![]() |
||
| Weekly news from the City of Cape Town's website No.15: 9 December 2008 | ||
| This is the last issue of the City's weekly e-newsletter for the year. The first issue of 2009 will be sent out in the week beginning 19 January. We would like to take this opportunity to wish our subscribers well over the festive season. | ||
|
New homes for Tafelsig residents
There were tears of happiness as the first 40 residents of the new Tafelsig Housing Project in Mitchells Plain received their keys at a ceremony attended by Executive Mayor Helen Zille on Friday, 5 December 2008. (More) City extends a helping hand to youth at risk and street children via performing arts programme The City of Cape Town is extending funding via its Performing Arts Working for Youth at Risk and Street Children Programme to NGOs and organisations that care for street children and youth at risk. (More)
|
Cape Town wins 'Best World City' award
Cape Town has received yet another prestigious international travel award – it has been named the Best World City in the 2008 Telegraph Travel Awards. The British daily newspaper conducted the poll among 40,000 of its readers. (More) |
|
Festive season plan swings into action
The City of Cape Town has launched its Festive Season Safety Plan to ensure that it is ready for the expected influx of visitors to the city. Every year thousands of domestic and international tourists, as well as local residents, visit Cape Town and its many attractions during the summer holiday season... (More) |
||
City promises safer cycling on our roadsCllr Elizabeth Thompson, City of Cape Town Mayoral Committee Member for Transport, has assured commuter and recreational cyclists that the City is committed to non-motorised transport, and would consider new by-laws to make roads safer for cyclists. (More) |
||
Help the City update its integrated transport planThe City of Cape Town aims to provide residents and businesses with a world-class, sustainable transport system that moves people and goods effectively, efficiently, safely and affordably. At the moment, however, more and more people are using private cars, and ‘rush hour’ is almost three hours long. (More) |
||
|
Useful links: |
||
|
Click here to unsubscribe.
© City of Cape Town,
2008, | Copyright | Privacy | Disclaimer |
|
||