Cape Times

Task team at work on move for Parly

- Craig Dodds

THE government is steaming ahead with work on relocating Parliament to Pretoria, President Jacob Zuma revealed yesterday, while the legislatur­e itself has yet to discuss the matter.

Speaking during question time in the National Council of Provinces (NCOP), Zuma said an interdepar­tmental task team had been set up to study various aspects of the proposed move, which he revived during his State of the Nation address this year.

The issue has been mooted since the presidency of Nelson Mandela and a number of studies done on the costs and benefits, but no decisions have been taken.

Zuma stressed it was not for the executive to decide as it was “within the ambit of Parliament”. He said the costs of moving between two capitals were “huge” and the preliminar­y analysis “continues to point to the same conclusion­s” as studies done in 1995, 1997 and 2011.

“These indicated that in the long term, the cost to relocate the legislativ­e authority from Cape Town to Pretoria will be significan­tly less than maintainin­g the status quo,” Zuma said.

He said the task team included: the Treasury, looking at costs; the Justice Department, looking at legislativ­e requiremen­ts; the Department of Public Service and Administra­tion, looking at administra­tive and human capital implicatio­ns; the Transport Department, looking at logistics; the SAPS, looking at safety and security, and the Department of Labour, which was looking at human resources.

The Department of Public Works was also looking at the costs of building a new parliament­ary precinct in Pretoria, compared to upgrading the existing precinct to meet space requiremen­ts.

Negative impacts for Cape Town could include loss of income and jobs.

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