Background on the ETDP SETA and Its Critical Role in South African Skills Development
The Education, Training and Development Practices Sector Education and Training Authority (ETDP SETA) plays a pivotal role in South Africa's post-school education landscape. Established under the Skills Development Act of 1998, this entity is one of 21 Sector Education and Training Authorities (SETAs) designed to bridge skills gaps in specific economic sectors. For the ETDP sector, which encompasses education practitioners, trainers, assessors, and moderators, the focus is on enhancing the quality of teaching and learning across technical and vocational education and training (TVET) colleges, community education and training institutions, and even university programs related to educator development.
Funded primarily through a 1% skills development levy paid by employers, the ETDP SETA disburses grants for learnerships, internships, and bursaries. In the 2024/25 financial year alone, it managed over R1 billion in allocations, supporting thousands of learners in programs that directly feed into higher education institutions. For instance, learnerships for TVET lecturers and workplace assessors ensure a steady supply of qualified staff for South Africa's 50 public TVET colleges, while bursaries often extend to undergraduate and postgraduate studies in education at universities like the University of Johannesburg or Stellenbosch University. When governance falters, as alleged in recent probes, the ripple effects disrupt not just individual careers but the broader higher education ecosystem reliant on these funds for practical training components.
ETDP SETA's mandate aligns closely with national priorities outlined in the National Development Plan (NDP) 2030, emphasizing quality education and skills for economic growth. It accredits training providers, develops occupational qualifications, and facilitates recognition of prior learning (RPL), making it indispensable for institutions aiming to produce industry-ready graduates in teaching and training fields.
The Spark: R15 Million Office Lease Controversy
The current governance probe traces back to early March 2026, when media reports exposed a contentious R15 million lease agreement for new head office premises at 45 Mooi Street in Johannesburg's CBD. Signed in July 2024 after the expiry of the previous lease at Gandhi Square, the deal promised modern facilities for 80-90 staff members at R690,000 per month, including parking and utilities. However, the building proved uninhabitable due to an invalid occupancy certificate dating back to 1990, hazardous conditions, and non-compliance with safety standards.
Staff were instructed to work remotely, leaving the premises largely vacant while payments continued—totaling R8.97 million by July 2025. An internal investigation into procurement irregularities was allegedly halted by acting CEO Nokukhanya Mafahla, prompting suspensions of two senior officials, including the CFO, for obstructing the probe. On March 8, 2026, Minister Buti Manamela demanded an urgent departmental report on the procurement process, financial exposure, health and safety risks, and ongoing probes, underscoring that "employee safety and responsible use of public resources are paramount."
This incident highlighted deeper procurement flaws: a compressed six-month bidding process after years of delay, reliance on bidder-submitted documents without independent verification, and the appointment of a previously suspended merSETA official to the Bid Adjudication Committee. The lease was eventually canceled in November 2025, but not before exposing systemic lapses in oversight.
Auditor-General's Bombshell: R637 Million in Unverified Grants
Compounding the lease fiasco, the Auditor-General of South Africa (AGSA) flagged a staggering R637 million in discretionary grant expenditure for 2024/25 as unsupported by adequate documentation. Discretionary grants fund targeted interventions like learnership stipends for TVET students training as educators or university bursaries for postgraduate diplomas in assessment practices. The AGSA could not verify a sample of R116 million across 179 transactions, citing material limitations that hinted at potential fraud.
ETDP SETA leadership attributed the issue to a "human error"—a R42 million accrual mistakenly recorded due to incorrect coding in their financial system during batch processing of stipends. No funds exited bank accounts improperly, and reversals were made post-audit. Additional misstatements included R10.38 million overstated administration costs and R55.4 million in unverified write-offs for expired contracts. The Portfolio Committee on Higher Education, during an April 23, 2026, grilling, dismissed these as excuses, with MPs decrying collapsed internal controls and absent oversight from the Accounting Authority.
Parliamentary records reveal the Finance Manager admitting under oath to record-keeping failures, while the board chairperson insisted no money was missing. Critics, however, pointed to 13 breaches of the Public Finance Management Act (PFMA), demanding forensic audits.
Minister Manamela's Escalating Interventions
Responding decisively, Minister Manamela invoked Section 14A of the Skills Development Act following NSA advice. An April 7, 2026, engagement yielded unsatisfactory assurances on governance, procurement, and finances. In a pointed April 23 letter to chairperson Dr. Olwethu Sipuka, he lambasted the inadequate response to prior directives, ordering a revised submission by May 4, 2026, detailing actions, timelines, and progress metrics.
"The accounting authority was expected to submit a clear, comprehensive, and conclusive account... but this expectation was not met," Manamela wrote, warning of statutory interventions like administration if unmet. This builds on earlier ultimatums, including 48-hour demands amid the lease scandal, positioning the minister as a bulwark against SETA decay. His actions echo interventions in other SETAs like Services SETA, signaling a broader cleanup in skills funding bodies vital to higher education.
Parliamentary Fury and Opposition Demands
The Portfolio Committee expressed "serious concern" over record-keeping gaps, with DA MP Karabo Khakhau demanding the financial division's disbandment: "The writing is on the wall. Minister Manamela must disband the entire financial division." EFF MP Sihle Lonzi labeled it potential criminality, questioning how a R42 million error evaded detection.
The DA laid criminal charges over the R637 million, while unions like SADTU demanded halts to corruption and worker protections. COSATU voiced appalled reactions to malfeasance, urging alignment with SETA objectives. These reactions underscore parliamentary resolve to restore accountability in entities channeling levy funds to TVET and university training pipelines.
Ongoing Probes: Public Protector, Hawks, and Suspensions
Investigations proliferate: The Public Protector probes the lease, Hawks eye corruption, and internal forensics target grant irregularities and CFO suspension (challenged in court). Two bosses were suspended for obstructing the R15m lease probe, amid litigation. A multi-year audit improvement plan promises centralized repositories and bi-weekly oversight, but skepticism persists given past unimplemented reports like the costly Duja investigation.
These probes could yield charges within 60 days of forensic completion, potentially reshaping leadership and procurement at ETDP SETA.
Stakeholder Perspectives and Broader SETA Challenges
Unions decry wasteful expenditure harming workers, while OUTA calls for chairperson replacements. The scandals mirror systemic SETA woes—governance lapses, cadre deployment, and revolving doors—eroding trust in a R20 billion annual levy system. Minister Manamela's reforms, including SLAs and quarterly engagements, aim to fortify oversight, but critics argue for structural overhauls like merging SETAs or shifting to QCTO.
- Governance: Collapsed controls, unverified bids.
- Financial: Misstatements, unsupported grants.
- Operational: Delayed procurements, safety oversights.
Impacts on Higher Education and TVET Colleges
Mismanagement delays stipends for 1,000+ learners annually, straining TVET colleges like Ekurhuleni West TVET where ETDP funds assessor training. Universities lose bursary reliability for BEd honors or training diplomas, exacerbating educator shortages (NDP targets 450,000 additional teachers by 2030). Skills mismatches worsen, with 30% youth unemployment tied to inadequate vocational training. Recovery hinges on forensic resolutions and grant transparency to resume funding flows.
Department of Higher Education site tracks SETA performance, revealing ETDP's pivotal yet precarious position.
Path Forward: Reforms and Lessons Learned
Minister Manamela's May 4 deadline looms, potentially triggering administration like Services SETA. Proposed fixes include AI-driven financial systems, independent verifications, and a SETA officials' database. For higher ed, this underscores needs for diversified funding and robust partnerships. Success could model accountability, bolstering skills for SA's education sector amid 4IR transitions.
Stakeholders urge swift action: transparent audits, consequence management, and legislative tweaks to preempt crises. As probes unfold, ETDP SETA's turnaround will test commitments to equitable, quality training integral to universities and TVETs.
