Irish Water to cut 1,200 jobs by 2021

Irish Water has a target of €1.1bn of savings by 2021

Irish Water has a target of €1.1bn of savings by 2021

Irish Water has said that it is planning to cut 1,200 people from its workforce over the next six years. 

The company expects that a voluntary redundancy scheme will be required at some point to achieve its target.

The amalgamation of the water services functions and employees of 34 local authorities left Irish Water substantially over-staffed.

It is under constant pressure to reduce costs.

It has a target of €1.1bn of savings by 2021.

This morning in a presentation to stakeholders Irish Water says that one third of those savings will come from reducing staff numbers.

The company says the 1,200 jobs to go by 2021 will be in addition to the 300 jobs that have been cut since last year.

Up to this point, the reductions have been achieved without redundancies - through natural attrition and not filling roles that have become vacant.

Irish Water says it will continue this approach but that a voluntary redundancy scheme will also be needed to reduce the numbers.

Meanwhile, the CEO of Ervia, Irish Water’s parent company, has said Irish Water will improve water supplies.

Speaking on RTÉ’s Morning Ireland, Michael McNicholas said that Irish Water will be investing €5.5bn in order to improve wastewater infrastructure, eliminate all boil water notices, eliminate discharge of raw sewage into bathing water, reduce the level of leakage by 10% and significantly improve the drinking and waste water capacity across the country.

He added that it will also restructure its service delivery model and reduce staff levels.

"We're going to do that, first of all by moving from 31 local authorities down to a single national utility which creates economies of scale.

"That allows centralised functions, it allows us to regionalise things and that allows us to take some of those jobs out. We're also going to invest in technology that allows us to run our treatment plants differently.

"It allows us to retrain and re-skill people and it allows us to move to the kind of level that a modern utility will have in terms of staffing."

Mr McNicholas also said that nearly 54% of people are projected to pay the second Irish Water bill - an increase of 10% on the first billing cycle.

Sinn Féin's finance spokesperson has said it would be better if Irish Water concentrated on fixing leaks rather than cutting staffing levels.

Speaking on the same programme, Pearse Doherty said that Irish Water's priorities were wrong.

He said: "The best way to drive efficiencies is to deal with the treated water that is being lost through the system day in, day out.

"We know the type of money that is being spent by Irish Water putting pipes into the ground which is minimal compared to the costs of putting water meters outside people's homes or indeed in consultancies or other costs associated with Irish Water.

"The priorities of Irish Water are all wrong."

He added that the plan outlined by Irish Water today is not permissible under law at this time.

Original article RTE Oct 7, 2015



Buncrana Together

This is a kick in the teeth to SIPTU who represent local county council water workers. Wonder what Jack O'Conner and the SIPTU Cork conference thinks about that?  The SIPTU conference is taking place at the moment in Cork City. 

2021 is about the time the Service Level Agreement between County Councils and Irish Water runs out and all local water workers' jobs will be at risk.



Boyd Barrett urges Siptu to end Labour affiliation

People Before Profit TD says union should decide on party support on a case by case basis

Richard Boyd Barrett said Labour has ‘imposed crushing austerity on working people’. Photograph: Dara Mac Donaill / The Irish Times

Richard Boyd Barrett said Labour has ‘imposed crushing austerity on working people’. Photograph: Dara Mac Donaill / The Irish Times

People Before Profit TD Richard Boyd Barrett has urged Siptu delegates to end their traditional affiliation with the Labour Party.

The four-day Siptu biennial national delegate conference begins in Cork today. A resolution to disaffiliate from the Labour Party will be debated on Wednesday.

“Labour have abandoned some of their key pledges to their own voters and have imposed crushing austerity on working people,” Mr Boyd-Barrett told The Irish Times on Monday.

“It’s hard to understand how Sitpu would maintain an affiliation with a party that has done all that. We think the affiliation should be broken.”

The Dún Laoghaire TD said the Union should provide financial support to political figures in a “democratic” way.

He said members of the Union should decide which candidates or political parties they wanted to support on a case by case basis every time there was an election.

A Labour Party spokesman said the issue was a matter for Siptu.

Siptu president Jack O’Connor, speaking to Newstalk this morning, confirmed he would vote Labour in the upcoming general election.

“I will be voting for the Labour Party. I’m a member of the Labour Party. I’ve never considered leaving it or threatened to leave it and I never will,” Mr O’Connor said.

“But I do recognise that we have to build alliances on the Left. We have to build alliances with groups on the Independent Left and people in the other parties that believe they’re on the Left.

“My only concern is that that work is not sufficiently progressed enough to offer a cohesive alternative to the people in the forthcoming election.”

The motion at the Siptu conference will be proposed by Kieran Allen, chairman of the UCD section committee.

Mr Allen wants to see all unions adopt an “open door” strategy to promoting their policies within political structures.

“This could mean backing a variety of Left candidates from different parties, provided they agreed to promote union policies,” he said.

Minister for the Environment and deputy leader of the Labour Party Alan Kelly expressed confidence at the weekend that the affiliation between the country’s largest union and his party would remain in place.

He was speaking on RTE’s Week in Politics programme on Sunday.

Original article by Mary Minihan Irish Times Oct 5, 2015


Buncrana Together

Siptu general secretary and former Labour Party councillor Joe O'Flynn sits on Irish Water board and receives over €15,700 per year for doing so.  See 'Irish Water board unveiled amid claims of hypocrisy',  Irish Independent 21/1/2015 '.  

Also SIPTU represents all local county council water workers who now operate under the Service Level Agreement and are contracted to Irish Water through the County Councils.


Three in court over Waterford water protest

Three people have appeared in court in connection with a water charge protest in Waterford city.

Derek Palmer, 22, from Cathal Brugha Place, Dungarvan, Francesa Veronica Dambra, 39, of Central Avenue, Lisduggan in Waterford city and 68-year-old Patrick Rochford from Ponds Fields, New Ross were before Waterford District Court.

Mr Palmer and Ms Dambra were granted bail on their own bonds of €300, with a condition attached that neither unlawfully interfere with waterworks or related installation in Waterford city and/or county.

Solicitor Hilary Delahunty, who represented all three, said Mr Rochford would not agree to undertake the same bail conditions as he said he had not actually been protesting but became embroiled in a debate with gardaí.

He was given bail under other conditions.

Legal aid was granted with respect to the three people and the matter was adjourned to 20 October.

Eleven people in total were arrested this morning on public order offences as contractors from Irish Water attempt to install water metres in a housing estate in the city.

The arrests took place at Laurel Park in the Cherrymount housing estate in Waterford city.

Eight people were questioned at Waterford and Tramore Garda stations and files are being prepared for the Director of Public Prosecutions.

Article RTE Thurs 24 Sept, 2015


Scenes from Waterford protest taken from Suzanne Ryan facebook page.

Quote from Suzanne on her facebook page
"Out of the barracks now after being arrested under section 12 of the water services act.11 people in total arrested here in Waterford today.I will post pics in a few mins and you can see what IW were doing in Cherrymount.Taken to the barracks,stripsearched,fingerprinted and mugshot taken and put in a cell.One of the protestors was alone in the cell with one of the bullies..think you can probably guess who by now..this so called guard produced a knife and cut the belt from our friends trousers..this is what we're dealing with here."