Weekend Argus (Saturday Edition)

City land auction goes ahead despite protest

- VELANI LUDIDI velani.ludidi@inl.co.za

THE City of Cape Town made over R21 million on the sale of vacant land and properties it auctioned off on Thursday.

Despite uproar and picketing by housing and land groups, the auction went ahead as planned.

The auction included a City-owned property that was sold for R10 million. The property is in Newlands, close to SA Junior College School.

The City could not confirm the money made from the auction, but the Weekend Argus viewed the virtual auction.

A total of R21 410 000 was made from the sale of the properties.

Land and housing groups have been objecting to the sale of City-owned vacant land and asked the municipali­ty to consider affordable housing, rather than auctioning.

The municipali­ty is facing a housing backlog that dates back to the 1990s.

There were about 347 000 registered applicants on the City’s Housing Needs Register.

The groups tried to prevent the auction from going ahead.

The City did remove three properties from the auction.

The City said the Housing Developmen­t Agency had expressed formal interest in three of the sites, resulting in its withdrawal from the auction.

They are the Eastridge, Mitchells Plain site and two small adjacent sites on College Road, Claremont.

Head of research and advocacy at Ndifuna Ukwazi, Michael Clark, said the money raised as a result of the public land auction offered the City an opportunit­y to put their money where its mouth was and fund genuinely pro-poor projects.

These had been allegedly deprioriti­sed in the past, largely on the basis that funds weren’t available.

“This could include using the funds to prepare and assemble land that can be used to build well-located social and affordable housing, investing in transition­al housing and alternativ­e accommodat­ion to support unhoused people and households facing evictions,” Clark said.

He added that while the shortage of affordable housing was an urgent need, the need for basic services was also a pressing need.

Reclaim the City leader Karen Hendricks said the public had been kept in the dark about the auctions.

“There are no public participat­ion processes for communitie­s to engage with the City around access to these pieces of land, whether it be for housing or cultural or recreation­al purposes. Instead, these properties were being sold to private developers.”

Mayco member for Human Settlement­s Malusi Booi told media: “The City’s social housing projects, which will benefit thousands of beneficiar­ies, are under way across various well-located areas of the metro, such as Fruit and Veg in Zonnebloem, Pine Road and Dillon Road in Woodstock, and Salt River Market.”

Alderman James Vos, the Mayco

Member for Economic Growth, denied that the public was not included in the process.

“This is a baseless accusation. Prior to putting a property to the market, the intention is advertised for public comment, which includes obtaining comments from the national and Western Cape government, sub-councils, ward councillor­s, and the general public.

“The monies received from disposals are used towards funding the service delivery costs of the city as a whole.”

He said he could not confirm how much they would receive as the informatio­n wasn’t available yet.

 ?? AYANDA NDAMANE African News Agency (ANA) ?? MEMBERS of advocacy groups Reclaim the City, Singabalap­ha and Housing Assembly protest outside the City’s auction at the Cape Town Stadium. |
AYANDA NDAMANE African News Agency (ANA) MEMBERS of advocacy groups Reclaim the City, Singabalap­ha and Housing Assembly protest outside the City’s auction at the Cape Town Stadium. |

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