Continue to invest in training – your B-BEEE scorecard depends on it

27th September 2021

     

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The COVID-19 pandemic has had a devastating impact on most businesses of all sizes and in all sectors around the world. Fortunately, by now most companies have been able to return their operations and activities to some version of the new normal.

“Lockdown regulations forced companies to rapidly change, adapt and embrace technology in order to make the wheels of commerce turn. Corporates were faced with little choice about investing in new and increased IT capacity, upscaling their virtual platforms and rethinking their traditional approach to conducting business and engaging with their customers and staff. One area where too many companies are still lagging, however, is resuming their focus on training and skills development,” says Shamila Grever, Learning and Development Consultant for Afroteq Academy.

Grever stresses that investing in staff development and training is a mandatory spend for a company’s Broad Based Black Economic Empowerment (B-BBEE) scorecard and that failure to meet the targets set by Government, will undoubtedly affect a company’s status in 2022.

“Government is particularly focused on encouraging and funding ongoing skills development and training as part of its drive to keep South Africa competitive in the global market, improve workplace productivity and redress historical repression. For this reason, B-BEEE has a specific section that pertains to skills development which stipulates that companies should spend 6 % of their payroll on training in order to access the maximum number of points allocated under the Skills Development section on the B-BEEE scorecard,” she explains.

Adding her voice to the choir of concerned experts who have noticed a marked drop in corporate spend on training this past year, Grever reports that it has become commonplace to see training budgets being slashed, while staff members are being instructed to be more operationally focused make up for losses suffered during lockdown.

“This approach, whilst understandable, is both short sighted and self-defeating since it will have a detrimental impact on a company’s sustainability, staff morale and retention, efficiency and ultimately also its profitability. How companies navigate their training during this uncertain time, offers a direct reflection of their corporate culture of learning”, she says.

All companies with a payroll of R500 000.00 and above are obligated to pay a Skills Development Levy (SDL) to the South African Revenue Service (SARS). This is a legislated, compulsory payment of 1 % of the total payroll. However, companies can get 20 % of their Skills Development Levy back simply by completing an annual training report (which specifies which corporate training was done the past year) and a workplace skills plan (which sets out the training they are planning to do for the following year). Once approved by their relevant SETA, corporates get a large portion of their contributions back, paid into their account in four tranche payments. The balance of the money can be accessed through the submission of discretionary grant funding applications when the funding windows are advertised by SETA, for example, should  additional funding for training be needed,” Grever explains.

Although companies were given an SDL payment holiday of 4 months, the B-BBEE targets were not adjusted and companies are still expected to reach those targets. Companies still need to prove that they have invested in ongoing skills development and training this past year – regardless of whether their staff worked from home or returned to work as part of essential services.

“The FM industry has the potential of becoming one of the biggest employers in the country and therefore has a high demand for qualified, experienced and properly trained individuals. The pandemic has created new and exciting opportunities to increase technical and practical skills which are supported by an academic qualification. Companies cannot hide behind the pandemic as an excuse for not training or developing their workforce. Every measured entity should be doing everything in their power to maintain their B-BBEE rating. It is not yet too late to invest in training before they have to submit their annual review early next year,” Grever concludes.

GOOD TO KNOW:

All Afroteq’s programmes are offered online through an engaging, accessible and easy-to-use virtual platform that has transformed the learning experience. Training can take place in the comfort of people’s work-from-home office, in the corporate environment or at an off-site training venue.

In addition to its online offering, Afroteq Advisory continues to provide traditional, face-to-face facilitated training to individuals and corporate clients (strictly adhering to COVID hygiene protocols).

Options for group or customized online or classroom-based courses are also available.

Afroteq Academy is ISO9001:2015 and ISO45001:2018 certified and endorsed and accredited by the South African Facilities Management Association (SAFMA), The Services SETA and the Quality Council for Trades and Occupations (QCTO). The academy is also endorsed by  The South African Institution of Civil Engineering (SAICE), Project Management South Africa (PMSA) and the South African Institute of Occupational Safety and Health (SAIOSH).

 

Edited by Creamer Media Reporter

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