Cape Argus

City, Province slammed for ‘weak’ housing programme

- SISONKE MLAMLA sisonke.mlamla@inl.co.za

THE City and the Province have been slammed for their “weak” housing programme and how the number of built housing units has collapsed over the years.

Housing activists, politician­s and pressure groups say there has been increasing pressure for housing, but the City leadership has paralysed delivery and other services through internal DA politics and not because housing profession­als were unable to deliver.

Stop CoCT founder Sandra Dickson said with every election promises were made by DA candidates. In 2017 the City under Patricia de Lille identified well-located land in the inner-city for low-cost housing.

After De Lille left, those projects were stopped, Dickson said.

“The truth in this matter is that the City has an ineffectiv­ely maintained housing list of over 300 000 people. This list grows annually instead of decreasing,” said Dickson.

SACP provincial secretary Benson Ngqentsu said the City has had no housing developmen­t which addressed apartheid spatial planning.

“What the City does have is an on-paper pipeline of possible future housing developmen­ts. That is either at feasibilit­y study level or not at all,” said Ngqentsu.

Human Settlement­s MEC Tertius Simmers said the view held was quite unfortunat­e. “We’re wholly focused on improving the lives of our residents and unlike others do not allow politics to hamper and or influence this process.”

Good Party secretary-general Brett Herron said in 2017 he announced a new approach to address the housing challenge comprehens­ively.

Herron said at the time, they introduced a 10-point turnaround plan to both the Provincial Department of Human Settlement­s and the National Department of Human Settlement­s.

“In the 2015/16 financial year the City delivered 4 293 new housing opportunit­ies. I was appointed to lead Housing on January 1, 2017 and we managed to complete the 2016/7 financial year with improved delivery of 6 028 new housing opportunit­ies.”

He said after he resigned, delivery dropped to 5 692 housing opportunit­ies in the 2018/19 financial year.

“In 2020/21 we had planned to deliver 11 000 housing opportunit­ies (11 088) but the City revised the target down and managed to deliver 4 950 of which only 2 587 were actual houses.”

Human settlement­s Mayco member Malusi Booi said close to R6.9 billion would go to Human Settlement­s projects over the next three years, including R2.5bn for formal housing on well-located land, and R4.4bn for informal housing upgrades, backyarder­s, and new accommodat­ion types.

Booi said over 13 300 housing opportunit­ies were under constructi­on, with a further 8 000 in the tender phase, and 37 500 opportunit­ies in the planning stage as at June 2021.

 ?? | AYANDA NDAMANE African News Agency (ANA) ?? AN INCOMPLETE housing project in Nyanga.
| AYANDA NDAMANE African News Agency (ANA) AN INCOMPLETE housing project in Nyanga.

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