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MY husband and I are now in our seventies and have elected to retire. We have sold our two businesses to new owners who will continue the successful trading relationship built up over the years.
We are proud to have been an integral part of the Wellington community and to have had the pleasure of bringing up our four children in this beautiful and picturesque town.
Whilst we shall always have fond and joyful recollections, it is with deep regret that there are still current and long resolved public issues which remain inspite our many attempts over the years to address these on the behalf of the public with various responsible(!) authorities.
We feel it pertinent to mention some of these so that those young entrepreneurs to follow can take these up and seek resolution.
Due to the large influx of customers on weekends, mainly farm workers, who had no public toilet facilities provided for them, we asked the municipality to develop their open plot on the corner of Main and Joubert Street. Instead the then muni-cipality simply erected a wall to keep everyone off their property.
After more vociferous nagging, they eventually agreed to build public toilets - directly facing the English church in Joubert Street - what a shame!
To compound the error, and against our strong advice, they then decided to build a night shelter on the same spot, within spitting distance of two bottle stores. They effectivly built a shelter for drunks, but even this has gone.
With the move to more demo-cratic dispensations in the past ten years, the Drakenstein Municipality immediately allowed (without sanction from the public) hawkers and street vendors to desecrate the pavements of our beautiful town.
Apparently the Municipality does not consider littering or the selling of open meat, fish and vegetables a health/hygiene issue.
Almost every corner has such unregulated vendors and on pension payout days we are invaded by even more vendors from the surrounding towns who set up their stalls and tables on the steps and surrounds of our Town Hall.
What a poor picture: surely a designated open area with demarcated zones for traders who pay for the right to use them, would be the right thing to do. This is what is being done in cities such as Cape Town.
This is an issue that publicly elected and committed councillors should be addressing.
We will not be surprised when the waves of younger shopkeepers start to toyi-toyi, demonstrate and show their feelings at the council buildings about their inaction on this matter.
Unfortunately our 70-year-old legs are not quite up to the physical demands thereof, but our spirit will fight on in support.
Ellie and Judy Gafen |