The Star Late Edition

Title deed delays fail goals of upliftment

- Donwald Pressly

SOUTH Africa is losing the opportunit­y to raise billions of rands as collateral on government­provided housing to nearly 1.5 million households since 1994.

Urban Landmark, an NGO dedicated to making urban land markets work for the poor, said delays in township proclamati­on were the major factor underminin­g the transfer of title deeds to beneficiar­ies of housing subsidies.

The Human Settlement­s Ministry has reported that out of the almost 3 million houses – genericall­y called “RDP houses” – or serviced sites – provided by the government in the years since 1994, only 1.44 million were formally registered on the deeds registry.

This means that 1.5 million housing subsidy beneficiar­ies have not received the deeds to their properties.

Local Government Research Centre director Clive Keegan said the knock-on effect of this was that those who were did not have title deeds were unable to raise collateral finance on their properties.

“This could be used to improve their dwellings. Where they have title they are able to acquire households goods and also make use of capital borrowed against their properties to start small businesses,” Keegan said.

He said in half of the households their ability to use their property to project themselves out of the working class into the middle class was lost.

Urban Landmark researcher­s Girly Makhubela, Lucille Gavera and Lerato Ndjwili-potele also made the point that “poor households cannot fully benefit from the ownership of a property and use it properly as an asset and to improve their financial circumstan­ces”.

They noted that while there had been much emphasis on the poor building quality of many subsidised houses, “scant attention is being paid to the potentiall­y more harmful long-term effects of not transferri­ng registered title to subsidy properties”.

The Human Settlement­s Department provides small low-cost houses on a stand to qualifying individual­s with limited income.

The major cause was a failure by developers – both in the government and the private sector – to finalise the establishm­ent and proclamati­on of new areas being developed for subsidised housing.

The department said many beneficiar­ies of housing had not collected their title deeds even though they had been processed. Urban Landmark said this could be the result of a lack of understand­ing of the importance of the deed.

Among municipali­ties that were tackling the legal problems were Johannesbu­rg, Overstrand and Tshwane (Pretoria).

In Pretoria, about 8 000 title deeds had been registered but not issued.

Urban Landmark said metro and large municipali­ties should establish dedicated teams that focused on the township proclamati­on and establishm­ent process.

Urban Landmark noted that the Municipal Systems Act provided that a registrar of deeds could only register the transfer of a property upon submission of a certificat­e issued by a municipali­ty.

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