Irish Water has cost State €2bn

by Joe Leogue, Irish Examiner

Irish Water will have cost the State over €2bn by the end of the year, according to government projections.

Figures released to the Irish Examiner show the controversial utility will cost the State €844m in 2016 alone, when its operating subvention, capital contributions and the replacement revenue — provided by the State following the decision to suspend billing customers — are taken into consideration.

 

The State gave Irish Water €678m and €621m in 2014 and 2015 respectively in operating subventions and capital contributions, bringing the total cost to €2.143bn over the past three years.

The operating subventions from the Government were paid in respect of concessions Irish Water was to pass onto customers, such as free allowances for children.

The Department of Housing, Planning, Community and Local Government released the figures following a request for the total cost to the State in establishing Irish Water to date.

“The provision of State funding to Irish Water is made up of a number of elements,” a department spokesperson said.

“Only those elements which do not have an expected return are counted for the purposes of calculating the cost to the State. For example, Irish Water received borrowings and not subvention for the costs of the domestic metering programme.

“No exchequer funds have been provided for the establishment costs of Irish Water.”

In 2014, the State provided a €439m operating subvention and €239m in capital contributions or equity. Last year, its operating subvention dropped to €399m and capital contributions came in at €222m.

However, 2016 has proven to be the costliest year to date. While capital contributions dropped to a low of €184m, the operating subvention rose to a high of €479m.

Furthermore, in 2016, the State gave Irish Water €181m in replacement revenue.

“Following the Government decision of 18th October 2016, it was agreed to provide Irish Water with an additional subvention of up to €181m to allow Irish Water meet the shortfall in its projected revenue stream that arose due to the suspension of domestic water charges,” the department said.

The figures are revealed as the 20-member Oireachtas committee on the future funding of domestic water services meets tomorrow for the first time since the publication of the Duffy report on charges.

Source: Irish Examiner, Dec 12 2016


Noel Dempsey: ‘Nonsense’ to pursue unpaid water bills

 

 

By Fiachra Ó Cionnaith
Irish Examiner Political Correspondent

 

 

A former Fianna Fáil environment minister has contradicted his party leader by saying it is “nonsense” to chase people who are refusing to pay water charges, and that refunds should be given by the State.

Ex-TD Noel Dempsey made his comments just 24 hours before the cross-party Dáil committee on water charges tasked with addressing the controversy meets for the first time tomorrow .

Speaking on RTÉ radio as it emerged that Irish Water has spent a massive €5m on business strategists, lawyers, and PR experts since charges were suspended six months ago, Mr Dempsey said he was shocked by the ongoing spending.

Asked for his views on what should happen next, the former Meath TD — who held the transport, communications, environment, and education portfolios between 1997 and 2011 — said there is no point in trying to force non-payers to pay the debts and that refunds must be made.

“The notion that you can charge people who didn’t pay is a nonsense,” he said. People who did pay should be refunded. But that will probably be fudged.”

The comment is likely to surprise Fianna Fáil headquarters and comes as pressure grows both within Government and on the Opposition benches for refunds to be given to people who paid water charges.

While the party’s official position is that it wants to see a cost-benefit analysis of both refunds and forcing non-payers to repay the debt before deciding on what action to take, party leader Micheál Martin has made it clear he believes non-payers should be pursued.

Earlier this month, Mr Martin said: “I believe in people obeying the laws” and that the focus “should be on pursuing people who haven’t paid”.

It emerged at the weekend that Irish Water has spent over €5m on strategists, lawyers, and PR advisers, among other costs, in the six months since the confidence and supply agreement between Fine Gael and Fianna Fáil saw the charges frozen. The company confirmed to a Sunday newspaper that despite effectively being in limbo since May it is still spending almost €3,000 a month on PR expertise.

In addition, it has paid €406,268 during the period to Ernst & Young for legal advice, and €123,570 to consultancy firm PriceWaterhouseCoopers, among other expenditure.

The significant costs are likely to be discussed at tomorrow’s first official meeting of the Dáil cross-party committee on water, which has been tasked with examining the future of water services in Ireland and how they should be funded.

An independent Government-commissioned report last month concluded that the vast majority of people should no longer have to pay fees, although an unspecified number will still pay charges, yet to be outlined.

These recommendations must now be discussed by the committee of Government and Opposition TDs and senators, which has been asked to make its own recommendations to the Dáil by next March.

Anti-water charges campaigners say that if political parties are to adhere to their pre-election promises they should vote to scrap water charges completely next March.

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