Archive for the 'Fingal news' Category

Balbriggan Fish and Farmers Market

Friday morning road closure necessary to allow the market to expand

The Balbriggan Fish and Farmers Market continues to enjoy huge success and is proving to be a popular feature of the town. The market has reached the point where expansion is necessary, but for this to happen the road outside the Courthouse would have to be closed off every Friday morning. To allow this, public support is needed. The Council will only close the road if enough people in the area give their consent.

Here’s your chance to make your opinion known and possibly help the market. Take a few seconds to complete this form and add your name to the list of those seeking to have the road closed on Friday mornings.

Take the survey here

Thanks for taking the time to have your say.

SCHOOLS AND TRANSPORT MAIN TOPICS RAISED IN MALAHIDE – JULY 2010

Took a walk with a few local Green colleagues from Waterside to Seabury and called on residents to hear what concerns they had and to spread the word about national and local work. Take a look at the newsletter below if you did not get a hard copy in your door yet.

The residents in Waterside in a number of cases have parents living in the centre of Malahide. The news that Waterside is reportedly outside the Scoil Iosa catchment area is a worry for these younger parents. Such an issue is decided upon by the school Board of Management but it is subject to changing circumstances so I am hoping there is room for flexibility and am contacting the school to clarify the latest position.

St Andrew’s NS needs an extra two classroooms and this is being pursued by me with the Minister and Tanaiste Ms Mary Coughlan TD.

National issues such as accountability in the banking sector were raised and discussed at length. I got general support expressed  for Government legislation such as  the Dog Breeding Establishment Bill especially from Gillian in Waterside who works in Dogs’ Trust the charity.

I noted the call from residents for the Swords Road to Malahide to be upgraded especially to help pedestrians and cyclists. I am writing to Mr Michael Lorigan the head of transport in Fingal County Council about this. Likewise there was widespread support especially in Seabury for the shutttle bus proposal and I am urging all interested to contact Malahide Coaches’ website to support their appeal to run this service.

The traffic congestion in Malahide Village is one of many reasons which makes it easier to walk, cycle or for the less mobile, a local bus service makes sense. Of course it will only succeed if it is widely used as buses need to make CENTS as well as SENSE in the current climate when Ireland is borrowing €40 million a day to pay for wages and services.

DOING THE ROUNDS IN SWORDS BEFORE VISITING THE NEW LOCAL PRODUCERS’ MARKET- JUNE 2010

The Green Party / An Comhaontas Glas in Government is determined that Metro North will be built to serve Swords. The Metro will run from An Lár (Dublin City Centre) to Lissenhall via Dublin Airport. This was welcome news on the doors in Boroimhe and Holywell as some people were beginning to doubt the project with reports of other cutbacks in the news.

Meeting people in Swords is always a worthwhile experience. The energetic and well organized Ken Duffy and his local Green colleagues John, Rita, Jim, Stiofán, Brian, Ray, Diarmuid amongst others  were great company. Boroimhe creates a very good first impression with well cared for open space and gardens. However after meeting some residents, it becomes clear that more needs to be done to make these estates good for children.

We need to work on three issues to help children primarily. First, more Garda patrols to allay fears of parents who are worried about suspicious adults visiting the area. Second, a playground well supervised by being overlooked by nearby houses on all sides would help the many young families living here. Thirdly, the couple of derelict areas, for example, the land reservation on the Ridgewood side of the estate needs to be secured. Right now it is used for clandestine consumption of alcohol. I have taken each of these issues up with Fingal County Council and An Garda Síochána.

Other residents raised reports of proposals for additional development on adjacent land which I am investigating. Many queries were related to housing and individual circumstances which are being dealt with on an individual basis.

Those who are struggling with a lack of paid employment discussed openly the different options available. For example, one man in Holywell having lost a job, was pursuing a change of career by enrolling in an Energy Management course at D.I.T. in Kevin Street, Dublin. People will pay money to save money and this is what energy management is about.

I am keen to support any entrepreneurship, (as long as it is legal, of course!). The establishment of the new Swords Fish & Farmers’ Market on a Saturday 10am – 2pm in the Town Centre Mall opposite the Hawthorn Hotel is very welcome as it is explicitly specialising in local produce and helping local food producers. One man who used to work in SRT at the airport is now turning his skills to creating a food business.

Starting a business requires careful planning. One aspect of a new business is market research, testing the water, so to speak. Taking a stall or even hiring a basket at the market can be a first step to seeing who likes the fruits of your labour. I have posted details of the new locally based Swords Fish & Farmers Market below and look forward to seeing you there selling or buying to support jobs and our local economy. ‘Shop local’ is now more important than ever.

Dun Emer, Lusk pathway urgently required

2 July 2010

Local TD Trevor Sargent has on several occassions asked for the completion of the pathway from Dun Emer to Lusk. The need is obvious and the current condition of the road is very dangerous and unsightly.

Now, Trevor is inviting you to add your name to the list of those calling for action to complete this necessary pathway. Click on the link to add your name. If you like, you can add your email address and we’ll keep you informed of any developments. Don’t worry, we will never pass your email address on to anybody else and we won’t bombard you with unwanted emails. You can opt out anytime.

Here’s the link to the petition:

http://spreadsheets.google.com/viewform?formkey=dHZyRW9mVXczeUhCSjg5eW1CVUx2cGc6MQ

Thanks for taking part.

DOING THE ROUNDS IN SKERRIES – JUNE 2010

Knowing many people in Skerries as I do, made  visiting around Shenick, Townparks, Churchfields, Sherlock and Kelly’s Bay an interesting experience. It was made all the more enjoyable by the good weather and the great company, thanks to Diarmuid, Rita, Jim, Brian, Don and Paul.

Being  in Skerries visiting different estates coincided with the publication of the historic 2008 EPA Quality of Bathing Water Report. Naturally as a ‘new’ report it was read as if it was up to date even though the news in it is two years out of date. However Skerries’ bathing water was described as having a ‘sufficiently high standard’. Since then work has taken place to improve standards. Apart from a new local sewage treatment plant serving both Skerries and Balbriggan, the Council is now embarked on a Colombo-esque mission to locate and terminate any rogue discharges of rainwater in to the sewerage system. These misconnections, as they are called by the engineers, become a real problem when downpours occur. They swell the volume of sewage in the system, the teatment plant overflows and raw diluted sewage gets discharged as it has nowhere else to go. So downpours keep people off the beach but they also result in the pollution which was detected by the EPA. The forecast of good weather and the ending of these misconnections will I believe give us cleaner results in the next EPA report. That being said between 2003 and 2008 Skerries had a ‘sufficiently good standard’. The poor year was 2004, but we hope for very good results from now on.

On the other hand, some issues raised by residents were quite individual and personal. For example, adoption procedures, requests for help in finding summer work or more permanent work as well as specific grievances when dealing with state agencies were all raised.

Government policies with regard to financial resources against the background of needing to borrow about €55 million each day to ensure current expenditure and wage cheques do not bounce were important to discuss. There is a very fine balance to be struck between pruning the ‘tree of state’ to ensure it grows back healthy and fruitful or going beyond that point. I pray that heeding wise council on the doors and from expert economists will ensure we get the balance right. The reason for the tough measures is to bring this country to a healthy state of sustainable, fair and entrepreneurial social and economic activity. Meanwhile the full rigours of the law had better deal with those who recklessly abandoned good banking practises which have led us to where we are as a country and which is causing so much pain and distress to so many households at present. The Green Party was not in Government when these problems were caused but we are now having to clean up the mess. It is not easy but it has to be done.

That being said, most of the issues I discussed on the doors related to policies of Fingal County Council. For example a dose of common sense is needed to ensure that kick about areas on open spaces are mown so children can play in safety and not on the roads. In the right places and to protect biodiversity, cutting grass less frequently can be a progressive policy, but not if it forces children to be less active. But as the Beatles (or even beetles) might say ‘we can work it out!’. I have written to Fingal County Council on behalf of several residents who made useful suggestions about various open spaces in and around Skerries.

Many people I spoke with were very happy to hear that about 150 allotments on the Golf Links Road were nearly ready to open. I want to again pay tribute to the Sustainable Skerries team who are an example of the ‘can-do’ community spirit this country needs more of. They have worked on this project  in co-operation with Fingal County Council. Check out their website at www.sustainableskerries.wordpress.com/ for more information. Only for people like Mary Marsden and the Sustainable Skerries team, the Council would have not had the resources to proceed. Skerries owes a huge debt of gratitude to the enormous voluntary effort and ingenuity which has gone in to getting the project over the line. I am now meeting other people in Kellys’ Bay who want to establish allotments in the vicinity of the Ballast Pit. The interest in Grow It Yourself activities is definitely growing and I encourage it in every way I can. A number of Skerries GIY enthusiasts were good enough to drop in to my own kitchen garden recently as the photographs below record.

Photos taken by C.Finn:

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Super-Dump decision by EPA has major implications, says Trevor Sargent.

28 May 2010

“Flagrant lack of assessment of commercial wells and underplaying the risk to a huge, regionally important, aquifer in the dump decision by the EPA puts them on a collision course with the European Commission” according to Trevor Sargent TD.

Local TD and former Minister for Food and Horticulture, Trevor Sargent expressed disbelief and disappointment at the Environmental Protection Agency’s decision to issue a licence for a major landfill in the Tooman/Nevitt area of Ireland’s horticultural heartland in north County Dublin.

In spite of Deputy Sargent’s highlighting the need for all commercial wells to be assessed fully in the Environmental Impact Statement, this was not done. “Even the EPA licence plays down the groundwater issue by requiring only ‘monitoring’”, he said.

Meanwhile, the European Commission is not convinced that the impact on groundwater quality will be ‘insignificant’. In a letter to the EPA in March 2008, the Commission says “there are, however, no concrete data (in particular in the EIS of April 2006 and June 2007) firmly demonstrating this”.

In stressing the need to move on from “outdated, out-of-sight, out-of-mind policies in dealing with waste”, Deputy Sargent cited the city of Guelph in Canada where he saw first-hand how a Zero‑Waste policy works, and consequently tabled over 200 amendments to the 1996 Waste Management Bill at the time.

I hope the European Commission will succeed in requiring proper procedures to protect the groundwater and the livelihoods which depend on this clean groundwater.” concluded the Green TD.

DOING THE ROUNDS IN DONABATE AND PORTRANE WITH ST ITA’S AND SCHOOL BUILDING PLANS THE MAIN POINTS OF DISCUSSION

When the sun shines, as it has been, while going door to door in estates like Seaview in Portrane, the sea views are exhilarating. The discussions were engaging. The opening of Knockamann or Cnoc na mBan at St Ita’s with the employment of 40 more nurses was widely welcomed. Most households especially in Portrane had some relative or friend locally working at the hospital.

The other big issue raised was the secondary school. In speaking with the VEC, I am told September 2011 is the opening date and everything is going to plan.

There were a number of housing issues I am writing about to the County Council, including house maintenance issues such a leaky tap. I’m sure the Water Dept will want the Housing Dept to deal with this urgently!

The wish to see the walk and cycleway across both the Broadmeadow and Rogerstown Estuaries was strongly expressed I am glad to say as this is a key objective in the Green Programme for Government.

Sargent initiates Dáil Debate on Building for Rush School

DEPUTY SARGENT INITIATES DAIL DEBATE ON GETTING NEW SCHOOL BUILDING FOR ST. JOSEPH’S, RUSH

20 May 2010

Local TD and former school principal, Trevor Sargent, has been campaigning for a new school building for St Joseph’s in Rush over several years with successive Ministers of Education. On Wednesday the 19th May 2010 this campaigning was stepped up another gear when the Green Party TD requested that the case be thrashed out on the floor of Dáil Eireann.

The crisis of accommodation at St Joseph’s where over 500 pupils and increasing, will not fit in a school built for 450, is also potentially an opportunity. If the Department, the County Council and the Board of Management can get around a table then we can plan for a new school building on a site already earmarked in the Kenure Local Area Plan.’ said Deputy Sargent.

Unfortunately, the Department is still not working on the new site idea but instead is intent on short term expenditure on the old school. Minister Batt O’Keefe told Deputy Sargent in the Dáil that ‘the Department has no record of an application from the school for a new school building on a greenfield site. However, due consideration will be given to any such proposal if it is made’.

Deputy Sargent is resolved to working with the Principal and Board along with the County Council and the Department to ensure Rush gets a modern new school and that there is a good community gain by the provision of shared sporting and other facilities as part of a new school development.

The full text of the relevant section of the debate is below…. Continue reading ‘Sargent initiates Dáil Debate on Building for Rush School’

DOING THE ROUNDS IN BALBRIGGAN – ISSUES RAISED ALMOST ALL NEED THE SERVICES OF FINGAL COUNTY COUNCIL – APRIL 2010

April was a good month for meeting people in their gardens. With the weather dry if not warm and many families celebrating First Holy Communions, some gardens even made space for a rented bouncy castle!

Also noticeable was the work being done to replace broken footpaths, for example at Fullam Terrace. The harbour was looking better than usual with the absence of wrecks and the lighthouse freshly painted, a welcome sight to behold while I am waiting to catch the train to Leinster House in the morning.

However in Tara Court a number of residents pointed out how tree roots are lifting paths with the result that some people had tripped while walking. I’ve written to the Transportation Dept in the Council about this and await a response.

Wherever residents are renting, I was being asked often to check with the Housing Dept about Rental Assistance Schemes (RAS) or current places on housing list or consideration of health issues in evaluating housing needs. Again letters have all been written and sent off to the Council to ask for help on behalf of those needing it.

Some housing queries were more appropriate to the Planning Dept. Martello residents for example have gone through hell as a result of bad building standards and a lack of enforcement to hold the developer to account. I have already a large file on this sorry saga and still the developer has not made good the shoddy workmanship. My next port of call is the Minster for Sustainable Planning, Ciarán Cuffe TD, who I am asking to meet with some of the affected residents.

The residents of Westbrook Avenue on the other hand want to stop attention from unwanted visitors. Their cul-de-sac has pedestrian and indeed motorbike access gaps. Residents are convinced that burglaries, car theft and vandalism are made worse by these gaps. I am in touch with both Gardaí and the Council Transportation Dept to get these gaps closed. The walk to the town centre is the same distance whether the gaps are there or not so I do not anticipate any objection especially as residents have already petitioned all other residents affected.

Some issues I can take to Dáil Eireann. Health issues came up as did issues of competitiveness and job protection about which I have written to the Minister for Enterprise, Trade and Employment. When I met the Principal of Balbriggan Community College at the school gates, he asked me to help with the campaign to build a purpose built Sports Hall with community meeting rooms. This excellent objective is worth fighting for given the contribution being offered by Fingal County Council. As a result I asked the Ceann Comhairle to allow me ask the Minister for Education and Skills to allow me debate the issue on the floor of Dáil Eireann. You can read the full debate here on the website.

Sargent calls for investment in Balbriggan Community College

13 May 2010

In this evenings Adjournment Debate in the Dáil, Trevor Sargent raised the issue of investment in sports and recreation facilities for young people and specifically, facilities in Balbriggan Community College. The full text of his address is below, along with the reply from Deputy Áine Brady on behalf ofDeputy Mary Coughlan, Tánaiste and Minister for Education and Skills. Continue reading ‘Sargent calls for investment in Balbriggan Community College’

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