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Outdated, unconstitutional bylaws of former Cape Town municipalities repealed

03 June 2025

The City is pleased to announce that bylaws adopted by former municipalities in what is now the City of Cape Town metro have been repealed. The Bylaw on the Repeal of Bylaws that were Adopted by Former Municipalities, 2025, has been published in the Provincial Gazette today, Wednesday, 4 June 2025. With the promulgation of this bylaw 1 029 outdated and unconstitutional bylaws of erstwhile municipalities have been repealed.

Before 1996, the City of Cape Town consisted of 30 separate small municipalities which were amalgamated into the six larger municipalities of Helderberg, Tygerberg, Blaauwberg, South Peninsula, Oostenberg and the City of Cape Town.

In 2000, the six larger municipalities were dissolved to establish the City of Cape Town Metropolitan Municipality as we know it today.

All the former municipalities adopted bylaws applicable to their area of jurisdiction, meaning that there were different bylaws applicable in different parts of Cape Town. The City of Cape Town has adopted a bylaw to repeal and replace these older bylaws. Some of the old bylaws repealed through this process date back to the 1890s. Also, some of these bylaws addressed matters that are no longer applicable, or fall outside of local government’s mandate, for example radio antennas, traditional beer and guns, firearms and explosions. 

‘This is the third and final bylaw of its kind. It took many years of thorough research to complete the investigation of all of the bylaws adopted over a period of more than 110 years by former municipalities that now make up the City of Cape Town,’ said the City Manager, Lungelo Mbandazayo.

Prior to this latest promulgation, two bylaws repealed bylaws adopted by the former municipalities:
• The Repeal Bylaw of 2007 repealed 514 outdated bylaws
• The Repeal Bylaw of 2016 repealed 302 outdated bylaws

‘With the third Repeal Bylaw of 2025 we have repealed another 213 outdated bylaws. This process is now complete, and we can safely say there is not a single outdated or unconstitutional bylaw left on our books,’ said Mbandazayo.

 
End

Published by:
City of Cape Town, Media Office

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