News / Local
Bulawayo vendors bemoan licensing delays
23 Feb 2021 at 01:48hrs | Views
BULAWAYO informal traders have rapped the local authority for taking long to license their vending stalls to enable them to resume their operations.
The issue came out last Friday during a virtual meeting organised by the Bulawayo Vendors and Traders Association (BVTA) in partnership with the Bulawayo City Council (BCC).
BVTA president Alex Ndlovu said the closure of markets in April last year had condemned hundreds of city vendors to penury.
"We bemoan the slow pace of licencing of vendors by the BCC. Our members were in the course of renewing their work licences, but the lockdown period disturbed the pace due to the closure of council vending licensing offices," Ndlovu said.
"The decentralisation exercise of vendors from the central business district (CBD) to the suburbs is also not visible," he said.
In April last year, council revealed plans to relocate more than 600 vendors who were trading at the Fifth Avenue market stalls in Bulawayo's CBD to their places of residence. Council said their relocation would be informed by the existing vendors' database.
At the time, the local authority claimed to have identified five fresh farm produce distribution hubs and new vending sites for the relocated traders.
These were Emganwini Mupedzanhamo, Tshabalala Market, Pumula Old Market, Magwegwe North Market, Cowdray Park Terminus Market and New Magwegwe Market.
The council said it had also identified other bulk delivery sites that, however, required appropriate sanitary infrastructure or engagements with private owners before these markets could become operational.
These sites were Nkulumane Sekusile, Nkulumane Complex, Lobengula Konron Market, Burombo Beer Garden, Nkunzi Beer Garden, Luveve Terminus Site, Entumbane Complex, Entumbane Flea Market, Njube Market, Mabuthweni Market, Makokoba Market and Makokoba Efusini. Bulawayo has 144 vending sites with a capacity of 15 353 vending bays located in the city's 29 wards.
The issue came out last Friday during a virtual meeting organised by the Bulawayo Vendors and Traders Association (BVTA) in partnership with the Bulawayo City Council (BCC).
BVTA president Alex Ndlovu said the closure of markets in April last year had condemned hundreds of city vendors to penury.
"We bemoan the slow pace of licencing of vendors by the BCC. Our members were in the course of renewing their work licences, but the lockdown period disturbed the pace due to the closure of council vending licensing offices," Ndlovu said.
"The decentralisation exercise of vendors from the central business district (CBD) to the suburbs is also not visible," he said.
In April last year, council revealed plans to relocate more than 600 vendors who were trading at the Fifth Avenue market stalls in Bulawayo's CBD to their places of residence. Council said their relocation would be informed by the existing vendors' database.
At the time, the local authority claimed to have identified five fresh farm produce distribution hubs and new vending sites for the relocated traders.
These were Emganwini Mupedzanhamo, Tshabalala Market, Pumula Old Market, Magwegwe North Market, Cowdray Park Terminus Market and New Magwegwe Market.
The council said it had also identified other bulk delivery sites that, however, required appropriate sanitary infrastructure or engagements with private owners before these markets could become operational.
These sites were Nkulumane Sekusile, Nkulumane Complex, Lobengula Konron Market, Burombo Beer Garden, Nkunzi Beer Garden, Luveve Terminus Site, Entumbane Complex, Entumbane Flea Market, Njube Market, Mabuthweni Market, Makokoba Market and Makokoba Efusini. Bulawayo has 144 vending sites with a capacity of 15 353 vending bays located in the city's 29 wards.
Source - newsday