17.3 C
Cape Town
Monday, April 20, 2026

City welcomes amended COGTA regulations after raising concerns over national overreach

Published on

 

The City has welcomed the amended District Development Model Regulations, which the Metro argued amounted to a constitutional overreach into the powers of local governments.

 

The regulations, which came into effect in May 2024, mandated each municipality to draw up a ‘One Plan’ for ultimate ‘approval’ by the COGTA Minister and ‘adoption’ by the National Cabinet.

 

The City immediately declared a formal intergovernmental dispute, deeming the original regulations unlawful.

 

A process of engagement between COGTA and the City followed, with the matter now resolved, following the publication of amended DDM regulations for public comment.

 

Cape Town Mayor Geordin Hill-Lewis says the changes substantially overhaul the original regulations, and the problematic clauses have now been removed entirely.

 

‘Local governments are independently elected, imbued with extensive original powers by the Constitution, and they may pursue their own policies and objectives. They are not mere sub-branches of the national government. The successful resolution of this dispute has underscored this important principle in our constitutional framework.’

 

The City’s dispute pointed out that these powers would infringe on local government’s constitutional autonomy and responsibility to regulate municipal planning under section 155 (6)(a) and (7) of the Constitution.

 

The City’s dispute further stated that the ‘One Plan’ is a wasteful duplication of the existing five-year strategic planning processes in municipalities, and could not lawfully replace or conflict with municipal Integrated Development Plans (IDPs), which are already consulted with all spheres of government, residents, and stakeholders.

Hill-Lewis argued the regulations would have further added a major red tape and bureaucracy that would’ve diverted municipal resources.

 

Instead, the amended regulations propose collaborative support to municipalities for long-term strategic planning in line with the constitution.

 

The Mayor lauded the engagement process between the parties to get it resolved:

‘While Cape Town had formally declared an intergovernmental dispute, there was no need to appoint a mediator thanks to the constructive engagement process with both the COGTA Minister and his Department, which has now resulted in these amended regulations. This is cooperative governance in action, and we look forward to the proclamation of the new regs in the near future.’

Liesl Smit
Liesl Smit
Liesl is the Smile 90.4FM News Manager. She has been at Smile since 2016, with nearly 20 years experience in the radio industry, including reading news, field reporting and producing. In 2008 she won the Vodacom Journalist of the Year Award, Western Cape region. liesl@smile904.fm

Latest articles

City: Dunoon area flooding caused by illegal structures and dumping

 The City of Cape Town has responded to online criticism by ANC Secretary General Fikile Mbalula, after he tweeted a video of flooding in...

Gift of the Givers inundated with pleas for help following heavy downpours

 Gift of the Givers teams have been activated to respond to numerous informal settlements across the Cape Metropole and Drakenstein areas, after being inundated...

LOOK: City teams responding to localised flooding in numerous areas

 Heavy rain and strong winds lashed Cape Town on Sunday, 19 April, as the second of two cold fronts made landfall this weekend. The...
error: Content is protected !!