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Interview with Sister Tshazibana
Black Liberations Movement Mosaic Under the direction of: Professors Jeremy Ball, Kim Lacy Rogers, and Amy Wlodarski Community Studies Center Dickinson College, Carlisle, PA 17013 Black Liberations Movement Mosaic Oral History Interview with Sister P.M. Tshazibana By Flosha Tejada Zinyoka, South Africa August 12, 2008 2 Interview with Sister P.M. Tshazibana Interviewed on 12 August, 2008 Location: Zanempilo Community Health Center, Zinyoka Location, Eastern Cape, South Africa Language: English Interviewer: Flosha Tejada Transcribers: Flosha Tejada Black Liberation Movements Mosaic Flosha Tejada: So then again let’s start with your name, your occupation. Sister Tshazibana: I’m [incomprehensible] Tshazibana, I’m the sister in charge of the clinic. I’m newly appointed as an operational manager. Flosha Tejada: When did you start working at the clinic? Sister Tshazibana: I started working here on the third of January of 2002. Flosha Tejada: And you’re still working here until today’s date, right? Sister Tshazibana: Yes. Flosha Tejada: So, how did you come to work at Zanempilo? 3 Sister Tshazibana: I use my own car, I travel…my own car. Flosha Tejada: Yeah, okay,how did you end up working here at this clinic? Out of all the clinics in the area, why here? Sister Tshazibana: I was working at the Bhisho Primary Health Care Services, so I was just allocated to this clinic. Flosha Tejada: Oh okay so… Sister Tshazibana: I was from Bhisho hospital. Flosha Tejada: Oh okay so, it wasn’t your choice to come here? Sister Tshazibana: No,no, I was just allocated. Flosha Tejada: Oh okay. -
BCMM Draft BEPP 30 March 2020
DRAFT BUILT ENVIRONMENT PERFORMANCE PLAN 2020-21 V02 09 JUNE 2020 ACRONYMS ACSA Airport Company South Africa ISDG Infrastructure Skills Development Grant AFS Annual Financial Statements IUDF Integrated Urban Development Framework AG Auditor General IWMP Integrated Waste Management Plan AMEU Association of Municipal Electricity Utilities IZ Integration Zone BCMDA Buffalo City Municipal Development Agency KWT King William’s Town BCMM Buffalo City Metropolitan Municipality LED Local Economic Development BEPM Built Environment Progression Model LSDF Local Spatial Development Framework BEPP Built Environment Performance Plan LVC Land Value Capture BEVC Built Environment Value Chain MELD Mdantsane-East London Development BKCOB Boarder Kei Chamber of Business MFMA Municipal Financial Management Act BOD Board of Directors MGDS Metro Growth and Development Strategy CBD Central Business District MRF Material Recovery Facility CBF City Budget Forum MSA Municipal Systems Act CIDMS City Infrastructure Delivery Management System mSCOA Municipal Standard Chart of Accounts CCTV Close Circuit Television MSDF Metropolitan Spatial Development Framework CID City Improvement District MTREF Medium Term Revenue and Expenditure Framework CIF Capital Investment Framework MTSF Medium-Term Strategic Framework CS Community Survey MUHF Mdantsane Urban Hub Framework CSIP Capacity Support Implementation Plan NDP National Development Plan CSP Cities Support Programme NDPG Neighbourhood Development Partnership Grant CURA Central Urban Renewal Area NDPW National Department -
Buffalo City Municipality State of Energy Report Table of Contents
BUFFALO CITY MUNICIPALITY SSSTTTAAATTTEEE OOOFFF EEENNNEEERRRGGGYYY RRREEEPPPOOORRRTTT J28015 September 2008 EXECUTIVE SUMMARY The Importance of Sustainable Energy to BCM South African cities are key players in facilitating national sustainable energy policy and legislative objectives. The 15 largest cities in South Africa take up 3% of the country’s surface area, and yet they are responsible for 40% of the country’s energy consumption. This means that cities must play a major role in facilitating the achievement of national sustainable energy targets (for example the national target of 12% energy efficiency by 2014). Buffalo City, being among the nine largest cities in South Africa, and the second largest in the Eastern Cape, must ensure that it participates in, and takes responsibility for, energy issues affecting both its own population, and that of the country as a whole. Issues associated with the availability and use of energy in South Africa and the Eastern Cape are more pressing than ever before. Some of the more urgent considerations are related to the following: Climate Change: Scientific evidence shows without doubt that the earth’s atmosphere has been heating up for the past century (global warming), and that this heating is due to greenhouse gas emissions from the burning of the fossil fuels (such as coal and oil products) from which we derive our energy. Some impacts of climate change that scientists have predicted will affect Southern Africa (including BCM) are: • More disasters related to severe weather events; • Longer and drier dry periods, leading to drought; • More runaway fires; • More intense flooding; • Sea-level rise; • Threats to food security and human health; • Loss of biodiversity; • Water supply problems; and • Related economic impacts Climate change is already causing negative impacts on people and ecosystems in South Africa. -
Case Study of King William's Town
Water Supply Services Model: Case Study of King William's Town Report to the Water Research Commission by Palmer Development Group WRC Report No KV110/98 Disclaimer This report emanates from a project financed by the Water Research Commission (WRC) and is approved for publication. Approval does not signify that the contents necessarily reflect the views and policies of the WRC or the members of the project steering committee, nor does mention of trade names or commercial products constitute endorsement or recommendation for use. Vry waring Hierdie verslag spruit voort uit 'n navorsingsprojek wat dour die Waternavorsingskommissie (WNK) gefinansier is en goedgekeur is vir publikasie. Gocdkcuring beteken nie noodwendig dat die inhoud die sicning en bclcid van die WNK of die lede van die projek-loodskoinitee weerspieel nie, of dat melding van handelsname of -ware deur die WNK vir gebruik goedgekeur of aanbeveel word nie. WATER SUPPLY SERVICES MODEL : CASE STUDY OF KING WILLIAM'S TOWN Report on application of the WSSM to the King William's Town TLC PALMER DEVELOPMENT GROUP WRC Report No KV110/98 ISBN 1 86845 407 X ISBN SET 1 86845 408 8 ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS We wish to extend our thanks to the officials and councillors of the King William's Town TLC for giving us access to the information necessary to conduct this study. We would in particular like to thank the Town Engineer Chris Hetem, the Treasurer Gideon Thiart, Hans Schluter of the Planning Department and Trevor Belser of the Department of Water Affairs and Forestry for their time and support during the course of the study. -
Rights in Principle – Rights in Practice, Revisiting the Role of International Law in Crafting Durable Solutions
Rights in Principle - Rights in Practice Revisiting the Role of International Law in Crafting Durable Solutions for Palestinian Refugees Terry Rempel, Editor BADIL Resource Center for Palestinian Residency & Refugee Rights, Bethlehem RIGHTS IN PRINCIPLE - RIGHTS IN PRACTICE REVISITING THE ROLE OF InternatiONAL LAW IN CRAFTING DURABLE SOLUTIONS FOR PALESTINIAN REFUGEES Editor: Terry Rempel xiv 482 pages. 24 cm ISBN 978-9950-339-23-1 1- Palestinian Refugees 2– Palestinian Internally Displaced Persons 3- International Law 4– Land and Property Restitution 5- International Protection 6- Rights Based Approach 7- Peace Making 8- Public Participation HV640.5.P36R53 2009 Cover Photo: Snapshots from «Go and See Visits», South Africa, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Cyprus and Palestine (© BADIL) Copy edit: Venetia Rainey Design: BADIL Printing: Safad Advertising All rights reserved © BADIL Resource Center for Palestinian Residency & Refugee Rights December 2009 P.O. Box 728 Bethlehem, Palestine Tel/Fax: +970 - 2 - 274 - 7346 Tel: +970 - 2 - 277 - 7086 Email: [email protected] Web: http://www.badil.org iii CONTENTS Abbreviations ....................................................................................vii Contributors ......................................................................................ix Foreword ..........................................................................................xi Foreword .........................................................................................xiv Introduction ......................................................................................1 -
Directory of Organisations and Resources for People with Disabilities in South Africa
DISABILITY ALL SORTS A DIRECTORY OF ORGANISATIONS AND RESOURCES FOR PEOPLE WITH DISABILITIES IN SOUTH AFRICA University of South Africa CONTENTS FOREWORD ADVOCACY — ALL DISABILITIES ADVOCACY — DISABILITY-SPECIFIC ACCOMMODATION (SUGGESTIONS FOR WORK AND EDUCATION) AIRLINES THAT ACCOMMODATE WHEELCHAIRS ARTS ASSISTANCE AND THERAPY DOGS ASSISTIVE DEVICES FOR HIRE ASSISTIVE DEVICES FOR PURCHASE ASSISTIVE DEVICES — MAIL ORDER ASSISTIVE DEVICES — REPAIRS ASSISTIVE DEVICES — RESOURCE AND INFORMATION CENTRE BACK SUPPORT BOOKS, DISABILITY GUIDES AND INFORMATION RESOURCES BRAILLE AND AUDIO PRODUCTION BREATHING SUPPORT BUILDING OF RAMPS BURSARIES CAREGIVERS AND NURSES CAREGIVERS AND NURSES — EASTERN CAPE CAREGIVERS AND NURSES — FREE STATE CAREGIVERS AND NURSES — GAUTENG CAREGIVERS AND NURSES — KWAZULU-NATAL CAREGIVERS AND NURSES — LIMPOPO CAREGIVERS AND NURSES — MPUMALANGA CAREGIVERS AND NURSES — NORTHERN CAPE CAREGIVERS AND NURSES — NORTH WEST CAREGIVERS AND NURSES — WESTERN CAPE CHARITY/GIFT SHOPS COMMUNITY SERVICE ORGANISATIONS COMPENSATION FOR WORKPLACE INJURIES COMPLEMENTARY THERAPIES CONVERSION OF VEHICLES COUNSELLING CRÈCHES DAY CARE CENTRES — EASTERN CAPE DAY CARE CENTRES — FREE STATE 1 DAY CARE CENTRES — GAUTENG DAY CARE CENTRES — KWAZULU-NATAL DAY CARE CENTRES — LIMPOPO DAY CARE CENTRES — MPUMALANGA DAY CARE CENTRES — WESTERN CAPE DISABILITY EQUITY CONSULTANTS DISABILITY MAGAZINES AND NEWSLETTERS DISABILITY MANAGEMENT DISABILITY SENSITISATION PROJECTS DISABILITY STUDIES DRIVING SCHOOLS E-LEARNING END-OF-LIFE DETERMINATION ENTREPRENEURIAL -
Draft Built Environment Performance Plan 2017/2018
DRAFT BUILT ENVIRONMENT PERFORMANCE PLAN 2017/2018 Draft 1 TABLE OF CONTENTS INTRODUCTION……………………………………………………............................................................................6 PROFILE OF THE BUFFALO CITY METROPOLITAN MUNICIPALITY ............................................................................... 6 SECTION A ........................................................................................................................................................................ 9 A.1. BEPP IN RELATION TO OTHER STATUTORY PLANS .............................................................................................. 10 A.1.1. BCMM Documents: .......................................................................................................................................... 11 A.1.2. National and Provincial Documents: .............................................................................................................. 11 A.1.3. Aligning the BEPP with IDP, MGDS, BCMM SDF and Budget ................................................................. 12 A.1.4. Confirmation of BEPP Adoption by Council ..................................................... Error! Bookmark not defined. SECTION B : SPATIAL PLANNING &PROJECT PRIORITISATION ...................................................................................... 14 B.1. SPATIAL TARGETING ............................................................................................................................... 14 (a) The National Development Plan -
(Eastern Cape Division, Bhisho) Case No
1 IN THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA (EASTERN CAPE DIVISION, BHISHO) CASE NO: 451/2016 In the matter between: THANDIWE ROSEMARY MXOLI Applicant and THE MEMBER OF THE EXECUTIVE COUNCIL, DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION, EASTERN PROVINCE 1st Respondent THE HEAD OF THE DEPARTMENT, DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION, EASTERN CAPE PROVINCE 2nd Respondent ________________________________________________________________ JUDGMENT ________________________________________________________________ MAGEZA AJ [1] Applicant in this matter seeks reinstatement as an educator in terms of Section 14(2) of the Employment of Educators Act 76 of 1998 (‘the EEA’) and places 2 reliance on an order of this Court granted under Case 517B/07 on 18 June 2013. The said section reads as follows: “14(2) If an educator who is deemed to have been discharged under paragraph (a) or (b) of subsection (1) at any time reports for duty, the employer may, on good cause shown and notwithstanding anything to the contrary contained in this act, approve the reinstatement of the educator in the educator’s former post or in any other post on such conditions relating to the period of the educator’s absence from duty or otherwise as the employer may determine” The Order of Court dated 18 June 2013 [2] The chronology set out in applicant’s heads follows on an order granted by the honourable Smith J dated 18 June 2013 under an earlier Case Number 571B/07. The order came about as a result of review proceedings under the said case number in which relief based on Section 14(1)(a) of the Employers Educators Act 76 of 1998 (the Act) was sought by applicant against the respondents. -
Buffalo City Metro Municipality Socio Economic Review and Outlook, 2017
BUFFALO CITY METRO MUNICIPALITY SOCIO ECONOMIC REVIEW AND OUTLOOK, 2017 Buffalo City Metro Municipality Socio-Economic Review and Outlook 2017 Published by ECSECC Postnet Vincent, P/Bag X9063, Suite No 302, Vincent 5247 www.ecsecc.org © 2017 Eastern Cape Socio Economic Consultative Council First published April 2017 Some rights reserved. Please acknowledge the author and publisher if utilising this publication or any material contained herein. Reproduction of material in this publication for resale or other commercial purposes is prohibited without written permission from ECSECC. Buffalo City Metro Municipality Socio-Economic Review and Outlook 2017 Foreword ECSECC was founded in July 1995 as an institutional mechanism for partnership between government, business, labour and the NGO sector to address underdevelopment and poverty in the Eastern Cape. The local government sector and the higher education sector joined ECSECC in 2003. ECSECC’s mandate of stakeholder co-ordination and multi-stakeholder policy making stems from the realization that Government cannot defeat poverty, unemployment and inequality on its own, but needs to build deliberate and active partnerships to achieve prioritized development outcomes. ECSECCs main partners are: the shareholder, the Office of the Premier; national, provincial and local government; organised business and industry; organised labour; higher education; and the organised NGO sectors that make up the board, SALGA and municipalities. One of ECSECCs goals is to be a socio-economic knowledge hub for the Eastern Cape Province. We seek to actively serve the Eastern Cape’s needs to socio-economic data and analysis. As part of this ECSECC regularly issues statistical and research based publications. Publications, reports and data can be found on ECSECCs website www.ecsecc.org. -
Profile: Buffalo City
2 PROFILE: BUFFALO CITY PROFILE: BUFFALO CITY 3 CONTENT 1. Executive Summary…………………………………………………………………….3 2. Introduction: Brief Overview ............................................................................. 6 2.1 Location ..................................................................................................................................... 6 2.2 Historical Pesperctive ................................................................................................................ 6 2.3 Spatial Status ............................................................................................................................. 7 3. Social Development Profile ............................................................................... 8 3.1 Key Social Demographics ........................................................................................ 8 3.1.1 Population ............................................................................................................. 8 3.1.2 Race, Gender and Age ........................................................................................ 10 3.1.3 Households ......................................................................................................... 10 3.2 Health Profile .......................................................................................................... 11 3.3 COVID-19 .............................................................................................................. 11 3.4 Poverty Dimensions .............................................................................................. -
BUF Buffalo City Draft BEPP 2017-18
DRAFT BUILT ENVIRONMENT PERFORMANCE PLAN 2017/2018 Draft 1 Table of Contents INTRODUCTION ................................................................................................................................................................. 5 PROFILE OF THE BUFFALO CITY METROPOLITAN MUNICIPALITY ..................................................................................... 5 SECTION A ........................................................................................................................................................................ 8 A.1. BEPP IN RELATION TO OTHER STATUTORY PLANS ................................................................................................ 9 A.1.1. BCMM Documents: ........................................................................................................................................ 9 A.1.2. National and Provincial Documents: .......................................................................................................... 10 A.1.3. Aligning the BEPP with IDP, MGDS, BCMM SDF and Budget ............................................................. 10 A.1.4. Confirmation of BEPP Adoption by Council .............................................................................................. 12 SECTION B : SPATIAL PLANNING &PROJECT PRIORITISATION ...................................................................................... 13 B.1. SPATIAL TARGETING .............................................................................................................................. -
Government Gazette Staatskoerant REPUBLIC of SOUTH AFRICA REPUBLIEK VAN SUID AFRIKA
Government Gazette Staatskoerant REPUBLIC OF SOUTH AFRICA REPUBLIEK VAN SUID AFRIKA Regulation Gazette No. 10177 Regulasiekoerant March Vol. 657 13 2020 No. 43086 Maart PART 1 OF 2 ISSN 1682-5843 N.B. The Government Printing Works will 43086 not be held responsible for the quality of “Hard Copies” or “Electronic Files” submitted for publication purposes 9 771682 584003 AIDS HELPLINE: 0800-0123-22 Prevention is the cure 2 No. 43086 GOVERNMENT GAZETTE, 13 MARCH 2020 IMPORTANT NOTICE OF OFFICE RELOCATION Private Bag X85, PRETORIA, 0001 149 Bosman Street, PRETORIA Tel: 012 748 6197, Website: www.gpwonline.co.za URGENT NOTICE TO OUR VALUED CUSTOMERS: PUBLICATIONS OFFICE’S RELOCATION HAS BEEN TEMPORARILY SUSPENDED. Please be advised that the GPW Publications office will no longer move to 88 Visagie Street as indicated in the previous notices. The move has been suspended due to the fact that the new building in 88 Visagie Street is not ready for occupation yet. We will later on issue another notice informing you of the new date of relocation. We are doing everything possible to ensure that our service to you is not disrupted. As things stand, we will continue providing you with our normal service from the current location at 196 Paul Kruger Street, Masada building. Customers who seek further information and or have any questions or concerns are free to contact us through telephone 012 748 6066 or email Ms Maureen Toka at [email protected] or cell phone at 082 859 4910. Please note that you will still be able to download gazettes free of charge from our website www.gpwonline.co.za.