Category Archives: City of Johannesburg v Blue Moonlight Properties

Business Day: Court just wants city to care for the poor a bit better

http://www.businessday.co.za/articles/Content.aspx?id=139916

KATE TISSINGTON and JACKIE DUGARD: Court just wants city to care for the poor a bit better
THE government provides some subsidised housing for the poor and should be commended for this.

THE government provides some subsidised housing for the poor and should be commended for this. However, the housing subsidy scheme and roll-out of subsidised “RDP” houses is not a solution for everyone. Some — single men without dependants; people without identity documents, child-headed households, noncitizens and permanent residents — do not qualify.

For those who qualify, the supply is inadequate and the process is lengthy and dogged with corruption. Even then, all the “lucky” recipients get is a house on the urban periphery, far from where they need to be to make a living. In the interim, they seek shelter in informal settlements, backyard shacks or dilapidated buildings. This in itself is the consequence of unstoppable migration from impoverished areas to cities such as Johannesburg.

On March 30, in City of Johannesburg v Blue Moonlight Properties, the Supreme Court of Appeal ruled that about 100 people living in derelict buildings in Johannesburg could not be evicted without the provision of temporary shelter from the city. It directed that the city adjust its housing programme to cater for the needs of poor people who are evicted by private property owners, and who have nowhere else to go because they cannot afford private rental housing.

The case concerns the inner city of Johannesburg, which is undergoing a process of “regeneration”. Those people who have accessed substandard accommodation in so-called “bad buildings” are being rapidly evicted with nothing available to them afterwards.

The city has bemoaned the judgment. It complains it cannot provide accommodation to everyone who is evicted throughout the city. This, however, is not what the judgment says. According to the court, the city is required only to stop evictions resulting in desperately poor people becoming homeless. A tenant who boycotts his rent will still be evicted without consequence for the municipality.

Municipalities worldwide have taken responsibility for devising and implementing public housing programmes. It is the City of Johannesburg’s failure to accept this responsibility that is at the core of its problem. The only way to solve it is to adopt a housing programme that will cater comprehensively for the poor. That is all the judgment requires.

The city says it doesn’t have the money. But it is important to note that the city actively, albeit indirectly, subsidises the eviction of desperately poor people. Many derelict properties in the inner city are bought cheaply at auction by shell companies backed by lone speculators. They know full well that there are people living in the buildings they buy, but are not interested. They simply want to refurbish the buildings for middle-class or corporate tenants — and make a quick buck.

This is completely in line with the city’s model of inner-city regeneration. The city even writes off service debts and gives tax breaks to allow them to do it. Forget the poor — it is property speculators who benefit most from the city’s largesse. With ratepayers’ money. All the appeal court has done is to suggest that the city use some of that money to accommodate the homeless, rather than fund a bargain basement giveaway to the rich.

It is hard to fault the appeal court’s reasoning. It cannot be fair for the poorest and most vulnerable members of society to be made homeless simply to serve the economic convenience of a privileged few. Nor is it in anybody’s long-term interests. The constitution’s entrenchment of socioeconomic rights — including the right to housing — embodies our common interest in ensuring that everyone has the basic elements of a decent existence. That is precisely why the courts are entitled to require the city to provide housing to people who need it.

As much as the city may want to ignore this reality, we live in the most unequal society in the world with staggering rates of poverty and 40% unemployment. The appeal court’s judgment — and the law it applied — is an attempt to ensure that poor people are not deprived of their existing access to shelter while they wait for their formal housing needs to be addressed. In doing so, it strikes a balance between the need for property rights to be respected and protected and the need to ensure social justice.

It is time that the city acknowledged its responsibilities towards the poor and acted on them. It would find the courts much less hostile if it did.

SERI: Supreme Court Upholds the Rights of the Poor

There is a lot of background detail to this case at the SERI site here.

SERI PRESS RELEASE
30 MARCH 2011

Supreme Court Upholds the Rights of the Poor

SCA criticises “irrational” City of Johannesburg and declares City housing policy unconstitutional

The Supreme Court of Appeal (SCA) today declared the City of Johannesburg’s housing policy irrational, discriminatory and unconstitutional. The SCA directed the City to provide temporary emergency accommodation to approximately 100 desperately poor people living in derelict buildings in Berea, Johannesburg by 1 June 2011. The occupiers stand to be evicted by the owner of the property. They would be rendered homeless without assistance from the City.

The SCA made the declaration in the course of its judgment in City of Johannesburg v Blue Moonlight Properties. In that matter the City was appealing an earlier order of the Johannesburg High Court which directed the City to provide accommodation to the occupiers and declared its refusal to do so unconstitutional. The City appealed that order on the basis that it was only obliged to provide accommodation to people it evicts from properties it considers unsafe.

The SCA, in a powerful judgment written by Navsa JA and Plasket AJA, rejected this proposition stating that the City’s approach

“effectively ties its own hands and renders itself blind to the real plight and homelessness of persons who find themselves in the circumstances of the occupiers. It precludes itself from considering the duties placed on it by the Constitution . . . By drawing [an] irrational and arbitrary distinction, [the City] is effectively putting potentially vast numbers of persons beyond state assistance in the face of an obligation to take positive steps to assist those who, because of their poverty and because of circumstances beyond their control, find themselves in dire need.”

The SCA stated that the City was directly obliged to prevent homelessness, using rate-payers’ money if needed. It stated that the occupiers “in their humble way” contribute “to the economic lifeblood of the City” and their needs must be catered for.

Teboho Mosikili, an attorney at the Socio-economic Rights Institute of South Africa (SERI), said “this is a groundbreaking decision. It confirms that the City is under a direct duty to alleviate the plight of the desperately poor and homeless. The City’s irrational attempts to evade its duties have been comprehensively dealt with. SERI hopes that the City will respect the decision and ensure its prompt implementation”.

The City was also ordered to pay the occupiers’ legal costs in the High Court and in the SCA.

The occupiers were represented in court by Paul Kennedy SC, Heidi Barnes and SERI’s director of litigation, Stuart Wilson. The Centre for Applied Legal Studies Litigation Unit at the Wits Law Clinic were the occupiers’ attorneys.

Contact:
Teboho Mosikili, Attorney at SERI: teboho@seri-sa.org / 072 248 2199 Kate Tissington, Research and Advocacy Officer at SERI: kate@seri-sa.org / 072 220 9125