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COMMENT ON THE SPATIAL PLANNING AND LAND USE MANAGEMENT BILL

Reviewing the constitutional validity and practical considerations of the Municipal Planning Tribunal, internal appeals, and land development applications.

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COMMENT ON THE SPATIAL PLANNING AND LAND USE MANAGEMENT BILL

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  1. COMMENT ON THE SPATIAL PLANNING AND LAND USE MANAGEMENT BILL PORTFOLIO COMMITTEE ON RURAL DEVELOPMENT AND LAND REFORM 21 AUGUST 2012

  2. OVERVIEW OF PRESENTATION • Due to time constrains presentation will only deal with two critical issues – • Municipal Planning Tribunal • Internal Appeals • Rest of the MEC of KwaZulu-Natal Co-operative Governance and Traditional Affairs’ comment in her written submission • Martin de Lange: Will present practical considerations • GertRoos: Will present legal considerations

  3. CONSTITUTIONAL VALIDITY OF MUNICIPAL PLANNING TRIBUNAL (1) • Act of Parliament cannot assign municipal planning to a tribunal consisting of officials and private persons: See JHB v Gauteng Development Tribunal Constitutional Court • SPLUMB assigns municipal planning to a tribunal consisting of officials and private persons • Municipal planning tribunals and DFA development tribunals almost identical – • Difference in who appoints: Premier v municipality • No provincial officials on municipal planning tribunal

  4. CONSTITUTIONAL VALIDITY OF MUNICIPAL PLANNING TRIBUNAL (2) • What is the determining factor for constitutional validity? • A: Who appoints (Premier or municipality)? or • B:Who has the right to perform the function (municipality or tribunal)? • Constitution: section 156(1)(a): “A municipality has executive authority in respect of, and has the right to administer…municipal planning” • National government can regulate but may not impede • No problem with voluntary assignment of powers, including to a statutory body like municipal planning tribunal

  5. PRACTICAL CONSIDERATIONS (1) • Previous experience with tribunals as decision makers of the first instance in KZN • Town Planning Commission (since 1952) • Private Townships Board (since 1952) • DFA Development Tribunal (since 1998) • Generally acted on advice from professional officials • Need for support staff (e.g. DFA Tribunal supported by 1 X Registrar, 3 X Deputy Registrar & 3 admin officials and 1 X Designated Officer per Municipality) • Chairman with 4 members hear an application • Adjourned hearings – difficulty in securing same quorum

  6. PRACTICAL CONSIDERATIONS (2) • 2009 Reality • ± 1000 land development applications • 45 DFA applications • ± 60 hearings and inspections and continued hearings (more than 1 hearing a week) • Cost implications: ± R1,2 Million (avg. R20 000 a hearing) • This cost only relates to 5% of the applications, and excludes costs to the Department in terms of officials

  7. PRACTICAL CONSIDERATIONS (3) • Implementation time and buy in – • Current KZN PDA – Taken 2 years to appoint Tribunal • Property Rates Act commenced in 2005 but by 2009 13 municipalities were about to lose R410 million in revenue because they have not implemented the Act • Sufficient expertise to support 261 municipalities? • Need at least 20 Tribunal members per municipality (=5200 members Nationally – Is there sufficient expertise available?) • Gauteng 14 000 applications annually (± 60 were DFA Tribunal) • Can all 14 000 applications go a tribunal route?

  8. PRACTICAL CONSIDERATIONS (4) • Tribunal can work – • Highly capacitated municipalities + high level delegated decision making: Formalise existing situation • Municipalities that experience very low levels of development • Tribunal will not work – • Low capacity and + high levels of development • SPLUMB solution: Joint tribunals will only work where there is spare capacity not insufficient capacity • Municipal Planning Tribunals must be a voluntary option

  9. SCOPE OF RIGHT OF APPEAL • SPLUMB: No right of appeal unless appellant can prove a right that has been adversely affected • Not many persons, other than an applicant appellant will be able to proof such a right • Planning authority can easily ignore IDP, national and provincial norms and standards, engineering reports, traffic impact assessments, need for community facilities etc without any fear of be challenged on appeal • Expect a lot of litigation to proof a right so that decision can be challenged on planning grounds • A person should be able to appeal on any planning ground, if he or she objected (Position in KZN 51years)

  10. CONSTITUTIONAL VALIDITY OF AN INTERNAL APPEAL • A right of appeal • Can only be exercised against a final decision • Implies municipality has already determined the matter • Determining an application and imposing conditions = An administrative action: See Administrative Justice Act: • Definitions: “admin action” and “decision” • Constitution: section 33(3)(a): National legislation must provide for the review of administrative action by a court or, where appropriate, an independent and impartial tribunal

  11. CONSTITUTIONAL VALIDITY OF AN INTERNAL APPEAL (2) • SPLUMB: Appeal to the Executive Mayor or Executive Committee • Can it be an independent and impartial tribunal as required by the Constitution? • Applicant may have consulted ward councillor etc • Objectors may have consulted ward councillor • Officials may have consulted council before determination, especially if funding and services are involved (municipality responsible for bulk services) • Council may have to rely on officials who made the original decision for technical advice

  12. PRACTICAL CONSIDERATIONS (1) • Previous experience with the hearing of appeals in KZN • Town Planning Commission • Town Planning Appeals Board • Development Appeal Tribunal

  13. PRACTICAL CONSIDERATIONS (2) • Is the Executive Mayor or EXCO best geared to deal with – • Exchange of documents? • Site inspections? • Leading of evidence? • Expert evidence? • Cross-examination? • Points of law? • Multi day hearings? • Volume of appeals?

  14. HOW DO THE PROVINCIAL LAWS DEAL WITH APPEALS? • Northern Cape: Use DFA Appeal Tribunal • KwaZulu-Natal: Provincial Appeal Tribunal soon to be replaced by independent municipal appeal tribunals (experts from private sector) • Gauteng Bill: Appeal Tribunal appointed jointly by municipalities, experts, officials and private sector • Western Cape Bill: Land Use Planning Board, review body appointed by MEC, experts, officials and private sector • Free State Bill: Appeal Tribunal appointed jointly by municipalities, experts, officials and private sector

  15. GERT ROOS 14th Floor, North Tower Natalia Building 330 Langalibalele Street Pietermaritzburg, 3200 Tel: (033) 33 395 2656 Fax: (033) 33 3949 714 E-mail: gert.roos@kzncogta.gov.za Website: www.kzncogta.gov.za

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