Wednesday, August 31, 2011

How am I doing?


If you are an Estate Agent operating in the retail residential market in South Africa, we invite you to participate in a confidential and voluntary information sharing programme.

The purose of the programme is to collect information about the market and trends within the market. The programme will not only give you information on how you are doing in relation to other agents in the market, it will also help you to set targets and track your preformance over time.

All you need to do is to submit your sales data on a monthly basis. The information is aggregated in such a way that no individual agent or agency is identifyable.

If you are interested in participating please complete this form and we will let you know what to do. If you have any queries please send an e-mail to proplib@tiscali.co.za

The saga continues.

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Tuesday, August 30, 2011

Ironic


It is ironic that this article appeared in the Star next to a LEAD SA article - "be the South Africa you want to be..." This is not the type of organisation that we wnat to be associated with the profession. Is it not time that some of the functions so inadequately managed by the EAAB be given back to the profession to manage? Surely there will be less of these unsavoury actions to contend with. Let the EAAB deal with customer complaints and the profession will do what it needs to do to deliver high quality estate agency and broking services witout being tarnished by the board's shenanigans.

Sunday, August 28, 2011

Who watches the Watchdog


Caught out once again - The EAAB just cannot get it right! This article appeared in the Sunday Times of 28/08/11.

Perhaps the officers should also write Proffessional Certification Exams, get NQF 4 certificates, be RPL'ed, be forced to pay for indemnity certificates, be subjected to anonymous whistleblowing systems and the like.

We just need less of these structures that have power over money they did not earn.

Bolani said: : "...the information about our activities has always been in the public domain" that's not the point - the point is using public money to benefit oneself! Doesn't he get it? Since when is he trying to be a motor car service technician?

Click on the photo to enlarge. (+)

Friday, August 26, 2011

Government Green paper moves SA closer to Government controlled Communism


Though foreigners get the nod on land ownership and government appears to have abandoned the notion that foreigners should not own any land in SA. it seems they are proposing that foreigners enjoy freehold title but with possible onerous conditions applied on for example coastal land and not being able to export all of what they produce on agricultural land and that land can only be owned in conjunction with local partners.

This, together with restricting freehold title for SA citizens, clearly indicate that the government is opposed to the idea of private land ownership in South Africa.

This will have a devastating impact on private initiative and wealth creation, not to mention the impact on the real estate industry in rural areas.

The green paper on land reform was approved by the Cabinet on Wednesday.

Again also, it seems as if there will be a bundle of regulations that the minister will be able to make without the kind of scrutiny that an act of parliament would go through. So again we are at the mercy of the administrators rather that the legislator.

If two imperatives for land reform were that the government has to "improve on past perspectives, without disrupting agricultural production and food security; and to avoid or minimise redistribution and restitution which do not generate sustainable livelihoods, employment and incomes", then the onerous processes involved in subdivision of land and all the regulations involved in transferring land ownership should be looked at. This is the writers view – rather than the top down approach proposed by the green paper.

It seems that the green paper will be made public next week. All are urged to help tranform the landscape of property ownership in SA, but not by giving a larger role for the Government but by strengthening individual property rights. One example are the RDP houses - the new owners to not get full title - they are for example not allowed to sell them. SA Blacks are being treated like second class citizens by their own government. This also shows the the government want more power and do not believe in individual land ownership with full rights. Is this what anti-apartheid activist really wanted - a disowned populace under an all powerful government?

(most of the factual information in this article was sourced from: http://www.businessday.co.za/articles/Content.aspx?id=151760 hartleyw@bdfm.co.za )



In the streets of Johannesburg.

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