Examples of Metropolitan municipalities in a sentence
The process of compiling this IDP was informed by the processes entailed in various pieces of legislation, the IDP Guide Packs and the Revised Framework for Municipalities outside Metropolitan municipalities and Secondary Municipalities, issued by the National Department of Cooperative Governance.
The process for the compilation of this Second Review of the Integrated Development Plan (2019/20) was guided by the processes entailed in various pieces of legislation, the IDP Guide Packs and the Revised Framework for Municipalities outside Metropolitan municipalities and Secondary Municipalities.
Metropolitan municipalities have already made progress in aligning their planning instruments with the budget through the BEPPs. The guidelines on the preparation of the BEPPs clearly articulate the relationship between the Municipal Spatial Development Framework (MSDF) and the IDP.
Metropolitan municipalities budgeted R1.2 billion in 2012/13 for the libraries function.
In order to achieve generalisability for the South African Metropolitan municipalities, a bigger sample must be used over the country.
There are three kinds of municipalities with varying responsibilities, powers and resources in Turkey: Metropolitan municipalities, district municipalities (within metropolitan areas), and municipalities in other urban localities.
Currently there is no study which has been done on the effectiveness of water loss projects in Metropolitan municipalities.
Metropolitan municipalities, in particular, have the responsibility to guide spatial development through urban planning instruments, infrastructure investments and service delivery programmes that shape the built environment of South African cities.
Metropolitan municipalities are those municipalities that have more than 500 000 voters and co-ordinates the delivery of services to the whole area which it governs.
This will be the case particularly with the bus and rail transport. Metropolitan municipalities shall facilitate the identification of accessible transport networks as well as corridors and link them to on-line infrastructure, in accordance with the guiding principles/recommendations of the NLTSF - towards achieving “reasonable accommodation”, as part of their transport planning processes.