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The Growth and Development Summit was a success, and proved that "the City was on the right track".
JOHANNESBURG'S long-term vision is a lot closer to being approved by
the City council, after garnering much public support at the City's
first ever Growth and Development Summit.
Held at the Nasrec expo centre on Friday, 12 May, the summit -
the first of its kind in the country - was attended by City officials
and administrators, representatives of business, labour and community
organisations, as well as individual residents with a keen interest in
Joburg's future direction.
Opening the function, the city manager, Mavela Dlamini,
expressed pleasure at the high attendance. More than 1 600 people were
seated in Hall 10 by the start of proceedings, with many more gathered
outside.
"The City sees it [the summit] as something necessary for its development," he said.
Executive Mayor Amos Masondo remarked that it was fitting for
the summit to coincide with the 10th anniversary celebrations of the
adoption of the South African Constitution earlier in the week.
"Today's summit is an endeavour to address the Constitutional
obligation of local government to provide democratic and accountable
government to local communities, ensure delivery of services in a
sustainable manner, address social and economic development, ensure the
participation of communities in matters of local government as well as
to promote a safe and healthy environment," Masondo said.
Prior to the local government elections in March, President
Thabo Mbeki announced that similar summits should be held in all
metropolitan and district municipalities throughout the country, within
one year of the elections.
"As a city on the move, Johannesburg needs a long-term strategy
to enable us to define the complex trends and dynamics that are shaping
the City's future and to enable us to negotiate the challenges and
position ourselves to grasp the emerging opportunities," Masondo
explained.
During the first five years of Masondo's term of office, the
City formulated a number of citywide programmes - outlined in the
Joburg 2030 strategy. Related plans and policies included the City
Safety Strategy, the Inner City Development Strategy, the Human
Development Strategy, the Informal Trading Development Programme and
the Spatial Development Framework.
The Growth and Development Strategy (GDS) encompasses ideas
expressed in all of these documents, but also takes into account the
province's GDS, the National Spatial Development Perspective, the
Accelerated and Shared Growth Initiative for South Africa (Asgisa) and
the strategies of surrounding municipalities, particularly Tshwane and
Ekurhuleni.
To ensure the process is as participatory as possible, the GDS
was discussed at ward level and at sectoral workshops convened by
mayoral committee members with community and non-governmental
organisations, organised labour and representatives of business.
Various challenges were identified. Despite steady progress,
the City still has to grapple with issues of poverty, eradicating
social inequality, ensuring quality service delivery and the need for
early childhood development programmes.
There is also much work still to dismantle the segregated
settlements created by apartheid-era planners and to transform
dormitory townships into viable areas in which to live and work.
Other challenges include infrastructure backlogs, creating
employment opportunities, reducing the high cost of doing business,
reducing transportation costs and combating crime and grime.
The Development Paradigm and proposals
"Democracy
is not just about the right to vote," Masondo said. "It is having
accountable elected representatives who listen to the voice of the
people and having administrative structures to support them in their
jobs."
Describing the City as a developmental form of local government, he
said it should be prepared to intervene to deal with neglected issues,
promote active participation of local communities, have a balanced
approach between economic, social and environmental development and
strive to redress the legacies of apartheid.
The mayor then referred to six principles that constitute the
City's Development Paradigm, which underpins its Growth and Development
Strategy:
- The City must find solutions to enable the pro-active absorption of
the poor, both from inside South Africa and beyond, as it has become a
magnet for the poor seeking a better life;
- It must ensure balanced and shared growth and break down the divide between the "first" and "second" economies;
- It must facilitate social mobility and equality and meet its obligations to serve the poor better;
- Since the City has been transformed in institutional terms over the
past 10 years, it is now time to accelerate its transformation in
spatial terms;
- It must ensure it becomes a more sustainable city by anticipating and managing the effects of environmental change; and
- The City recognises that it cannot deal with the challenges it
faces alone and it needs to find new ways of working across the
traditional public-private divide and across boundaries that separate
it from its neighbours.
Discussions informing the GDS were held for nine sectors: economic
development; community development; housing; infrastructure and
services; environment; development planning and urban management;
transport; and health and safety. Each of these sectors has a member of
the mayoral committee and City department dedicated to dealing with the
concerns and challenges it faces.
As such, Masondo said the GDS proposed the following for the City,
as it moved forward in its quest to become a world-class African city:
- Economic development: the City envisages an economy that plays a
role as the key economic hub on the continent and a national economic
growth leader;
- Housing: a city with sustainable human settlements where residents
have access to a wide range of accommodation options that are
affordable, of good quality and located close to economic opportunities;
- Infrastructure and basic services: are key elements of the city
strategy, and for many people constitute the essence of what they
expect from a local authority. It is usually the most obvious way to
measure the success or failure of a city government;
- Community development: a vision where community development,
personal growth and social mobility are enhanced so challenges of
poverty, vulnerability, inequality and social exclusion are dealt with;
- Environment: service delivery cannot be separated from
environmental sustainability. This will be an important focus area for
the City as it works towards lessening the effect of urban processes
and the built environment;
- Development planning and urban management: the City has a vision of
a spatial urban form that embraces the principles of sustainability and
inclusivity and should progressively increase opportunities and quality
of life for all communities and residents;
- Health: a City with an efficient, accessible and equitable health
system with sufficient capacity to meet its changing healthcare
challenges; and
- Transport: a city with a safe and efficient transport system and
infrastructure that is able to connect businesses, people and places in
a sustainable and cost-effective manner. This will not only improve the
quality of life of residents but also stimulate growth of the local
economy.
"We have set ourselves very comprehensive and ambitious targets. But we
did so with the confidence that we have at our disposal a very
dedicated team of elected representatives and officials that can really
move Johannesburg over the next two or three decades," Masondo said.
Before starting the breakaway sessions, he lit a candle in memory
of all those who had died of Aids-related causes. The candle was a gift
from the mayor of the West Rand District Municipality.
Breakaway sessions were held at various halls around the expo
centre according to specific sectors, with organisations and residents
given more than two hours to voice their views on the strategy.
Reporting on community feedback
Following the
sectoral sessions and a break for lunch, members of the mayoral
committee pointed out some of the concerns and comments of residents
regarding the Growth and Development Strategy.
Ruby Mathang, the mayoral committee member for development planning and
urban management, said issues raised included further debate on the
City's urban boundary, strengthening the Southern Corridor (Soweto),
intervening in areas of decline, continuing work in the inner city and
better enforcement.
"There were also concerns about better preservation of open spaces and heritage sites," he said.
With the City expected to experience further growth, residents
were especially concerned about issues of public lighting, universal
prepaid metering, stormwater management and disposal of solid waste,
said the member for infrastructure and services, Ros Greeff.
Rehana Moosajee, the member for transport, said a major concern
was that rapid economic development in Soweto was leading to increased
congestion on the township's roads. There was also a need to develop
multi-modal transport, give more attention to the needs of pedestrians
and provide transport for the disabled.
Turning to housing, mayoral committee member Strike Ralegoma
said prevalent views were for the People's Housing Process to be
boosted, for Reconstruction and Development Programme houses be better
designed, for more information to be available on housing at People's
Centres and for secure housing to be provided for child-headed
households.
There were also calls for an Independent Complaints Office to be created to deal with issues concerning council-owned flats.
"In general there has been great enthusiasm from community-based
and non-governmental organisations to assist us in our mandate, and we
appreciate that," said Prema Naidoo, the member for environmental
planning and management.
Residents raised concerns about the need for more effective
community education, management, monitoring and enforcement, and
suggested a "name and shame" approach to serious polluters.
Thomas Phakati, the mayoral committee member for safety, said
four prominent concerns were raised by residents at his breakaway
session, namely, creating a safe and secure urban environment, having a
city free of crime and violence, regulating road traffic and promoting
road safety, and creating a proactive and effective emergency response
and disaster management capacity.
"The issue of immigrants was also raised, and we have to find
ways to better deal with the situation. There is no way in which we can
simply wish them away," he said.
Phakati urged community members to be vigilant and to report the abuse or improper personal use of official vehicles.
The City also had to do more in the area of community
development, especially in creating support programmes to assist the
elderly, commissioning more research into child-headed households and
looking into the scourge of drugs.
"Most importantly, we need to ensure communities have a sense
of ownership of the projects and programmes taking place around them,"
said the member responsible for community development, Nandi
Mayathula-Khoza.
Residents at the breakaway session called on the City to work
with the province to deal with issues of long delays in getting access
to social grants and food parcels, while also assisting the youth with
further education and training.
"As it is International Nurses' Day, let me first recognise and
appreciate the good work being done by our health workers," said the
member for health, Matshidiso Mfikoe.
She said common concerns included queues at City clinics, the
need for better access to healthcare facilities, access to HIV/Aids
treatment, and the need to deal better with mental health problems and
drug abuse.
Johannesburg Executive Mayor Amos Masondo lights a candle in memory of all those who died of Aids-related causes
(Photo: Enoch Lehung, City of Johannesburg)
"We especially see the need for youth-friendly services
dealing with issues of reproductive health, while also looking into how
health students can undergo training at the City's health facilities,"
Mfikoe said.
The final mayoral committee member to report back on his breakaway
session was Parks Tau, who is responsible for finance and economic
development. He said there was general agreement on the sectoral plan,
but that there was a need for clearer deliverables with which they
could go back to the community.
"Issues raised included the need for economic diversification
to ensure global competitiveness in niche areas, the need to support
small businesses starting out in previously disadvantaged communities
and to ensure that huge shopping centres being developed in Soweto do
not displace existing spaza and tuck shops," he said.
The way forward
Masondo said he way truly
humbled by the support for the Growth and Development Summit and hoped
all who attended would be inspired to work hard to turn those plans
into reality.
"Learning is a two-way process and we have learned a lot from you.
We are more sensitised to the concerns of the residents than before the
summit, but the general message is that we are on the right track," he
said.
Masondo said this would not be the last meeting to be held on
the Growth and Development Strategy, although there would be no further
summits or conferences of similar magnitude during the current term of
office.
Further discussion of the strategy would take the form of
"roving mayoral committee member meetings", where members would
continue to discuss issues raised according to sector.
Closing the summit, Dlamini thanked the mayor and his team for
ensuring Joburg was the first to hold a growth and development summit,
shortly after local government elections.
"The GDS is not about the municipality, but [about] every
person whose life is touched by the City of Johannesburg. The product
we forward to council has to be a representation of the views of the
residents of Joburg.
"We want to deliver a service that enhances the value of life of the residents of Johannesburg," Dlamini concluded.
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