Estate Living Magazine #liveyourbestlife - Issue 46 December 2019 | Page 30

D E V E L O P & I N V E S T PROPERTY PRACTITIONERS ACT: WHAT IT MEANS FOR DEVELOPERS The Property Practitioners Act has now been signed into law. What does it mean for property developers, and how will it change the way we all work? Early October 2019 saw the Property Practitioners Act of 2019 signed into law by President Cyril Ramaphosa. The new law was generally welcomed by property practitioners … even if there was initially some confusion about who exactly counts as a property practitioner! The new act was a long time in coming: it repealed the 43-year- old Estate Agency Affairs Act 112 of 1976, introducing important changes to the real estate industry (including regulating the buying, selling and renting of land and buildings). It puts in place better monitoring mechanisms, including small but significant changes like, for example, requiring inspectors to obtain warrants to enter premises. There was, inevitably, a whole load of debate around the new law. As industry body Rebosa (Real Estate Business Owners of South Africa) was quick to point out: ‘There is […] a long road ahead as the regulations must now be drafted, published for comment and finally approved by the minister. Only then will the bill be promulgated to become an act. Incidentally, it is even technically possible that it never gets to be promulgated.’ Rebosa CEO Jan le Roux went on to tell SAFM that the new act is more of a renovation than a complete overhaul of the old act. Before we unpack the act and what it means for estate developers, it’s worth checking the act’s definition of the term ‘property practitioner’. To sum up 25 lines of dense legalese, a property