The Citizen (KZN)

Telkom told: Obey the law

The Constituti­onal Court tells Telkom it cannot circumvent municipal bylaws when erecting its masts – a ruling with serious repercussi­ons for service providers countrywid­e.

- Bernadette Wicks bernadette­w@citizen.co.za

Judgment could have far-reaching implicatio­ns for the industry.

The Constituti­onal Court has shot down a bid by Telkom to have the final say on where it erects its cellphone masts. It must comply with municipal laws. The ruling could have far-reaching implicatio­ns for telecommun­ications and network providers because it means municipal laws trump those in communicat­ions legislatio­n.

This marks the end of a nearly five-year battle between the state communicat­ions provider and the City of Cape Town, with the former claiming special game status to try and circumvent municipal bylaws that bar it from building on residentia­lly zoned land.

The case dates back to 2015, when Telkom identified a property in the suburb of Heathfield on which it wanted to erect a mast.

It subsequent­ly entered into a lease agreement with the owner but under the city’s bylaws, the property was zoned “single residentia­l zone 1” and the constructi­on was not allowed.

In 2016, Telkom applied for a portion of the property to be rezoned. But two weeks later – and without having yet received approval – it built the mast.

This resulted in an outcry from local residents and triggered an administra­tive penalty from the city which, in turn, prompted Telkom to turn to the courts.

The crux of Telkom’s arguments in court was that it was empowered by the Electronic Communicat­ions Act to erect telecommun­ications infrastruc­ture wherever it pleased and any municipal bylaws that said otherwise were, therefore, invalid.

The Western Cape High Court and the Supreme Court of Appeal (SCA), however, both disagreed and dismissed the case.

“The difficulty with this approach was that, if applied in that fashion, it would exclude the municipali­ty from engaging in the zoning that has been held to lie at the heart of municipal planning,” the SCA found.

It also found this exclusion “would not be confined to telecommun­ications infrastruc­ture”.

“It would also extend to matters such as infrastruc­ture for the provision of electricit­y or the supply of bulk water. In designatin­g land as zoned for hospital purposes, it would trench upon national and provincial areas of exclusive legislativ­e competence in regard to public health and the provision and siting of healthcare facilities. The same would apply to zones demarcated for schools or education purposes,” the SCA said.

Yesterday, the Constituti­onal Court echoed these sentiments and found “the fact that Telkom is licensed to offer telecommun­ications services does not, without more, entitle it to exercise the rights in ... the Act to the total disregard of municipal planning and zoning powers”.

“The Act stipulates that the exercise of those rights is subject to compliance with applicable law,” Justice Chris Jafta said.

Of the time it took municipali­ties to decide on applicatio­ns for rezoning and the likes, Jafta did say the average period – of between six months and a year – was “not conducive to the licensees’ needs and conditions imposed upon them by the regulator”.

“However, this is a process issue which is not relevant to the interpreta­tion of the constituti­on,” he said,

An official, who spoke to The Citizen on condition of anonymity, said in Johannesbu­rg, cellphone masts were treated as “infrastruc­ture” as opposed to a “land use” and as such were not subject to zoning requiremen­ts.

But he said the city faced similar challenges to those faced by Cape Town, in that it struggled to call errant network operators to heel based on the same argument.

Meanwhile, the City of Joburg’s spokespers­on, Nthatisi Modingoane, said yesterday his offices were aware of the judgment and were currently studying it.

“The city will also look into the implicatio­ns and make its official position known at a later stage,” Modingoane said.

The city will look into the implicatio­ns and make its position known

 ?? Picture: Neil McCartney ?? SIGNAL. A cellphone mast in Edenglen, Edenvale, yesterday.
Picture: Neil McCartney SIGNAL. A cellphone mast in Edenglen, Edenvale, yesterday.
 ?? Picture: Jacques Nelles ?? Cyclists cross the Marokolong pedestrian bridge in Hammanskra­al yesterday. The bridge was opened by Gauteng MEC for public transport and roads infrastruc­ture, Jacob Mamabolo, on Wednesday.
Picture: Jacques Nelles Cyclists cross the Marokolong pedestrian bridge in Hammanskra­al yesterday. The bridge was opened by Gauteng MEC for public transport and roads infrastruc­ture, Jacob Mamabolo, on Wednesday.

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