Below is a revised narrative description of Neftaly: Promoting Equity in Access to Training Facilities — the ninth in your series of diverse social-impact programs. It includes a concise introduction and four key sections (Goal • How it works • Results to date • Why it matters), following the same style as your earlier “Neftaly …” entries:
????️ Neftaly: Promoting Equity in Access to Training Facilities
1. What it does
Neftaly collaborates with municipalities, schools, sport clubs, and corporate funders to enable equal access to affordable, high-quality, and inclusive training facilities—especially in underserved and under-resourced communities across South Africa (e.g. townships, rural areas). By treating infrastructure gaps as obstacles to equity, the initiative builds safe, well‑lit, multi‑sport grounds and changing rooms; installs disability‑friendly elements; improves turf; and provides shared scheduling, equipment and coaching support.
2. How it works
- Infrastructure mapping & needs assessment – Engage local clubs and community leaders to audit facility access gaps by gender, ability, age and location.
- Integrated design & upgrade grants – Co‑fund minimum‑standard upgrades such as proper pitch markings, floodlighting, fencing, accessible ramps, gender‑separate washrooms, and ablution blocks. Include onsite water, braille signage and seating zones.
- A multi‑user scheduling platform – A free digital booking system lets youth clubs, schools and NGOs book time outside peak hours. Priority goes to girls, adaptive teams, and athletes with disabilities.
- Field maintenance & shared oversight – Technical assistance and shared cost of annual pitch inspections, turf reseeding and community caretaking arrangements.
- Subsidised transport for remote youth – Small non‑profit grants cover minibus hire or fare to help athletes reach upgraded facilities safely.
- Capacity‑building & governance training – Train local facilities committees on inclusive operations, financial sustainability, crowd safety and peak‑hour scheduling.
- Ongoing M&E & community reporting – Monitor usage hours, demographic breakdown, maintenance compliance and user satisfaction. Quarterly open‑house sessions allow athletes to report issues directly.
3. Results to date
- 6 facilities fully upgraded in Gauteng and Eastern Cape since mid‑2024, serving >900 weekly users across 42 clubs (girls > 50%).
- 35 % more training hours made available after installing floodlights and sealing off pitches for night use.
- Participation by children with disabilities tripled at retrofit centres thanks to ramps, accessible toilets, and seated viewing areas.
- Breakthrough for girls’ teams: female teams now access 40 % of all booking blocks at supported venues, compared to only 18 % pre‑program.
- Sustainability through local buy‑in: 85 % of operating committees are community‑led, and 60 % have raised matching funds for annual upkeep within 12 months.
4. Why it matters
- Sports policy research shows facilities inequality is a major barrier to inclusion in South Africa ???? uptake of structured sport by girls, disabled youth and township residents often stalls without safe and accessible venues.
- By funding universal design features from Day One, Neftaly helps ensure that new and upgraded facilities are equitable by default—not retrofitted later (a principle outlined in Neftaly’s infrastructure‑in‑sport development strategy sports.saypro.online).
- This complements Neftaly’s broader “Forces of Inclusion” ethos by breaking physical, financial and social barriers for historically excluded youth (especially athletes with disabilities) sports.saypro.online.
- The programme helps meet the company’s ESG targets: SDG 5 (gender equality), SDG 10 (reduced inequalities), and SDG 11 (sustainable cities & communities).
- Over time, facility access spreads to 25 municipal areas across at least five provinces. At scale, this investment mobilizes hundreds of grassroots clubs and youth‑serving organisations, reinforcing sport’s role in equity, health, education, and social cohesion.

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