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Wednesday, October 24, 2012

Fw: Cllr Keith Martin's Blog

 
 
Sent: Wednesday, October 24, 2012 1:11 PM
Subject: Cllr Keith Martin's Blog
 

Cllr Keith Martin's Blog


A response to Putting People First

Posted: 24 Oct 2012 04:45 AM PDT

 
A response to Putting People First 
 

By Councillor Keith Martin
 
 
 
 

 
 
[Oct 2012]
 
 

 
 
<!--[if !supportLists]-->1.      <!--[endif]-->Ireland is the 2nd most underrepresented country in the EU when it comes to local government.
<!--[if !supportLists]-->2.      <!--[endif]-->The ratio is 1 councillor per 118 per head of population per Councillor in France, 250 per head of population in Sweden and 350 in Germany. This rises to 610 in Spain and 1100 per head of population in Greece and Belgium.
<!--[if !supportLists]-->3.      <!--[endif]-->This plan proposes to make this situation worse by increasing the ratio from 1 councillor per 2,336 to 1 councillor per 4,800.
<!--[if !supportLists]-->4.      <!--[endif]-->According the McCarthy Report and the AMAI the total saving from abolishing 75 town councils and 700 councillors is just €6 million; that's a saving of just €80k per council.
<!--[if !supportLists]-->5.      <!--[endif]-->This is a further centralisation of power into the hands of fewer councillors which was criticised in the 1991 Barrington report on local government reform.
<!--[if !supportLists]-->6.      <!--[endif]-->The average salary of a town councillor is €4,400 before tax.
<!--[if !supportLists]-->7.      <!--[endif]-->The total expenditure on councillors, salary, expenses, conferences, study trips, accounts for less than 1% of the total budget of a Town Council.
<!--[if !supportLists]-->8.      <!--[endif]-->Town councils are the lowest most effective level of local government, most responsive to the needs of their constituents.
<!--[if !supportLists]-->9.      <!--[endif]-->Repeated studies have shown that Town Councils are more efficient and effective than city or county councils.  Source: The Case for Town Local Government in Ireland in the 21st Century' by UCC.
<!--[if !supportLists]-->10.  <!--[endif]-->The abolition of Town Councils is directly contrary to the Principles of Local Agenda 21 and the EU principle of Subsidiarity as enshrined in the Lisbon Treaty.
<!--[if !supportLists]-->11.  <!--[endif]-->The report seeks to remove Town Councils, Borough Councils and City Councils which have existed separately for centuries in the interests of savings only, taking in no account the historical, economic, cultural, social and morale impact of such a move.  Meanwhile Dublin is to be left as 4 separate local authorities for no good reason.
<!--[if !supportLists]-->12.  <!--[endif]-->No effort has been made to differentiate between effective, efficient and successful councils and other less effective councils.
<!--[if !supportLists]-->13.  <!--[endif]-->No new powers have been conferred on councillors.
<!--[if !supportLists]-->14.  <!--[endif]-->The raising of new taxes such as the Property Tax is to be handed over to the Revenue Commissioners (Irish Times 23 October 2012).
<!--[if !supportLists]-->15.  <!--[endif]-->Town Councils are already accountable and transparent with regard to finances as a Budget is published every year detailing the council's spending.  This budget is audited by the Local Government Auditor.  (Compare the budget of a Town Council and County Council to see which is the more transparent.)
<!--[if !supportLists]-->16.  <!--[endif]-->Town Councils are already accountable and transparent with regard to planning as they publish a Town Plan every 5 years which as a completely public process and which is overseen by the Dept of the Environment.
<!--[if !supportLists]-->17.  <!--[endif]-->Councillors are to be removed from the planning process even further by the removal of their powers under Section 140.  Section 140 is the provision whereby Councillors have the last say over the Executive and is an important piece of legislation which ensures that local government is not solely the purview of unelected officials. 
<!--[if !supportLists]-->18.  <!--[endif]-->Planning is to become the sole purview of unelected officials and opens up the possibility of a whole new era of corruption out of sight of the elected councillor.
<!--[if !supportLists]-->19.  <!--[endif]-->The new municipal councils are just enlarged Local Area Committees not true councils in their own right.
<!--[if !supportLists]-->20.  <!--[endif]-->The fact that the councillors sit on both municipal area council and City/County Council is proof that it is just a further centralisation of powers was criticised in the 1991 Barrington report on local government reform.
<!--[if !supportLists]-->21.  <!--[endif]-->The majority of the 75 councils to be abolished are outside the major cities and conurbations and as such they balance out the power and investment that goes into cities like Dublin, Cork, Limerick etc by providing a voice to their areas as well as acting as lobbying organisations with the state, semi state companies, service providers, councils, regional bodies and groups like the IDA and the Tourism Bodies.  The abolition of these councils will silence whole areas of rural Ireland.
<!--[if !supportLists]-->22.  <!--[endif]-->The loss of 75 Town Mayors is a huge loss of prestige and pride to local communities who like having someone to look to for Civic Leadership and to welcome VIPs and investors in their community.  It is an end to all Civic Honours currently hosted by these Mayors.   
<!--[if !supportLists]-->23.  <!--[endif]-->Town Managers and County Managers will still run the system although they will be called CEO's councillors will not have the powers to hire or fire them as they do in all EU systems of local government. 
<!--[if !supportLists]-->24.  <!--[endif]-->Executive Functions will still exist allowing the CEO to act as he sees fit and with no democratic accountability.
<!--[if !supportLists]-->25.  <!--[endif]-->The proposed abolition of Town Councils is directly contrary to the pre election policies of both Fine Gael and The Labour Party which both committed them to strengthening and empowering local government.
<!--[if !supportLists]-->26.  <!--[endif]-->The proposed abolition of Town Councils is not a policy of the Programme for Government.
<!--[if !supportLists]-->27.  <!--[endif]-->The number of Regional Assemblies is to be cut from 10 to 3, another reduction of democratic representation.
<!--[if !supportLists]-->28.  <!--[endif]-->No direction election of representatives to the remaining regional assemblies compounds the democratic deficit and weakens the authority of such assemblies.
<!--[if !supportLists]-->29.  <!--[endif]-->No direct elections of Mayors for those councils which will still exist.
<!--[if !supportLists]-->30.  <!--[endif]-->In short this is not a plan of reform.  It is a plan of budget cuts, a reduction of local democracy on a scale never seen in a modern European nation and a further centralisation of local government.
 
 
 
 
 

Thanks from the Green Cross and President Mikhail Gorbachev

Posted: 23 Oct 2012 07:46 PM PDT

 
Subject: Thanks from the Green Cross and President Mikhail Gorbachev
To: councillorkeithmartin@gmail.com


Dear Supporter,

Thank you for taking the time to sign the petition supporting our efforts to make water an international right for all.

Sincerely,


Mikhail Gorbachev,
Chairman of the Board,
Green Cross International
www.greencrossinternational.net

 

Water petition

Posted: 23 Oct 2012 07:45 PM PDT

Westport Labour Councillor Keith Martin is urging people to support a
trade union campaign entitled "The Right2Water petition" to ensure
that water services throughout Europe remain in public ownership.

The trade union IMPACT is asking its members and their friends,
families and communities to sign an online petition, which aims to
gather 30,000 signatures in Ireland. The 'right to water' campaign
calls on the European Commission to recognise water as a human right,
exclude water and sanitation services from EU internal market rules,
and legislate to ensure water and sanitation assets remain in public
control even where private companies operate them.

The campaign has grown amid concerns that Irish water services could
be privatised in the future following the current restructuring
programme.

The petition is the first citizen's campaign of its kind under the
EU's European Citizen Initiative (ECI), a new legal tool introduced as
part of the Nice Treaty, which forces European institutions to
consider issues that win the necessary public support. The Right2Water
petition aims to attract a million petition signatures throughout the
EU and was launched in Ireland at the IMPACT Biennial Delegate
Conference in May.

According to the Cllr Keith Martin who is a member of the IMPACT trade
union "Water is a human right, not a commodity to be bought and sold.
We must ensure that efforts to conserve and improve water quality such
as the establishment of Irish Water do not become the gateway
organisations to privatisation. In Boliva there were riots over water
when the water supply was privatised and the price of water was pushed
up and up until the ordinary citizens rose up in protest. The West of
Ireland is blessed with one of the highest rainfalls in Europe and we
must protect this asset from both pollution and exploitation by
speculators."

The petition can be signed at http://www.watertreaty.org.

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