Failure to install โadequate infrastructureโ in Clareโs rural communities will accelerate their demise, local councillors have warned.
A progress report from Irish Water surrounding wastewater treatment plants for villages in the county without such facilities was sought by Cllr Joe Cooney (FG) at the December meeting of Clare County Council.
He stated in his motion to the floor, โIt seems to be progressively more difficult to achieve planning permission for the onsite wastewater treatment system even though site assessors recommend that sites are suitable in the countryside in order to revitalize our rural communitiesโ.
New public sewerage schemes are planned for Ballyvaughan, Clarecastle, Kilrush, Kilkee and Liscannor, Irish Water advised in a written reply. Construction of wastewater treatment infrastructure is to commence in Kilrush, Clarecastle and Liscannor next year while planning is to be submitted for upgrades to Ballyvaughan and Kilkee in 2021.
Irish Water insisted they were making โreal and tangible progress working with local communities to deliver critical infrastructure which has suffered from years of historic underinvestmentโ.
Alarm bells sounded for councillors as the response outlined that Irish Waterโs investment plan โprioritises public health and safety by targetting agglomeration where there is no treatment for raw sewage or where the treatment is not in compliance with the EU Urban Wastewater Treatment Directiveโ and that the utility company has โno statutory role where there is currently no networkโ.
As he acknowledged the plans for five areas in the county, Cllr Cooney flagged that the response โdoesnโt answer the motionโ. The East Clare representative stated, โWe are all well aware that a number of villages are lagging behind for the proper infrastructure. Little or no progress has been made but we are still working hard on it. The reply from Irish Water has nothing whatsoever with what I had down. I will keep fighting for the proper wastewater systems in rural parts, if not we will struggle to keep good people in our rural areas. Quite possible that small villages like the ones Iโm talking about will have land dezoned in the next County Development plan if the infrastructure is not in placeโ.
Cooney continued, โIf we donโt keep fighting there will be no facilities and then there will be no people. If we donโt start somewhere we wonโt need to start at all because the people will have moved onโ.
Cllr Pat Burke (FG) described as โoutlandishโ Irish Waterโs statement that they have no role in areas without a network, โIโm shocked, didnโt realise Irish Water had no role in the village of Broadfordโ. No reference to this was made at previous meetings with Oireachtas members and the Broadford Action Group, he said. โThere seems to be an abandonment from Irish Water. We need to make sure we have the basic infrastructure. We need to think outside the box,โ Cllr Pat Hayes (FF) added.
Seconding the proposal, Cllr Michael Begley (IND) revealed that โdisturbing newsโ had emerged in Meelick which stipulated that any upgrade was โdependent on an upgrade to the existing drainage systemโ. He felt that it was โinappropriate for the Government to do that type of thing, to allow a project proceed further and do nothing about itโ.
Development in Meelick is restricted because of the sewerage issues, Cllr Pat OโGorman (FF) maintained. He said locals hopeful of building a house there were now forced to move to areas such as Sixmilebridge or Limerick instead. A โprototypeโ for the regeneration of villages has already been identified, Cllr Gabriel Keating (FG) suggested as he referred to the example set in Labasheeda and Carrigaholt.
Absence of a wastewater treatment plan has put the โworld class designation and marketingโ at Doolin under threat, Cllr Joe Garrihy (FG) cautioned. Cllr Joe Killeen (FF) recalled that An Bord Pleanรกla overturned a Clare County Council decision to grant planning for a new business in Doolin โbecause of lack of wastewater treatment. We need to get progress on that. You have to have a level playing field and try accommodate rural villagesโ.
Quoting his party colleague, Cllr PJ Kelly (FF), the view was expressed by Cllr Cillian Murphy (FF) that West Clare would be left behind if Irish Water persisted with its current approach. โWe may as well put a gate across the road on the N67 and shut it because that is effectively what is happeningโ.