Tafelberg decision: the moment of truth for Zille and her Cabinet

On Wednesday, the Western Cape government must decide if it will “continue with a legacy of apartheid spatial planning” or not

| By and
Graphic of housing
Urban designer Azraa Rawoot’s impression of the proposed mixed-use and social housing development on the Tafelberg site. This impression was included in Ndifuna Ukwazi’s submission to Cabinet.

On Wednesday 22 March the Western Cape Provincial Cabinet will meet to decide the fate of the Tafelberg site – a prime piece of publicly owned property in Sea Point. Either it can be sold for private development which benefits only privileged people, or it can be turned into a mixed-use one, that includes decent affordable housing for people who work in Sea Point, but cannot currently afford to live there.

In late 2015, Tafelberg was sold to the Phyllis Jowell Jewish Day School (PJJDS). We took the provincial government to court because we were advised this was an unlawful sale. In response the provincial government agreed to further public consultation on the sale.

Cabinet can decide to stop the sale in the interest of spatial justice, and undertake a project that will benefit hundred of families. It would also give hope to thousands more across Cape Town who have suffered forced removals, violent evictions, and displacement to relocation camps like Blikkiesdorp and Wolwerivier.

However, in decisions around public land, Cabinet may be pressured to yield to private investors, who are mostly white men. Given our history, can we accept that it is the most privileged who continue to access, own and occupy public land. Upholding the sale of Tafelberg would yet again fail to redress the racial segregation of Cape Town, which has continued from the colonial era through apartheid until today

Just as Minister for Social Development Bathabile Dlamini has attempted to extend an unlawful, corrupt contract in the SASSA case, so Premier Helen Zille may attempt to push through an unlawful sale of public land.

We can anticipate the arguments some within government may make to defend the indefensible. The possibility of being sued by the PJJDS may be raised. But this is not a sufficient justification for going ahead with an unlawful sale. The Constitutional Court has previously dismissed claims for damages brought by successful bidders where the tender process was flawed and the tender set aside.

Another argument may be that Tafelberg falls outside the City of Cape Town’s Restructuring Zone (RZ). The purpose of RZs is to direct social housing grants into well-located areas, which are close to economic activity and transport routes. This is premised on the need for greater racial and economic integration. One of the RZ’s in the City of Cape Town is the “CBD and Surrounds”. Although Salt River, Woodstock and Observatory are explicitly mentioned under this RZ, it is open to interpretation what other suburbs are included in the “surrounds”.

Some may argue (absurdly) that Sea Point is not part of the CBD and Surrounds. This is not a barrier. Mayor De Lille and Minister Madikizela have the power to simply declare it an RZ, a relatively menial administrative task, to benefit the thousands of poor and working-class who need affordable housing in Sea Point.

To appease the campaign to stop the sale of Tafelberg, Cabinet may be encouraged to suggest that an alternative site be used for social housing. This would be unacceptable. The use of an alternative site would not address the unlawfulness of the sale or make up for the conflicts of interest that have clouded it.

This should not be about Tafelberg or another site. This should be about Tafelberg and other sites. Tafelberg can be a blueprint for affordable housing on well-located public land.

In its deliberations on Wednesday, Cabinet must make a decision according to relevant policy and law, including meaningful consideration of public submissions. The public submissions include models that challenge the conservative proposal published by the Department of Transport and Public Works, demonstrating that more affordable and sustainable housing is possible. Cabinet cannot simply ignore the evidence before it or ignore the legal and moral obligations to the people of the Western Cape and the City of Cape Town in particular.

The way Cabinet deals with Tafelberg is a real test for how it will deal with affordable housing in well located public land. Cabinet has an opportunity to show visionary political leadership.

By selling Tafelberg, our government will continue with a legacy of apartheid spatial planning, and a track record of buckling under private investors who have designs on our prime public land.

With a decision to the contrary – a decision for upholding its obligation to build affordable housing in the inner city – Cabinet establishes a precedent for integration in our city and areas formerly reserved for whites only.

We trust that our Cabinet members’ conscience and their sense of duty to the people, especially black and coloured working class people of the Western Cape, will guide Wednesday’s decision.

CORRECTIONS: This article was updated after publication at the request of the authors. 
The word “wealthy” in the first paragraph was replaced with “privileged”.
In the fourth paragraph, the words “in decisions around public land” were inserted after “However”. The words “who stand to benefit from Tafelberg and other parcels of public land into the future” were removed. The sentence starting “Given our history” was inserted.   

Hopolang Selebalo is the head of research at Ndifuna Ukwazi

Emile Engel is the head of organising at Ndifuna Ukwazi

Views expressed are not necessarily those of GroundUp​.

TOPICS:  Housing

Next:  Reblocking at Imizamo Yethu suspended

Previous:  SASSA warns workers not to strike

Write a letter in response to this article

Letters

Dear Editor

The sale of the Tafelberg site for R135 million is the estimated annual market land rent of ±R9m at a fifteen year multiple. Ignoring inflation and rental reviews this means that the Province could instead have expected R900 million if they leased the land out for a century. And then still enjoy the revenues for the next billion years of the earth's estimated life-span.

The contrary argument is that R135 million is the discounted price due to the delay in rental receipts. But this does not hold up because any such discounts will be matched by increases in land rents and prices over time. For instance, the average price of vacant housing land has increased seventeen times since 1994 to R750K according to ABSA. This is four times the CPI increase over twenty three years.

And alarmingly these increases come about without any effort on the owner's part. They are windfall gains caused by state, province and municipal spending on infrastructure, services, governance and population increases, and can be captured.
So far from selling land, especially trophies like Tafelberg, the Province should be expropriating Ysterplaat, Wingfield, Youngsfield and Transnet’s underused holdings and letting them out to house builders on perpetual and reviewable leases.

Whether the Province allocated the right use to Tafelberg is not discussed here. Nevertheless there are economies to be had in providing accommodation as close as possible to work places to relieve transport congestion, to use existing infrastructure and to match the zoning of the socio-economic need. So the price of land need not slavishly comply with a willing seller, willing buyer sale.

The Province is authorised to alienate land by leasing it out. And to repeat, the state, province and municipalities have no obligation to subsidise land prices. This would therefore perfectly comply with sec 25.5 of the Constitution that “the state must take reasonable legislative and other measures, within its available resources, to foster conditions which enable citizens to gain access to land on an equitable basis.”

© 2017 GroundUp. Creative Commons License
This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.

You may republish this article, so long as you credit the authors and GroundUp, and do not change the text. Please include a link back to the original article.