What are the different legal ways for our community to get land, housing and services?
The Development Facilitation Act says that provincial authorities can make land available where people can settle and have secure tenure immediately. The land settlement grants and housing subsidies from the Government can help to pay for houses and services. (See: Land redistribution and land grants; Types of housing subsidies)
But the laws alone will not deliver land or housing. Communities must also take the initiative to ensure that they get their rights. For example, in the Grootboom case, the Cape High Court and the Constitutional Court dealt with the obligations of the government regarding the right of access to adequate housing. The Court said the state must provide the children and their parents with shelter until their parents were able to shelter their own children. The bare minimum kind of shelter included tents, portable toilets and a regular supply of water. The Constitutional Court said all spheres of government (national, provincial and local) had a duty to have a plan and a programme in place to care for the needs of homeless people.
The Integrated Development Plan of a local authority must include measures that will help to create housing and must provide for homeless people and those most in need of shelter and housing. (See: Drawing up an Integrated Development Plan)
Community organisations can ask for a meeting with the local authority in the area. They can also contact the Department of Rural Development and Land Reform. Then they can discuss finding land and setting up services.
Community leaders can also ask to be provided with the local authority’s Integrated Development Plan (IDP) that shows how job creation, housing and services in the area are going to be facilitated.