| Department of environmental planning and management |
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Legislative frameworkThe City's environmental planning and management department operates in accordance with several legal requirements. The starting point is stated clearly in Section 24 of the country's Constitution: "Everyone has the right to have the environment protected, for the benefit of present and future generations, through reasonable legislative and other measures that:
Based on this, the National Environmental Management Act of 1998 aims "to provide for co-operative, environmental governance by establishing principles for decision-making on matters affecting the environment, institutions that will promote co-operative governance and procedures for co-ordinating environmental functions exercised by organs of state; and to provide for matters connected therewith". The Municipal Systems Act, which governs how local government delivers basic services, stipulates that basic services should be delivered in a sustainable manner while promoting socially equitable development. The other guiding legislation is the Environmental Impact Assessment Regulations Act, which requires environmental impact studies to be undertaken for new developments. The Environment Conservation Act further regulates the management of waste. Sectoral legislation related to the National Environmental Management Act includes:
A number of by-laws also regulate environmental planning, management and conservation, namely open space by-laws; health by-laws; and waste management by-laws. Operational legislation that binds the environmental portfolio includes the Municipal Finance Management Act and the Occupational Health and Safety Act. In performing its duties according to these laws and principles, the department undertakes a number of functions, including issuing waste licences and air permits and publishing the State of the Environment reports.
Waste licences
All commercial waste operators working in Johannesburg must be licensed in accordance with the waste management by-laws, propagated in 2004. There are about 2 000 such operators across the city. In terms of the by-laws, garden waste operators do not need to be licensed. Operators who should be licensed include waste transporters, waste recyclers, waste collectors and disposal sites. Their activities include transporting, and storing, accumulating, collecting, managing, treating, sorting, disposing of, buying, selling and recycling, or any other manner of handling waste.
Air permits
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