The Expanded Public Works Programme (EPWP) faces an integrity crisis due to widespread abuse, which the Department of Public Works and Infrastructure (DPWI) admits is rife with non-transparent recruitment, inadequate verification, and administrative weaknesses.
These flaws facilitate manipulation, patronage, and theft, often by ward councillors controlling beneficiary lists. Sweeping reforms, prioritising robust digital systems over flawed human control, are immediately necessary, the department said.
DPWI Minister Dean Macpherson said eThekwini’s case reinforces why the ministry has embarked on wider EPWP reform.
“For too long, weaknesses in administration at implementing public bodies, opaque recruitment processes, and weak verification systems have left the programme vulnerable to manipulation. That must end,” Macpherson said on Tuesday.
“We are working to modernise the programme through stronger digital systems, better verification processes, and real-time oversight tools…