The Cape Chamber of Commerce and Industry says Cape Town is rapidly running out of space to dump the vast amount of garbage generated by the growing City and a new approach to the problem is needed. Published on 24 August 2018 By Smile Staff Reporter FacebookTwitterWhatsApp Smile Staff Reporter Latest WCED undeterred by SADTU’s threats of strike action Khayelitsha stormwater infrastructure to mitigate impact of flooding Here’s the official September fuel price decreases ‘We are not firing or retrenching teachers’, says WCED President Cyril Ramaphosa backs Western Cape anti-crime pact Latest articles Strum into the Weekend with Smile FM 7 September 2024 Springbok fever in Cape Town ahead of second test 6 September 2024 Annual Waterblommetjie Festival 6 September 2024 ICYMI: Road closures and Free MyCiTi shuttle for Springbok vs All Blacks clash 6 September 2024 Previous articleElke Suid-Afrikaner word aangemoedig om die oseaan belofte af te lê en meer eko-vriendelike verbruikers te word.Next articleZimbabwe se konstitusionele hof het die verkiesingsuitslag bekragtig. Hoofregter Luke Malaba het Emmerson Mnangagwa as die wenner van die verkiesing verklaar. Cannabis Master Plan: Boost for Hemp cultivation Smile Staff Reporter - 6 September 2024 A total of 1 110 permits have been issued for hemp cultivation since the declaration of hemp as an agricultural crop. This follows the approval... Time to Spring Clean Cape Town! Smile Staff Reporter - 6 September 2024 Mayor Geordin Hill-Lewis has launched the City’s annual Spring Clean Cape Town campaign at a mass clean-up event in Blue Downs together with Grant... WCED undeterred by SADTU’s threats of strike action Smile Staff Reporter - 5 September 2024 The Western Cape Education Department (WCED) insists that strike action will not change the fact that it is facing a R3,8 billion budget shortfall....