Abstract:
The article explores the nature and extent of public and stakeholder participation
in the municipal demarcation processes undertaken by the
Municipal Demarcation Board (MDB) towards establishing Collins Chabane
Local Municipality located in the Vhembe District Municipality in Limpopo
Province, South Africa. The study stems from the government’s decision
that was concluded through the Minister of Cooperative Governance and
Traditional Affairs’ (CoGTA) request to the MDB to establish the new municipality
under the Vhembe District Municipality after the 2016 local government
elections. The establishment of the new municipality led to several
challenges that emanated from the community of Vuwani, which previously
formed part of the Makhado Local Municipality, as well as certain
traditional councils which objected and protested the MDB’s decision to
incorporate their areas into the newly established municipality. These stakeholders
cited that they were not adequately consulted by the MDB before
its decision to change the municipal boundary. To this end, a comprehensive
review of a qualitative set of data collected from a variety of sources
was selected and analysed to achieve the research objective of this article.
The study revealed that various factors undermined the participatory role
that communities and stakeholders should have played in the municipal demarcation
processes leading towards the establishment of the municipality.
Key challenges include, but are not limited to, the inadequate involvement of traditional councils on areas proclaimed as rural traditional councils;
inadequate mechanisms, systems and procedures for public participation;
an inability to insulate between financial sustainability and service delivery
challenges; and a lack of social cohesion between different ethnicities and
tribal groups. Based on the aforementioned, the study proposes appropriate
interventions that government can adopt to enhance and entrench a culture
of public and stakeholder participation in the municipal demarcation processes.
The study argues that government alone cannot resolve demarcation
problems; it requires collective action by all relevant stakeholders.
Description:
This article is partly based on a mini-dissertation that was completed under the supervision of
Dr Onkgopotse Madumo at the University of Pretoria. Mathye, N. 2020. ‘Analysis of public and
stakeholder participation in the municipal demarcation process towards the establishment of Collins
Chabane Local Municipality’. Master of Public Administration. Unpublished master’s dissertation.