Cape Argus

Shooting from the lip

- By Murray Williams

city began to see the benefits of transformi­ng small places into very public spaces for gathering… then both the people and their ward councillor­s might begin to see these as an essential service. They could – with the ‘light touch’ of reduced bureaucrac­y – be a very easy way for communitie­s to reclaim parts of the city in highly customised ways, suited to their particular needs.

“If local people are involved in change, they can guide it… If citizens create parklets for themselves, then the city’s role in service delivery is not providing the parklet itself, but an easy process that citizens can follow to get them built,” Williams argued.

And here’s the killer point: “Government’s ‘basic service’ is, then, the enabling process, not the product.”

Until recently, the term “public transport” referred only to buses, minibuses and trains.

Until Uber – “unlocking” a latent resource: the millions of private cars on the same roads, every day. From this, we learnt that mining latent resources is the new frontier, as this column has argued before.

So let’s remind ourselves of the task at hand: to survive the drought crisis (literally). To protect our most vulnerable, as our highest priority. To protect our economy. And education, if at all possible.

To achieve these, the first piece of paper on the table is a map of our resources – ours, everyone’s, manifest, latent.

Both dam water and privately stored rain and borehole water. Purificati­on systems for both public and private use. Both municipal infrastruc­ture and commerce’s vehicle fleets.

And who’s on the “A-Team”, to make all this possible, together? “The right people in the room”?

United leadership. United technical leadership. The government’s best. And the private sector’s – in management, logistics, retail, finance, digital communicat­ions, security, transport. And mobilised civil society leadership. One clear voice. To avoid, or survive, Day Zero.

Together, to unlock and enable every conceivabl­e resource on our shared map. From macro to micro.

More judo, less karate.

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