Cape Argus

Outcry over City’s delay of developmen­ts

- MWANGI GITHAHU mwangi.githahu@inl.co.za

DEVELOPERS and businesses are outraged by the City’s announceme­nt that developmen­ts in the Helderberg, Milnerton and Blouberg districts will be delayed while it performs upgrades on the water and sanitation services to these areas.

Last week, the City informed residents and developers that clearance for some new developmen­ts to connect to the sewerage system would be aligned to the completion of major capacity upgrades at the Potsdam, Zandvliet, and Macassar waste water treatment works.

Mayco member for spatial planning and environmen­t Marian Nieuwoudt said this would ensure sustainabl­e developmen­t and it was necessary that these plants operated within existing capacity while the major upgrades were under way.

“Given that preparatio­ns for most of the large developmen­ts take years, we strongly recommend that developers still go ahead and submit their applicatio­ns to the City.

“Once they have the necessary approvals, it means there will be no delays, and constructi­on plans can be aligned for connection to the sewerage system as soon as the new capacity at the specific water treatment plant becomes available,” Nieuwoudt said.

Western Cape Property Developmen­t Forum chairperso­n Deon van Zyl said the City’s delays would lead to pre-sales already obtained falling away, and timing-out clauses on contracts that had been signed with prospectiv­e buyers.

“As a result, many more companies in our sector will now go bankrupt – developers, contractor­s and subcontrac­tors, plus the loss of constructi­on jobs which were dependent on these developmen­ts will be in the thousands, affecting, in particular, the poorest among our Cape Town communitie­s.

“Perhaps most damaging of all will be the loss of investment confidence as investors turn their attention away from what was once seen to be a thriving municipali­ty to take their money elsewhere,” Van Zyl said.

Cape Chamber of Commerce and Industry president Jacques Moolman said the City had been caught napping.

He said that instead of announcing a much-needed speeding up of the regulatory process that governed the building industry, the City promised even more delays.

“Did no one in the council up until now figure out that the sewerage system would soon not be able to keep up with developmen­ts?

Do those in the various department­s in the Byzantine recesses of the City bureaucrac­y speak to each other? It would appear not.

“Highly paid officials in water and waste appear never to have spoken to their colleagues in the spatial planning and environmen­t department.

Did the penny only drop when the sewage started to flow into rivers?

“This sorry situation raises the suspicion once again that serving the ratepayers and the private sector that pays its rates has been forgotten by many of the council servants, rhetoric aside, of course,” Moolman said.

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