Irish Minister signed Order to hand over 419 sites to Irish Water July 21st 2017

A Statutory Instruments Order S.I. No. 329 of 2017, named the Water Services (No. 2) Act 2013 (Property Vesting Day) (No.10) Order 2017, was published on July 27th 2017. It was signed by Eoghan Murphy, Minister for Housing, Planning, Community and Local Government and came into effect on July 21st 2017.


″This Statutory Instrument gives effect to the decision of the Minister for Housing, Planning, Community and Local Government to transfer the property listed in the schedule to the Order from water services authorities to Irish Water in accordance with section 12 of the Water Services (No. 2) Act 2013.″

The Eddie Fullerton Dam, Illies, Co Donegal

 

WATER SERVICES (NO. 2) ACT 2013 (PROPERTY VESTING DAY)
ORDER 2017

I, EOGHAN MURPHY, Minister for Housing, Planning, Community and Local Government, in exercise of the powers conferred on me by section 12 (1) of the Water Services (No. 2) Act 2013 (No. 50 of 2013), hereby make the following order:

1. This Order may be cited as the Water Services (No. 2) Act 2013 (Property Vesting Day) (No. 10) Order 2017.
2. The 21st July 2017 shall be a “property vesting day” for the purposes of section 12 of the Water Services (No. 2) Act 2013 (No. 50 of 2013).
3. On the property vesting day referred to in article 2, the property listed in the schedule to this Order, which immediately before this day was vested in a water services authority, shall stand vested in Irish Water.

The Schedule listed 419 property sites that were be handed over to Irish Water including reservoirs, waste waterworks and waterworks formerly controlled by local authorities.


Sinn Féin in Government - Preparing for Pritatisation in Northern Ireland

Third in our series on articles concerning water charges in Northern Ireland,  this is an extract from Sean McVeigh's 'Sinn Fein In Government'  published in 2012 in Irish Marxist Review.  Although we concentrate on the 'Privatising Water' chapter, we strongly recommend readers to read the full article downloaded from the above link.

PFI stands for Private Financial Initiatives, a way of creating "public–private partnerships" (PPPs) by funding public infrastructure projects with private capital.

Original photo of Stormont by http://www.flickr.com/photos/robertpaulyoung/

Sinn Féin in Government

Privatising Water

Until May 2011 Sinn Fein minister Conor Murphy was in charge of the department of regional development which oversees public transport, roads, and water infrastructure.  In preparation for full privatisation NI Water became a government owned company in 2007 (just before the Executive returned from suspension) with the aim of becoming ”self-financing” within three years through the introduction of domestic water charges.

When SF’s Conor Murphy took over the department in May 2007, he allowed NI Water to continue to prepare for the introduction of water charges on domestic properties by installing charging meters in every new house built in Northern Ireland. The fact that water charges have been continually deferred is evidence that both Sinn Fein and the DUP are fully aware that such a move would lead to mass resistance that could threaten the tribal basis of the Stormont regime. Murphy also continued the policy of handing over water infrastructure to be run by private companies under PFI deals. Under a deal signed with the consortium Dalriada Water Ltd in 2006 worth 110 million, the private sector will soon deliver 50.

When the deal was announced by direct rule ministers, the Stormont administration was in suspension and SF opposed the PFI contracts. But when SF got back in government in 2007 the party suddenly found merit in the PFI arrangements and Murphy presided over the transfer of large parts of the water network to the private sector.

The biggest company involved in Dalriada Water is California based multinational Aecom. This company specialises in taking over denationalised public utilities and has gas, oil and water interests around the globe.

When opening a water treatment facility in Antrim constructed with the help of Aecom in 2009, Murphy praised the PFI project saying it would ”deliver an efficient, cost effective and high quality water source”.

Sinn Fein has played a key role in shaping the activities of NI Water because Murphy as DRD minister appointed a number of directors of the company. One of Murphy’s appointments was Lawson McDonald, a director of Global Armour Ltd, which supplies body armour to the SAS and other British forces in Afghanistan. The SF minister also appointed Padraic White who as former Managing Director of the Republic’s Industrial Development Authority was lauded as one of the architects of the Celtic Tiger. White is husband of Fianna Fail senator Mary White. These are the people - put in place by Murphy - who have shaped the direction of NI Water and are moving the company towards full privatisation with the always present danger of the introduction of metered domestic water charges.


Oireachtas Water Committee TDs abandon Ireland's 9.4 Exemption. Have we been served?

How could the massive campaign against water charges in Ireland that commanded support from the majority of it’s citizens, where over 57% of households refused to pay water charges and even recognise Irish Water, eventually boil down to twenty politicians bartering away the clear wish of the Irish people?  How could they ignore the elephant in the room?

 

by Enda Craig and James Quigley

 

It happened in the Oireachtas Committee on the Future Funding of Domestic Water that started proceedings late 2016 and ended in April 2017.  This establishment process was initiated by the government and accepted by the Right2Water leadership and it's five supporting TDs who took part in it.  The committee ended with a very iffy final report and an even iffier initial draft one that by the way,  prompted the Right2Water TDs to prematurely declare a victory.
 

Allegiance to party supersedes allegiance to country

It was a clever plot indeed hatched in the murky depths of politician and civil servant land, designed to take the impetus away from the anti water movement and trick us into thinking that they were doing it for our benefit.

The majority of Irish people were supposedly represented on the Committee by maybe ten members including five signed up to Right2Water and five Fianna Fáil members. All of whom at one time or other promised to abolish Irish Water, get rid of water charges and water meters. However, of these ten most had an underlying allegiance to party, self preservation or personal agenda and as a newspaper headline once stated ‘party allegiance trumps allegiance to country’.

Imagine giving carte blanche to these same politiciansto champion the cause of the anti water movement.  Pardon us for being cynical but isn’t a politicians' allegiance to party or to their self preservation? 

Brendan Ogle, assumed leader of Right2Water Ireland, having said ″we have done our bit, now it is up to the politicians to do theirs″, has come back to haunt us.  Mr Ogle indeed did his bit by handing the reins to politicians, and these politician went on to shaft the anti water charges movement. 

If these same politicians get their way Irish Water is here to stay, water charges and water meters are on the way,  all done in small print and in the interest of the Irish people. Granted, for the time being, charges are couched in an euphemism of ‘only for excessive use’ and metering, well once ‘excessive use’ was accepted then meters are not far behind.  Anyway ‘excessive use’ can be worked on and manipulated through time.

Oireachtas draft report ignores the 9.4 Exemption

It's all in the final draft report and the final final report of the Oireachtas committee. What is very alarming about the initial draft report presented by the chairman Mr Pádraig Ó Céidigh in April is the obvious omission of any mention of the River Basin Management Plans or reference to Ireland’s exemption from charging for domestic water as stated in section 9.4 of the Water Framework Directive 2000.

This omission is highly significant giving the fact that Mr Ó Céidigh devoted a whole day to debating what he described as ‘very important matters’  but somehow he did not include them in his report. 

What is as significant is the fact that none of the ten supposed anti water charges members on the committee complained about or questioned this omission or lack of protocol.  If one believed, as we do, that the River Basin Management Plans are the cornerstone of the Water Framework Directive and that the 9.4 exemption clause is the most important defense Ireland has against the EU Commission insistence on water charges,   then surely it should have been in the Oireachtas report and surely any of the five Right2Water members on that committee should have made sure that it was in the draft report. 

The Oireachtas committee for all intents and purposes abandoned the Irish Exemption clause that was granted originally in 2000 in paragraph 9.4 of EU Water Framework Directive that states

 

4. Member States shall not be in breach of this Directive if they decide in accordance with established practices not to apply the provisions of paragraph 1, second sentence, and for that purpose the relevant provisions of paragraph 2, for a given water-use activity, where this does not compromise the purposes and the achievement of the objectives of this Directive. Member States shall report the reasons for not fully applying paragraph 1, second sentence, in the river basin management plans.″

 

The hard fought and successful anti water charges campaigns of the ‘70s and 90s’ in Ireland were instrumental in pressurising the Irish government of the day into insisting on the insertion of the 9.4 Exemption clause into the Water Framework Directive.  This is why it is known as the 'Irish Exemption'.  Now twenty politicians on the Oireachtas committee have for all intents and purposes given it away.

 

See also http://buncranatogether.com/home/2017/7/29/clouds-of-suspicion-over-omission-of-9-4-exemption-in-oireachtas-water-committee-report