UWRA cleans up: the RAP project

The RAP cleaning project (Rapid Action Patrol) was started by UWRA to supplement Council’s cleaning service as Council’s service is inadequate to combat littering & dumping in Woodstock. We try to focus on dirt hotspots around Roodebloem Road, Mountain Road and clean the Woodstock Gateway.

In addition, UWRA envisaged the RAP project as a job creation project.  The RAPpers get a temporary job, money and food and eventually we hope that they move on to more permanent employment. So far the first RAPpers have already moved on to better jobs.  In this way we hope that the RAP project will also become an upliftment project.

RAP has gone through some changes since its inception.  We learned that even a small scale project like this requires hands-on management.

The project was handed over to the very competent Karen Cain, a Woodstock resident and active community member, during the course of 2008.  The project is financially supported by these Woodstock businesses: Skyrove, Cape Town Deco Lodge, Roodebloem Studios, Jamaicamecrazy and Amazing Spaces.

RAP now employs two Zimbabweans from the Haven Night Shelter. The RAPpers clean once a week and are paid R100 each per day, in addition to receiving a food parcel.

It is our hope that both of these men will find better jobs.  Karen Cain knows each one of them well and can therefore give reliable references & character witnesses.

You may be interested to know more about them:

MATTEUS

Matteus is a 36-year old Zimbabwean who fled to SA because of political violence.  Matteus and his wife Patience had to leave their 5 year old daughter, Violet, in Zimbabwe. Patience slept on the street but fortunately she was eventually picked up and taken to a Haven night shelter.

From there Patience managed to organise for Violet to be taken to Johannesburg.  The Haven helped her to have Violet brought down to Cape Town by a truckdriver.   For a while Violet stayed with a foster family in Woodstock.  Patience & Matteus recently had their second child, Antony Daniel.

Matteus is employed once a week as a Rapper.  In addition he makes & sells frames.  His business has steadily grown, in fact so much so that he has been able to move his family to a rented room in Plumstead.  

The family is legally in SA although as with the other RAPper, Divine, the bribe payable to Nyanga Home Affairs Office is a monthly expense.   The corruption at Nyanga Home Affairs has been reported on extensively in newspapers and on radio.  Matteus and Divine need to pay R300 per month, essentially a bribe to Home Affairs in return for legal residence.

Matteus would like to do a hospitality course.  In the meantime he has managed to get a stand in Simonstown where he sells his frames as well as vegetables.

The Haven nightshelter has received some funds from the Rotary Club.  With this the Haven buys good nutritious food which Matteus then makes up into daily or weekly food parcels.

If you would like to assist Matteus please buy one of his frames.  You can contact him on 084 871 5313. The frames are also exhibited at Cape Town Deco Lodge, 22 Roodebloem Road (entrance round the corner on Hilyard Street).

DIVINE

Divine also fled Zimbabwe due to political unrest and ended up at the Haven nightshelter.  Like Matteus he pays a R300/month bribe to Nyanga Home Affairs Office.

Divine has recently completed a hospitality course with Job Start, a Cape Town based NGO.  He is currently looking for a job as a waiter or barman.  However, he worked as a vet in Zimbabwe and his real love is still animals.  Divine is a responsible, caring person who has been put in charge of all the animals at the night shelter, clipping fur, defleaing and deworming them and generally looking after them.

Although still living at the night shelter, he is currently looking for a job at a hotel, guesthouse or lodge so that he can move out.

Divine would like to live on a farm and work with animals.  If you would like to assist him you could hire him as dog walker or animal sitter.  Contact Divine, or leave a message with Karen Cain at the Haven Night shelter, on tel. (021) 671 4209.

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Neighbours building? Check the plans now!

When your neighbour starts building a new house, check the building plans immediately. If there is any problem with them – and particularly if the value of your property could be prejudiced – seek legal advice on how to put a stop to the construction work without delay.

In a recent High Court case concerning the construction of a 5-storey house in an area of Cape Town with a 3-storey limit (presumably a loss of sea view was the problem), the Court remarked that you “are required to check actively for building plans every time any building work commences on a neighbour’s property.” Delay may disentitle you not only from having the approval of the plans set aside, but also from stopping construction in the interim.

Having said that, if you are the owner who is building, think carefully about starting work if approval of your plans is in any way open to challenge – take advice on whether you should first get the written consent of all neighbours.

The case in question shows the danger of proceeding regardless. The plan approval followed the granting of departures from zoning regulations and relaxations of title deed restrictions and, although the neighbours only realised that there was a problem after a considerable amount of construction had already taken place (some R13.4m worth), the Court found that the neighbour had given plausible reasons for the delay in acting, and ordered a halt to all building work. Worse, a demolition order is threatened if the plan approval is set aside.

(From newsletter by Maurice Phillips – Wisenberg)

UWRA COMMENT:

Complaints from residents about building work in their area will be taken up with City Council by UWRA and this could lead to work being stopped and/or delayed.

It is always advisable to consult UWRA and the Aesthetics Committee before your start renovations or building work. We can advise you on how to go about it in line with the heritage criteria for Woodstock. And again: if the plans are referred to us by Council at a later stage, it could lead to significant delays.

So consult us right from the beginning.

Go Green

  • Give green gifts. Give an experience like a Wild Card, theatre tickets, or items sourced from local markets and vintage shops. Low-energy gadgets like a wind-up headlight or USB desk light are cool. Trees and plants make great gifts too – they’re beautiful and good at absorbing CO2. Be sure to choose indigenous trees or shrubs that don’t demand loads of water. Or give from your kitchen – fresh herbs, home made lemonade, rusks or biscuits.
  • Think before you print. Having a party? Save paper by SMS-ing or e-mailing invitations. When you do use paper, remember to recycle – it saves trees, water and energy, and reduces air pollution by 70%.
  • Wrap it up. Use posters, clothing, magazines or newspaper pages as recycled gift wrap.
  • Think organic and local. When you’re cooking, opt for free range, organic and local foods. Organic crops build soil fertility and reduce chemical pollution, while buying foods produced in your area helps stimulate the local economy and reduces your carbon footprint.
  • Go nuts. A potted nut or fruit Christmas tree can be replanted in the garden and can be enjoyed for years to come.
  • Save a heap. Feed the soil in your garden and reduce household waste by starting a compost heap. You can add most kitchen waste, newspapers (not magazines or colour printed pages), weeds, grass cuttings and leaves to the heap. Or start a worm farm to ‘recycle’ kitchen waste into garden fertiliser.
  • Re-use, recycle. Use some of your time at home to set up a household recycling routine: Glass, paper, tins and some plastics can be recycled at your municipal or nearest recycling facility. Make a point of re-using plastic shopping bags or invest in re-usable bags.
  • Switch over. Energy-saving compact fluorescent lights use up to 70% less energy and last up to six times longer than incandescent globes.
  • Cool down. A geyser uses more energy than any other appliance, so turn its temperature down to 60ºC. You’ll also use up to 40% less energy if you lower your washing machine’s wash temperature to 30ºC.
  • Discover. Road trips, cycle tours and hiking trips are low carbon holidays.

Excite Rezoning application

The business of Excite Taxis has been operating from No. 111 – 113 Mountain Road (corner of Palmerston Road) for quite a while now. These properties are zoned for residential use only. The owner has now applied for rezoning to Special Business Use Zone.

UWRA has stated in the Woodstock Development Framework that Woodstock should remain a residential area and business creep into the area must be avoided. Rezoning of the above properties might open the door for all kinds of other businesses operating there in the future: totes, workshops, garages, places of assembly.

Some time ago we asked the Woodstock residents for comment and we only received responses, which stated that people were against the rezoning.

UWRA has officially submitted a letter of objection to the rezoning to the relevant council department (see below). The process will now follow its course and we will let you know of the outcome as soon as we hear anything.

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Safety Hints

Some safety precautions you can take in and around your house: 

  • High Walls are NOT safe. A high see-through fence around the house with lockable gates is much safer due to the advantage of improved visibility.
  • Ensure all doors are locked and windows closed when you are not at home. Never leave keys in the door.
  • Lock all tools away – ladders, axes, spades, picks, screwdrivers, hammers can be used in an attack or to break into your house.
  • Get into the habit of not immediately falling asleep after switching off the lights.
  • You should not be visible in the bedroom from the outside when you are asleep.
  • Always keep a torch nearby at night and when you use it, ensure that you do not give away your position.
  • When you are out late in the evening or at night, be aware of your surroundings and if you don’t feel safe or comfortable, contact your security provider (they should come to your assistance) or the Woodstock SAPS Sector 2 Patrol Vehicle or Woodstock Station – see numbers below.
  • Get to know your neighbours and get their phone numbers. Your neighbour is closest when you need help and good neighbours can support and help each other. Also inform each other about anything suspicious.
  • Get a whistle and blow it loudly when something happens. People will come to your assistance.
  • Vary your daily routine, because you never know who is watching you.
  • Involve employees, as they are part of the family/team and must be involved in maintaining security on an equal footing.
  • Do not employ casual workers without a reference.
  • Do not leave valuable items in your car!!!
  • These are the essential phone numbers you must have programmed into your phone and stuck to your fridge or front door:
    • Woodstock SAPS Patrol Vehicle Sector 2 – 082 443 5129
    • Woodstock SAPS Shift Captain – 082 469 2522
    • Sector Manager Constable Prins – 082 302 6789
    • Number of your security provider – ADT, City Bowl, Chubb, etc.
    • Number of your neighbour(s)

Also: report all crime – even if it seems trivial to you. Woodstock Police need this information to effectively combat crime in our area!

Vine Road – Update November 2008

The property at 2 Vine Road, on the corner of Salisbury and Vine Roads, has now been demolished (see other posts about this property).

UWRA has made contact with the owner/developer to find out what he plans to do with the plot. We want to establish a positive relationship so that we can give constructive comment at an early stage. The developer has promised that someone would contact us to discuss the plans, but so far we have not heard or seen anything.

UWRA has also kept close contact with the various council departments about future plans for the plot. Apparently plans for a 4 or 5 storey block of flats have been submitted, but not finalised yet. Council officials have assured us that the plans will be send to UWRA for comment.

We will keep you in the loop and let the community know when the plans arrive.

My First House: Helen Zille

Mayor of Cape Town and Leader of the Democratic Alliance, Helen Zille, is standing outside her first home, a semidetached house in Earl Street, Woodstock. She’s chatting to delighted locals and signing autographs while listening patiently to the residents’ host of gripes on subjects ranging from unfair dismissal to electricity price hikes. ‘Oh, please don’t call me Madam Mayor, it reminds me of the old South Africa. I’m Helen,’ she declares cheerfully.

‘I’ve always loved the sense of community here,’ Helen says. Pointing to a house in the adjoining road, she continues: ‘The woman who lived there was always claiming she could smell a fire. It became a regular neighbourhood event. We all stood outside, watching the fire trucks and drinking tea. It was always a false alarm.’

The suburb of Woodstock is home to charming Victorian properties, the Old Biscuit Mill organic market, a trendy décor route and several new architectural developments. When she bought her first house here in 1979, Helen was the political correspondent for the Rand Daily Mail, where she made a name for herself by exposing the circumstances surrounding the death of Steve Biko, founder of the Black Consciousness Movement, at the hands of apartheid police. ‘Female journalists earned a lot less than their male counterparts were paid, and I thought the purchase price of R11 000 for the house was a huge amount of money. I got financial help from my dad,’ Helen says.
Restoring the dilapidated house was a labour of love. ‘I even hired a blowtorch and stripped the old paint off the front door. I still have the scars to prove it,’ she says, holding out her hands for inspection. She agonised over paint colours. ‘Eventually, I painted the exterior white, peach and…’ she points to a passing tabby, ‘that exact shade of pale ginger.’ When Peter Sullivan, the former political correspondent for The Star, bought the semi next door, he painted parts of the exterior bright red and yellow. ‘It looked like Shoprite. He did it just to be aspris; bloody-minded male,’ she laughs.

Helen introduces herself to Lynda Nielsen, the current owner of her old home. ‘I know who you are,’ Lynda says. ‘When I bought the house, I was given a list of previous owners, and I knew if there was a problem I could phone you.’

‘Yes, of course you can; everyone else does,’ Helen responds, adding: ‘Recently, I took a call at one in the morning from a sobbing woman who was having a dispute with her husband. My husband woke up and muttered: “I wish I could complain to the mayor every time I had an argument with my wife.”‘
Accepting Lynda’s invitation, Helen steps into the house and muses: ‘How many times I’ve crossed this threshold.’ There are two little bedrooms, and a bathroom where Helen would make notes in chalk on a wall she had painted in green ‘blackboard’ paint. She also had a spiral staircase installed in order to gain access to the open-plan living-dining-kitchen area, which is in the basement.

If Helen is delighted that the quarry tiles she laid are in such good nick, she’s even more ecstatic that her tiny gas stove is still here – and in working order. ‘I bought all this stuff second-hand on Main Road, including a little fridge that now stands in my son’s cottage – it’s also still working,’ she says.

In the postage-stamp garden, both the bougainvillea and hibiscus she planted are thriving. ‘Look, there’s my mountain view,’ she exclaims. It’s one of those rare sunny days the Cape winter offers up like a reconciliatory gift after weeks of grey weather, and the corner of Table Mountain is clearly visible against the cloudless sky.

Back inside, Helen lingers at Lynda’s desk. ‘This is exactly where I put my desk,’ Helen says. ‘And I get such a chill, because I sat here and made two sobering phone calls: one to break off an engagement, and another to tell my mother not to fly out for the wedding… And it was through that window that I saw a stalker peeping in at me.’

But Helen was happy in this house. ‘Such a big part of me is still here,’ she says. Back on the street, she points out the lamppost that her husband, Johan Maree, would bump with monotonous regularity when reverse parking. ‘There must have been a blind spot in his rear-view mirror,’ she comments. ‘I used to listen out for the “ding”, and when I heard it, I knew he’d arrived.’ After Helen and Johan were married, they moved to Johan’s house in Observatory. ‘I sold the Woodstock house for R50 000 at the beginning of 1984. I thought it was a fortune,’ Helen says.

For the past 24 years, Helen, Johan and their two sons have lived on the border of Mowbray and Rosebank, just below UCT. ‘It’s been a functional home,’ Helen says. ‘We converted the garage into a cottage, where we store the children. The cars stand outside,’ she jokes.
Her advice for first-time property buyers? ‘I suppose it should be “position, position, position”, though I’ve always bought property based on the vibe of an area and never with financial gain in mind,’ Helen says. ‘If I had done, I would have originally bought in Tamboerskloof – but I don’t think that way.’ In fact, just before Helen bought in Woodstock, she had purchased a cottage in Harfield Village, Claremont. ‘I didn’t have a lot of knowledge about Cape Town, having come from Johannesburg. But, when I heard that forced removals had taken place there, I never even moved in – I just sold it on at a loss.’

Woodstock was completely integrated, so Helen was happier buying here. ‘I felt so comfortable in this house, on this street,’ she recalls. The only downside was the neighbour in the house in front of Helen’s. Every day, in full view of her bedroom window, he would urinate in his garden. ‘That drove me crazy,’ she recalls. Maybe she should have complained to the mayor.  

(The Property Magazine – October 2008 – Words: Hedi Lampert Kemper)

Dilapidated Buildings Draft Policy

This is the first draft of a positive nature to address the many concerns we have around dilapidated buildings.

Please scrutinize and forward any comments you have to the Ward Councillor: CedricReginald.Thomas@capetown.gov.za or Gregory.Todd@capetown.gov.za.  

problem_buildings_dilapidated_b_uildings

The Traffic issue

Traffic problems in Woodstock, and notably Roodebloem Road, have increased. These were discussed at the AGM in Feb 2008. Specific problems include: cars not stopping at pedestrian crossings, speeding in Roodebloem Rd, parking on pedestrian crossings (especially in front of Power Tools) and parking dangerously on corners.

UWRA has contacted Mr Frank Lock, who heads the Traffic Department for our area, on a number of occasions to enquire what the Traffic Department could do in our area. To date UWRA has received no sensible reply from Mr Lock. However, residents have noticed some activity from traffic officials very recently. The intervention has been minimal, and a far cry from what is actually required to address the behaviour that poses a genuine threat to safety.

Concerns are the increasing traffic flows through our area, along with the extra parking required by restaurant customers in Roodebloem Road, especially at night. Some people have even taken to parking in front of residents’ driveways and garages.

The Observatory Civic Association has presented a traffic management plan to Council and UWRA is contemplating if the same should be done for Woodstock. UWRA welcomes your suggestions on how to reduce traffic problems. Please post your thoughts here or send them to uwra@woodstock.org.za or PO Box 138, Woodstock, 7915.

Share your Woodstock Story

We will never get tired of telling people that Woodstock is an awesome place to live in. But don’t take our word for it, read how some new Woodstockers have experienced their first couple of months in Woodstock. In short: they love this place. |

Do you have a good story to tell about Woodstock? Please share it with us. We would love to hear from you. Send your story to: uwra@woodstock.org.za.