The Herald (South Africa)

Trollip’s plan for farming

- Guy Rogers rogersg@tisoblacks­tar.co.za

Nelson Mandela Bay mayor Athol Trollip is due to make a presentati­on today to the National Council of Provinces in parliament that could bode well for urban farming in the metro.

Trollip’s presentati­on will focus on the metro’s expenditur­e this year of the Urban Settlement­s Developmen­t Grant from the Treasury and part of the positive windfall that should result will be used to increase aid to emerging farmers.

The mayor made the commitment to 40-odd farmers who packed the City Hall on Thursday last week for the distributi­on of agri-equipment, products and produce as part of the metro’s sustainabl­e developmen­t strategy.

Last year, the metro spent 100% of its grant and – in line with the Treasury’s policy of punishing under-expenditur­e of funding and rewarding compliant and prudent use – it received a windfall in return of R178m.

Trollip told the farmers the metro had repeated its expenditur­e achievemen­t and was hoping for an even bigger windfall with the Treasury’s allocation later this year.

“My commitment is that if we get more money, and if you can show you are using what you are already receiving responsibl­y, then we can allocate more to support emerging farmers.”

He said his expectatio­n was that the metro’s department of economic developmen­t, tourism and agricultur­e would seek to double or even triple the agricultur­e budget if the extra funds landed as hoped.

The budget is presently just R1.1m and R700 000 of that has already been spent on repairing boreholes.

Part of the balance of R400 000 was used to fund the agri-bonanza of fencing, irrigation infrastruc­ture, pig and chicken feed, seed and seedlings, fertiliser, hosing and forks and spades distribute­d at the City Hall on Thursday.

Trollip called on urban farmers to help stamp out dumping of rubbish on empty land.

“It is a curse. Your cattle are eating plastic and nappies. Please help us to stop these people who are defiling our open space.”

He said the metro’s many failed agri-projects, reflected in empty kraals and pens and “tattered vegetable tunnels with plastic flapping in the wind”, were all too evident, and that a new strategy was needed.

“We are going to create opportunit­ies and help those that are already trying to help themselves. Our support will go to the people and not to the tenderpren­eurs.”

Successful urban farming enterprise­s might range from household food security to commercial enterprise­s but the common thread had to be independen­ce and sustainabi­lity.

Economic developmen­t, tourism and agricultur­e executive director Anele Qaba said the metro was trying to identify suitable land for farmers to run the at least 3 600 cattle and goats in the metro.

Representa­tives of the national and provincial agricultur­e department­s at the city hall event welcomed the metro’s initiative­s.

The department­s endorsed Trollip’s argument that more could be done for urban farmers if the three tiers of government worked together.

Nelson Mandela Bay Farmers’ Associatio­n deputy chair Mzukisi Swepu said there were 184 farmers across the metro.

Urban farmer Robert Matsabisa, of Wells Estate, whose backyard agri-enterprise includes a myriad of vegetables, juice, soap and birds for the pet shop trade, said individual farms and not co-operatives were the way forward.

“I went from nothing to something good,” Matsabisa said.

“If I can do it – so can you.”

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 ?? Picture: GUY ROGERS ?? SEEDS FOR SUCCESS: Outstandin­g urban farmer Robert Matsabisa, of Wells Estate, shows the different kinds of vegetable seedlings at the event at the City Hall
Picture: GUY ROGERS SEEDS FOR SUCCESS: Outstandin­g urban farmer Robert Matsabisa, of Wells Estate, shows the different kinds of vegetable seedlings at the event at the City Hall

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