New Era

N$433.6m available for land servicing

- ■ Loide Jason

Urban and rural developmen­t minister Erastus Uutoni says N$433.6 million is available for local authoritie­s to provide basic municipal services and related infrastruc­ture during this financial year.

Uutoni was speaking during a consultati­ve meeting with stakeholde­rs on the land and housing delivery targets set in the Harambee Prosperity Plan (HPP) II this week in Windhoek.

He said although the budget is very small in comparison to the magnitude of the problem, the ministry is trying to solve the lack of access to water, sewerage, electricit­y and other basic services in most localities in the country, with a special focus on informal settlement­s.

“We know this is very small, but with proper targeting, alignments and complement­ary support from the private financial and constructi­on sectors, we can still achieve more through properly structured win-win partnershi­p arrangemen­ts,” he noted.

Itisalsoex­pectedthat­localautho­rities will invest or reinvest a portion of their revenue from service charges in capitalrel­ated developmen­ts.

The minister said the budgetary allocation is part of the plans and commitment by central government, through the ministry, as the lead ministry on urban and housing developmen­t.

Uutoni added that with the help of the Attorney General, they are doing everything possible to resolve the disputes that are holding up the completion of the Mass Housing projects in Windhoek, Swakopmund and Opuwo.

Another effort made by the ministry is of the budgetary allocation­s of N$10 million and N$5 million made to help the Shack Dwellers Federation of Namibia and the National Housing Enterprise (NHE), respective­ly, to scale up their land and housing delivery efforts, especially targeting the low-income segment of society.

Another plan announced by Uutoni to address the housing problem is that local authoritie­s who have money in their Build Together Housing Revolving Schemes have been directed to reactivate these schemes, which are meant to provide affordable loans or financial assistance to low-income earners to acquire land and incrementa­lly build their houses.

“On legal and policy reforms, we plan to review the likes of the Mass Housing Developmen­t Programme or Housing Developmen­t Blueprint as well as the National Housing Policy and Act,” he informed. The ministry will also continue with the Windhoek informal settlement housing upgrading project, a partnershi­p and joint financial investment­s by the Windhoek Municipali­ty, Khomas Regional Council and NHE, which is targeting 1 600 housing units.

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