<--- Back to contents Chapter 4 - Environmental LawPROBLEM 1: Making complaints about environmental problemsA. Industrial fumesA small factory in your neighbourhood is burning something that gives off fumes and clouds of smoke that make you feel ill. What can you do?Write a letter to the committee in the municipality that deals with environmental issues, reporting the matter and asking them to investigate. B. Raw sewageA sewerage treatment plant regularly overflows and raw sewerage is pumped into a river where children play. What can you do?Write a letter of complaint to the Department of Water Affairs and Forestry, and to the committee in the municipality that deals with water affairs. C. Local DevelopmentYour municipality is making a decision about a development that will change the environment in the area. You feel certain principles of NEMA haven't been followed in the planning process and you are afraid that the development will go ahead. What can you do?- Approach the full time council officials, like the Town Planning Department, and explain your concern. Ask for information about the development and which committees will be deciding the issue.
- Go to the committee(s).
- If these committees don't respond to your recommendations, write to the council executive committee. Warn them if you believe that they did not follow the right procedures or went against NEMA. Tell them you might go to court and challenge their decision.
Wait for the response to your complaint. If it goes against you, think about appealing, or applying for conciliation, and only then going to court to set the decision aside.
PROBLEM 2: Appealing against government environment decisions
The government plans to use land in a certain way and you think is going to have a bad affect on the environment. What can you do?Write a letter appealing against the decision. In your letter: - explain your complaint in detail
- say which NEMA environmental principle/s have been disobeyed
- say which law has been broken say why you think the decision is unreasonable
If you are not satisfied with the result of your appeal you can ask the government to find and pay for a conciliator to try to solve the dispute.
PROBLEM 3: Complaining to the Director General
A group of people have been burning large numbers of tyres in an open field in order to sell the steel that is found inside the tyres. Your municipality has been unable to catch them or stop them burning the tyres. The land owner cannot control the tyre burners either. What can you do? First complain to the municipality and then the provincial government. If you are not satisfied with the steps taken by the municipality or provincial government, you should write to the Director General or provincial head of department. You must: - write a statement of the facts of the complaint
- add copies of all letters of complaint to other government officials and answers received
- add maps, photographs or video evidence, medical evidence of injury, and so on, if you have this
If you make a complaint to the Director General or provincial head, they must investigate the case and tell the polluter to take reasonable steps to stop the problem by a certain date. If you are not satisfied with the result of your complaint you can ask the government to find and pay for a conciliator to try to solve the dispute.
PROBLEM 4: Applying for conciliation or arbitration
Government decides to allow a dam to be built that will destroy many villages and natural areas. A study was done on the likely impact on the environment (environmental impact assessment). But the environmental impact assessment report does not take into account cultural needs, like the fact that the dam will flood graves and religious sites. the local community is against the dam development because of this. The community and the government cannot resolve their differences. What can you do?Write a letter to the minister, member of provincial executive council or municipal council (whichever one is concerned with the dispute), and ask them to refer the dispute to a conciliator or facilitator. If the parties cannot agree, the conciliator can ask the two parties whether they would like the case to go to arbitration. The arbitrators decision will then be final.
PROBLEM 5: Harm to the environment
Workers can refuse work that harms the environmentYou work for a doctor and your work includes cleaning up and throwing away waste. One day the doctor tells you to throw a large amount of medical waste in a nearby field. You refuse to do this. The doctor threatens to dismiss you. What can you do?You can tell the doctor that NEMA says you cannot be dismissed for refusing to do this. Reporting activities that harm the environmentYou work for a company that grows vegetables. One of your bosses is secretly using a banned pesticide on one of the farms in order to grow more vegetables. What can you do?You should report this to someone senior in the company. If the activity carries on, you can report it to a committee of parliament or the provincial legislature, to the Public Protector, Attorney General or the Human Rights Commission. NEMA helps protect you against being victimised for blowing the whistle on your boss |