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South Africa is a developing nation; infrastructure is being upgraded, new housing developments are frequently springing up, and different industries are quick to adopt new technology to keep up with the rest of the world. While we see this advancement in development, it does not come without its environmental impacts on the surrounding environment. Environmental Impact Assessments (EIA’s) play an important role in ensuring the environmental and social impacts are mitigated as much as possible. Equally as important is including the voice of the public in the EIA process.
Reputation
Matters has launched its public participation service to support environmental
practitioners and developers with the public participation process.
Reputation
Manager and sustainability specialist at Reputation Matters, Chris Bischoff
elaborates on their new service, “We have been involved in the public
participation element with past clients and we have seen the value that good
media coverage has towards sharing information with the public.
Our EIA
public participation service is designed to achieve media coverage that
highlights the projects benefits. We also include a public survey to collect
comments from affected stakeholders and to include all public concerns and
recommendations in the environmental management plan. Lastly, based on the
public feedback on the proposed development, we will guide the project
management team and EIA practitioners on how best to communicate with
interested stakeholders based on their preferred communication means.”
The purpose of public participation is to provide a source
of information for the public about the EIA and proposed development. It also
allows stakeholders to register as interested and affected parties (I&AP’s)
to submit their comments, concerns and recommendations. Public participation is
a vital component to the EIA process and will largely influence the Department
of Environmental Affairs’ decision to approve a development based on the EIA.
“We want to ensure that the public participation aspect goes
beyond the minimum requirements; our service is designed for this. Our team has
extensive public relations and stakeholder engagement experience, along with a
comprehensive understanding of the EIA process in South Africa,” says Bischoff.
For more
information about Reputation Matters and their new EIA public participation
service, get in touch with Chris Bischoff at chris@reputationmatters.co.za
or visit www.reputationmatters.co.za.
Follow Reputation Matters on Facebook (@yourreputationmatters) or Twitter
(@ReputationIsKey).
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Released by
Reputation Matters
Media contact:
Chris Bischoff
081 435 2917
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