Integrated Development
        Planning (IDP) in South Africa
        
        
Public Participation in the Integrated Development
        Planning Process
        
          - Existing Legal and Policy Framework
 
        
        The Constitution stipulates that one of the objectives of
        municipalities is "to encourage the involvement of communities and
        community organisations in the matters of local government".
        The White Paper Local Government (WPLG) emphasises the issue of
        public participation (not only in municipal planning). It goes into some
        detail on how to achieve public participation and of the role local
        government has to play to ensure the involvement of citizens in policy
        formulation and designing of municipal programmes, as well as
        implementation and monitoring and evaluation of such programmes. Public
        participation is meant to promote local democracy. While the WPLG
        emphasises that the municipalities themselves should develop appropriate
        strategies and mechanisms to ensure participation, some hints on how are
        given, such as:
        
          - forums of organised formations (especially in the fields of
            visioning and on issue-specific policies, rather than on multiple
            policies);
 
          - structured stakeholder participation in council committees (in
            particular in temporary issue-oriented committees);
 
          - participatory action research, with specific focus groups (for
            in-depth information on specific issues); and
 
          - formation of associations (especially among people in marginalised
            areas).
 
        
        There are guidelines reflected in these hints. Firstly, participation
        should be a structured process rather than a process of public mass
        meetings. Secondly, public participation should focus on certain
        specific processes, and is not equally useful in all fields of municipal
        management.
        Local government is not only expected to find its own ways of
        structuring participation, but is expected to become active in
        encouraging and promoting participation, especially when it comes to the
        participation of marginalised groups and women.
        While the MSB defines a municipality as a "corporate
        entity" which consists not only of its "structures,
        functionaries and administration", but also of its
        "communities, residents and ratepayers", it differentiates
        clearly between the roles and responsibilities of the "governing
        structures" (which form a separate legal personality), and the
        communities, residents and ratepayers.
        The public participation chapter of the MSB is guided by the
        principle that formal representative government must be complemented by
        a system of participatory governance. Participation in the
        decision-making processes of the municipality is determined to be a
        right of communities, residents and ratepayers. Integrated development
        planning is emphasised as a special field of public participation.
        The decision on appropriate mechanisms, processes and procedures for
        public participation is largely left to the municipality. The only
        prescribed participation procedures are the receipt, processing and
        consideration of petitions and complaints and the public notice of
        council meetings. No procedures are prescribed for participation in the
        integrated development planning process.
        Municipalities are requested to create conditions for public
        participation and, moreover, to encourage it. The only prescribed tool
        for promotion of public participation, however, is the dissemination of
        information on mechanisms and matters of public participation, on rights
        and duties of residents and on municipal governance issues in general.
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          - Experiences to Date
 
        
        Leaving the decision on ways and means of public participation to
        each municipality results in:
        
          - completely different styles of democracy with highly diverging
            combinations of formal representative and participatory governance
            within the country;
 
          - helplessness and confusion on the side of most municipalities,
            which find it difficult to determine appropriate procedures of their
            own; and
 
          - denying residents their right to participate, by avoiding setting
            minimum requirements which specify that right.
 
        
        Many participation processes in the recent integrated development
        planning phase were organised in a way which did not comply with any of
        the general principles stated in the WPLG and the MSB.
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          - Principles of Public Participation
 
        
        
          - The elected councils are the ultimate decision-making forum on
            IDPs. The role of participatory democracy is to inform, negotiate
            and comment on those decisions, in the course of the
            planning/decision-making process.
           
          - Public participation has to be institutionalised in order to
            ensure that all residents of the country have an equal right to
            participate. Institutionalising participation means:
 
        
        
          - setting clear minimum requirements for participation procedures
            which apply for all municipalities by means of regulations, and
 
          - providing a legally recognised organisational framework.
 
        
        
          - Structured participation: Most of the new municipalities are too
            big in terms of population size and area to allow for direct
            participation of the majority of the residents in complex planning
            processes. Participation in integrated development planning,
            therefore, needs clear rules and procedures specifying who is to
            participate or to be consulted, on behalf of whom, on which issue,
            through which organisational mechanism, with what effect.
 
          - Diversity: The way public participation is institutionalised and
            structured has to provide sufficient room for diversity, i.e. for
            different participation styles and cultures. While there has to be a
            common regulatory frame for institutionalised participation in the
            country, this frame has to be wide enough for location-specific
            adjustments to be made by provinces and municipalities.
 
          - Promotion of public participation by municipal government has to
            distinguish between:
 
        
        
          - creating conditions for public participation, which is a must for
            all municipalities (in line with the MSB), and
 
          - encouraging public participation, which should be done in
            particular with regard to disadvantaged or marginalised groups and
            gender equity in accordance with the conditions and capacities in a
            municipality.
 
        
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          - The Functions and context of Public Participation in the
            Integrated Development Process
 
        
        Participation in the integrated development planning process is only
        one of several arenas of participatory interaction between local
        government and citizens. Other means of ensuring participatory local
        government are:
        
          - offering people choices between services;
 
          - citizen and client-oriented ways of service delivery and public
            administration;
 
          - partnership between communities/stakeholder organisations and
            local authorities in implementation of projects; and
 
          - giving residents the right of petition and complaint and obliging
            municipal government to respond.
 
        
        Participation in the development of municipal IDPs has to be seen
        within this wider context. It serves to fulfill four major functions:
        
          - Needs orientation: ensuring that people's needs and problems are
            taken into account.
 
          -  Appropriateness of solutions: using the knowledge and
            experience of local residents and communities in order to arrive at
            appropriate and sustainable problem solutions and measures.
 
          - Community ownership: mobilising local residents' and communities'
            initiatives and resources, and encouraging co-operation and
            partnerships between municipal government and residents for
            implementation and maintenance.
 
          - Empowerment: Making integrated development planning a public event
            and a forum for negotiating conflicting interests, finding
            compromises and common ground and, thereby, creating the basis for
            increased transparency and accountability of local government
            towards local residents.
 
        
        These functions must always influence the choice of appropriate
        procedures and mechanisms for public participation.
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          - Tools, Procedures and Mechanisms for an Institutionalized and
            Structured Process of Public Participation
 
        
        Structured participation is largely based on the existence of a set
        of organisations with certain rights in the planning process. While the
        organisational arrangements may differ widely in detail from area to
        area, the following minimum requirements have to be regulated.
        
          - Ward Committees are the organisational framework through which
            communities in geographical areas can participate in the planning
            process.
 
          - Stakeholder organisations which represent certain social,
            economic, gender or environmental interests have to be registered as
            "Stakeholder Associations" (at municipality level) through
            which they can participate in the planning process.
 
          - The council and the chairperson of the IDP Committee have to make
            sure that all relevant groups and all social strata are given the
            opportunity to be adequately represented. Unorganised groups should
            be represented by "advocates" (e.g. social workers, NGOs,
            resource persons who did studies on such groups, etc.).
 
          - All Ward Committees and Stakeholder Associations should be
            represented on the "Representative IDP Forum" which will
            form a formal link between the municipal government and the public.
            The Representative IDP Forum should be a permanent organisation
            which is also in charge of monitoring the performance during IDP
            implementation. Meetings of the IDP Forum have to be attended by the
            IDP Committee members and by the councillors.
 
          - IDP committees and their technical, project/programme-related
            sub-committees or task teams may include representatives from ward
            committees and stakeholder associations or resource persons from
            civil society if the municipality considers it appropriate. Such
            representatives may be permanent (sub-) committee members or be
            invited on a temporary issue-related basis.
 
        
        For category A and C municipalities, different institutional
        arrangements will apply. While districts can build on the participation
        processes of the local councils within the area of jurisdiction,
        metropolitan municipalities may need one additional stage of
        participation on a sub-metropolitan level.
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          - Guidelines for Creating Conditions for Public Participation
 
        
        The MSB requires municipalities to disseminate information on
        processes and procedures and on matters of concern. Transforming this
        general requirement to the integrated development planning process means
        that each municipality has to follow at least the following procedures.
        
          - The residents have to be informed on the integrated development
            planning process as a whole, and on crucial public events related to
            that process through:
 
        
        
          - public announcements (appropriate media to be determined in the
            "work plan"); and
 
          - ward committees and stakeholder associations.
 
        
        
          - Councillors have to inform the communities within the area of the
            ward, through a public ward-level meeting.
           
          - The Representative IDP Forum has to be involved at least once in
            each major stage of the drafting process.
           
          - The community and stakeholder representatives have to be given
            adequate time (2-4 weeks) to conduct meetings or workshops with the
            groups, communities or organisations they represent, before the
            issue is dealt with by the Representative IDP Forum. This is to give
            a fair opportunity for legitimate representative participation, but
            it does not necessarily involve the municipal governments in
            community- or stakeholder level workshops.
           
          - Draft planning documents have to be accessible for every resident,
            and everybody has the right to submit written comments. There must
            be a time period of at least four weeks for ward committees,
            stakeholder associations and interested groups and residents to
            discuss the draft document publicly, and to comment on it before the
            Representative IDP Forum deals with the draft.
           
          - The IDP committee has to inform the ward committees and
            stakeholder associations on the way the comments were considered, or
            on reasons why they were not considered by the Representative IDP
            Forum, before the draft is submitted to the council for approval.
           
          - Council meetings on the approval of integrated development
            planning must be public meetings.
 
        
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          - Guidelines on the encouragement of Public Participation
 
        
        The municipal government, through its IDP committee and its
        councillors, should use all appropriate means, above and beyond creating
        the necessary conditions, to encourage public participation. As it will
        be a struggle for most municipalities to provide the minimum conditions,
        and ensure the involvement of the major role-players from within
        municipal government, and as participation is a right but not a duty of
        residents, the ability to actively encourage public participation at
        community level will be limited in most places.
        Active encouragement should therefore focus on those social groups
        which are not well organised and which do not have the power to
        articulate their interests publicly. This could mean poverty groups, or
        women, or specific age groups (youth, orphans, aged people). The
        municipality has to identify the groups and determine appropriate ways
        of ensuring their representation in the Representative IDP Forum.
        
          - Guidelines on phasing Public Participation
 
        
        Public participation is not equally relevant and appropriate in each
        stage of planning, and not all participation procedures are equally
        suitable for each planning step. To limit participation costs, to avoid
        participation fatigue, and to optimise the impact of participation, the
        mechanisms of participation will have to differ from stage to stage. The
        following guidelines can help municipalities to decide on appropriate
        tools for the right step:
        
          
            | Planning phase | 
            Required intensity of public
              participation | 
            Mechanisms | 
          
          
            | Analysis | 
            PPP | 
            
              
                - Community and stakeholder meeting
 
                - Sample surveys (problem census, etc.)
 
                - Opinion polls
 
               
             | 
          
          
            | Strategies | 
            P | 
            
            - District level workshops of IDP committees, with
              representatives of sector departments and selected representatives
              of stakeholder organisations and resource people
 
              - Partly on district-level
 
  | 
          
          
            | Project Planning | 
            P
               PPP  | 
            
              
                - Technical sub-committees with few selected
              representatives of stakeholder organisations/civil society
 
                - Intensive dialogue between technical subcommittees and affected
              communities/stakeholders
 
               
             | 
          
          
            | Integration | 
            P | 
            
              
                - By Representative IDP Forum
 
               
             | 
          
          
            | Approval | 
            PPP | 
            
              
                - Broad public discussion/consultation process within
              all community/stakeholder organisations
 
                - Opportunity for comments from residents
 
               
             | 
          
          
            | Monitoring | 
            PP | 
            
              
                - By Representative IDP Forum
 
               
             | 
          
        
        
        
        
        More about the  Roles and Responsibilities of District and
        Local Municipalities, the  Planning Approach and
        Methodology, and Strategies (Part
        1 and Part 2) in the IDP approach
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