Local Moville Greencastle Group 26 Years Battle with Government Gets European Backing

On February 1st,  2016, Mr Enda Craig, spokesperson for a local County Donegal community group, Save the Foyle, received a communication from the European Commission in Brussels. This correspondence confirmed the group's assertions that Ireland had not complied with an European Court of Justice C-50-09 judgement and the Environmental Impact Assessment Directive which was passed in 2011.  This means that the Irish Government will have to enact new legislation which complies with the ECJ C-50 ruling and the EIA Directive.  What it could also mean is that any relevant planning in Ireland since 2011 assessed under the old discredited legislation using the SI 684 Waste Water Directive, 2007 was illegal.

Save the Foyle is a local Co Donegal group from Moville/Greencastle in Inishowen. They have been campaigning for the past 26 years against plans by Donegal Co Council for a sewage treatment plant and to pump effluent into the mouth of Lough Foyle at Glenburnie beach.

Glenburnie Beach, Moville, Co Donegal

Glenburnie Beach, Moville, Co Donegal

European Commission

Ms Antoinette Long,  European Commission Case handler for Ireland-infringements division in Brussels, responded to Mr Craig's request for clarification on a meeting between the Commission and the Dept of the Environment on November 17th, 2015 in Dublin.

That meeting came about after a 'Save the Foyle' delegation travelled to Brussels and presented their objections about Donegal County Council plans to the Commission.  They also put forward their contention that the Irish Government was not in compliance with the EU Directive namely C-50.09 judgement.

In her answer to Mr Craig's query, Ms Long stated that
“Irrespective of what may have been done in the past or of any preparatory work undertaken, we remain confident that no licencing decision will be taken (and consequently no building will be started) until the planned new legislation is in place and a licence has been obtained....... However, we believe that this legislation should ensure compliance with the C-50 judgment in the area of waste water discharge licencing. Therefore any future decision should and must comply with the judgment and with the EIA Directive.”

Mr Enda Craig's statement on behalf of 'Save the Foyle'

"This is what we have argued from day one and finally we have got someone to listen to our concerns. Most of our local politicians rejected us, Donegal Co Council and An Bord Pleanala rejected us, the EPA rejected us, the High Court rejected us as did Irish Water and the the Irish Government. It's a poor reflection on our country that its citizens must go to Brussels to access justice.

Save the Foyle,  Moville/Greencastle group with John Waters.  from left: Paul McLaughlin, Mrs Pat Hume, Dan McGuinness, John Waters, Don McGinley, Enda Craig, Thomas Farren.

Save the Foyle,  Moville/Greencastle group with John Waters.  from left: Paul McLaughlin, Mrs Pat Hume, Dan McGuinness, John Waters, Don McGinley, Enda Craig, Thomas Farren.

Now we have confirmation that Ireland was non compliant with very important legislation involving licensing and planning permission for waste water treatment plants. In particular for a case such as ours we have been seeking the protection of this and other EU legislation which was denied us in the lead up to and the granting of permission for the sewerage scheme.

This has implications for all major planning projects, particularly those that have potential to do serious damage to our environment. A discharge licence cannot just be tagged on at the end of a scheme that has already received planning permission. These schemes must not be split up into separate planning applications and must be assessed as one unit.

Save the Foyle have been down every road to highlight the idiotic decision of Donegal County Council to pump effluent into an enclosed Estuary when access to open sea is available.

In 1990 Donegal County Council elected members unanimously passed a motion to reject any proposal to pump sewage or effluent from the proposed Moville/Greencastle Sewerage Scheme into Lough Foyle and to relocate the proposed treatment plant and outfall pipe at a more suitable location outside of the environs of the Lough. This was overturned by an executive decision and permission was granted.

Ignoring this unanimous decision by the Council caused millions of euro to be spent on consultants proposing a scheme, an ultra expensive oral hearing, an appeal rejected by an Bord Pleanála (despite the opinion to refuse planning permission by the Boards Inspector on three separate occasions).

Our community has had to stump up and support me in an expensive High Court Challenge which I believe failed to identify the requirements of C50/09 in a case of such environmental importance.

Irish Water have taken over responsibility for the Moville proposed treatment works and it's discharge of effluent.

They should halt their plans to continue with procuring the scheme.  In the communication from Antoinette Long the Commission states that they anticipate the scheme cannot progress until new legislation is in place. 

Irish Water is throwing more good money after bad. This should not be an option.

The responsibility for past 26 years of hell that this little community of Carnagarve has endured must be placed directly at the feet of Donegal County Council.

After having democratically and unilaterally selected the perfect location for the disposal of the properly treated effluent into the Wide Atlantic, North of Greencastle in 1990, they have spent (or rather wasted) millions manipulating the disputed plans.

These 26 years have been made even worse by the despicable treatment we have been subjected to by most of the agencies we have had to deal with. These agencies, whose function should be to inform and assist, have shown themselves incapable of transparency when it came to applying regulations.

Nothing less than a wide ranging investigation should be accepted into the incompetence that has left this community without an up and running plant for this past twenty years.”

Sunrise at Glenburnie beach, Lough Foyle

Sunrise at Glenburnie beach, Lough Foyle

Read full ECJ Judgement on www.shelltosea.com
Read full history of the campaign here savethefoyle.com
For other background reading see article nobel-peace-prize-winner-the-sewage-plant-and-irish-water       

 


Marian Harkin, MEP

Marian Harkin, MEP

Midlands North West MEP Marian Harkin has praised the Campaign for a Clean Estuary in Moville after the EU confirmed to the group that Ireland was non compliant in relation to granting planning permission for waste water treatment plants, and new legislation is now necessary.

This impacts on the long running debate about the proposed treatment plant at Carnagarve, which local campaigners believe must now go back to the drawing board.

Marian Harkin says the group’s campaign has been pivotal in highlighting Irish breaches of EU regulations……….


Buncrana Together

On the face of it you might wonder what is the significance of this ECJ C-50 judgement on a sewage treatment plant and a small, beautiful unspoilt beach in a remote corner of Ireland. 

To the handful of dedicated campaigners who have battled for 26 years, this is a major victory. 

However, it is not until you look into the implications this judgement may have nationally that you begin to understand the potential significance. The communication from Brussels regarding the meeting with the Irish Government last November, brings up major questions which must be answered.  For example why was the Irish Government's not compliant with EU directives since 2011.  Why did various planning and environment bodies doggedly pursue the Moville sewage plan under old legislation even though it had been made redundant since 2011?  Why were bodies such as Donegal County Council, An Bord Pleanala, the Environment Protection Agency complicit in the questionable plans?  Why did the Government squander millions of pounds of tax payer's money.  And many, many more questions need answered, not least why did they treat a community for 26 years the way they did?  


Colm McCarthy - The Economics of Renewable Energy

Published by Suir Valley Environmental Group Conference, Jan 20, 2016

Economist Colm McCarthyPhoto RTE

Economist Colm McCarthyPhoto RTE

"The wind lobby here in Ireland is remarkably well resourced and they snow the media and they have snowed a lot of politicians.  They are not farming the wind, they are farming subsidies", Colm McCarthy

 

Click on Ireland's Energy Future photo to view youtube video, duration approx 18 min

Suir Valley Environmental Group Conference, Raheen House, Clonmel, January 20th, 2016.

Suir Valley Environmental Group Conference, Raheen House, Clonmel, January 20th, 2016.


Replace pipes that 'poisoned' Flint water, lawsuit demands

Article from nr.news-republic.com  via fliuch.org

Matt Hopper holds and comforts Nyla Hopper, age 5, after she has her blood drawn to be tested for lead on January 26, 2016 in Flint, Michigan

Matt Hopper holds and comforts Nyla Hopper, age 5, after she has her blood drawn to be tested for lead on January 26, 2016 in Flint, Michigan

The downtrodden US city of Flint was poisoned in a misguided drive by penny-pinching officials to save money, a lawsuit filed Wednesday claimed, demanding the corroded lead pipes responsible for contaminating tap water be immediately replaced.

Officials are accused of ignoring months of health warnings about foul-smelling and discolored water, even as residents complained it was making them sick.

"In a failed attempt to save a few bucks, state-appointed officials poisoned the drinking water of an important American city, causing permanent damage to an entire generation of its children," Michael Steinberg, legal director of the American Civil Liberties Union of Michigan, said in announcing the lawsuit.

"The people of Flint cannot trust the state of Michigan to fix this man-made disaster and that is why court oversight is critically needed."

Michigan Governor Rick Snyder speaks to the media regarding the status of the Flint water crisis on January 27, 2016 at Flint City Hall in Flint, Michigan

Michigan Governor Rick Snyder speaks to the media regarding the status of the Flint water crisis on January 27, 2016 at Flint City Hall in Flint, Michigan

Governor Rick Snyder -- who faces calls to resign over his handling of the scandal -- appointed a team of outside experts Wednesday to help the state resolve Flint's water crisis and deal with the long-term health impacts.

In an interview with CNN, set to air Wednesday evening, he admitted the number of children harmed by lead in the water could be much higher than tests have so far revealed.

"There could be many more," the governor told CNN, "and we're assuming that."

Snyder vowed at a news conference to help "address the damage that's been done" in the predominantly poor and black city of 100,000.

But he stopped short of promising to replace the pipes, which began releasing lead after Flint switched to a cheaper but dangerously corrosive water supply.

"It's a lot of work to take out pipes, to redo the infrastructure," Snyder told reporters.

"The short-term solution is to hopefully recoat, and have it validated by third parties so we know the water is safely coming out."

$1.5 billion fix

Tears stream down the face of Morgan Walker, 5, as she gets her finger pricked for a lead screening on January 26, 2016 in Flint, Michigan

Tears stream down the face of Morgan Walker, 5, as she gets her finger pricked for a lead screening on January 26, 2016 in Flint, Michigan

Lead exposure is harmful to everyone, but it can have devastating impacts on young children by irreversibly harming brain development. It has been shown to lower intelligence, stunt growth and lead to aggressive and anti-social behavior.

Water treatment plants across the United States are required to closely monitor lead levels in tap water and use chemicals to reduce acidity and coat pipes to prevent corrosion.

The state of Michigan is working to map out exactly where the old lead pipes are in Flint so it can "come up with the proper priorities about how we replace that infrastructure," Snyder said. But he said that was a long-term project and declined to comment on the lawsuit.

Flint's mayor has estimated that the cost of fixing the damage done to the city's infrastructure by the corrosive water could reach $1.5 billion.

The cash-strapped city was reportedly hoping to save $5 million over two years by drawing water from the Flint River beginning in April 2014 rather than continuing to buy it from nearby Detroit.

The state's environment department approved the switch even though the city's treatment plant was not able to produce water that met state and federal standards.

It cost $12 million to switch Flint back to the Detroit water system in October after a local pediatrician released a study showing that the number of children with elevated blood-lead levels had doubled from 2.1 to four percent.

Nation's pipes need replacing

The City of Flint Water Plant is illuminated by moonlight on January 23, 2016 in Flint, Michigan

The City of Flint Water Plant is illuminated by moonlight on January 23, 2016 in Flint, Michigan

Activists and environmentalists say the state now needs to spend whatever it takes to make sure the water is safe to drink.

"For years the state told us we were crazy, that our water was safe, which wasn't true," said Melissa Mays of Water You Fighting For, a Flint-based organization which joined the American Civil Liberties Union and the Natural Resources Defense Council in filing the lawsuit.

"For the sake of my kids and the people of Flint, we need a federal court to fix Flint's water problems because these city and state agencies failed us on their own."

Replacing all the lead pipes in Flint would take years and cause major disruption for residents because roads would need to be shut down to dig them out of the ground, said Greg DiLoreto of the American Society for Civil Engineers.

But while short-term fixes might be able to resolve Flint's lead problems for now, replacing those pipes is something that Flint -- and most other American cities -- has to start planning for, he told AFP.

A large proportion of the nation's water systems were built in the early 20th century and some pipes date back to the late 1800s.

"No engineer designed any system to last 150 years," DiLoreto said in a telephone interview.

"This is like your house. At some point you're going to have to put a new roof on it."