HWseta, Student numbers incorporated in above statistic, June 2006 Council no longer provide its own training course and SAWs register in the FET training programme offered by the HWseta, 1755- FET Learnerships
11STRATEGIC PLAN
- In presenting the strategic plan for the 2007/08
financial year, we outline our intention to
streamline social service professions, to promote
efficiency, prevent duplication and to maximize
service delivery in respect of social development
as well as positively contribute to social
interventions of joint efforts among all South
Africans to improve social cohesion as mentioned
by President Mbeki in his State of the Nation
Address. - The Social Service Professions Act, 110, 1978 is
the guide to ensure true collaboration.
VISION AND MISSION A professional Council
striving for social justice through guiding,
enabling, and empowering the social service
professions to promote and enhance developmental
social welfare in the interests of their various
social service client groups.
- Serving the interest of social service
professionals - Education and training
- Ethical conduct and
- Professional service
STRATEGIC PLAN SACSSP
- SACSSP employees to excel
- Client centricity
- Foresight and Visionary thinking
- Positive attitude/optimism
- Trustworthiness
- Respect for the individual
- Understanding as well as buying into the
strategic vision/ mandate of the Council
12PROGRAMMES AND PRIORITIES 2007/08
PPROFESSIONAL CONDUCT
CEOS/REGISTRARS OFFICE
- Create awareness amongst the public about the
code of conduct expected from social service
professionals - Educate communities about their rights and
recourse if social service professionals violate
these rights - Educate social service stakeholders about ethics
and the role Council play in ensuring adherence
to these ethics by social service professionals - Research into Trends pertaining to Disciplinary
- Compile a compendium of previous cases for
social work students to use during training -
- Policy development to govern the relationship
between Council and Boards - Processing of Regulations
- Professionalizing other occupational groups
- Financial sustainability of the Council and the
Professional Boards - Expansion of registers of the social service
professions
13PROGRAMMES AND PRIORITIES 2007/08 (Conti
- EDUCATION AND DEVELOPMENT
POLICY AND ADVOCACY
- Continuing Professional Development (CPD)
- Determine more specialised fields in Social Work
- Learnership in Social Auxiliary Work (SAW), Child
and Youth Care (CYC) etc - Develop minimum standards for the education and
training of social auxiliary workers and social
workers - Finalise and publish the regulations for
registration of child and youth care workers - Compliance with norms and standards for IHL
-
- Enhance image profession
- Development and implementation of Communication
strategy - Constituency consultation
- Management of media
14PARTNERSHIPS WITH VARIUOS SOCIAL SERVICES
STAKEHOLDERS
15Future partnering projects
- Joint strategy for mitigating impact of HIV/AIDS
on professionals - Accelerating education and training of more
social workers and social auxiliary workers - Continuous professional development
(reorientation of social service professionals
e.g. on customer care)
16Future partnering projects (cont.)
- Establishment of more specialities in social
work, in line with the recruitment and retention
strategy for social workers - Registration of new professions e.g. development
practitioners - Provincial visits to employers of social workers,
to assess compliance with norms and standards - A conference for the sector where the unified
professional association for social workers will
be launched
17CHALLENGES
- To enhance the image of the social service
professions, through marketing and continued
professional development -
- To provide guidelines to the various occupational
groups in terms of scope of practice, standards
for education and training and the code of ethics - To create awareness amongst civil society about
the code of ethics of social service
professionals
18CHALLENGES (cont.)
- To professionalize various unregulated groups of
occupations that render inferior services to
vulnerable groups - To ensure financial sustainability of all
professional boards - To clarify the roles and responsibilities of the
Council versus the Professional Boards in
relation to the Councils role as the juristic
person and the accounting institution - Registration of child and Youth care workers
Acceleration of the consultation process to
enable the finalisation of the regulations and
database to be able to register them
19CONCLUSION
- Council sincerely appreciates this opportunity to
present to the Portfolio Committee on issues of
common interest that are meant to improve the
sector and challenges faced by our country
20THANK YOU