Dáil debates

Wednesday, 6 April 2011

9:00 pm

Photo of Eoghan MurphyEoghan Murphy (Dublin South East, Fine Gael)

I raise a matter specific to my constituency of Dublin South-East but which has relevance to all constituencies as it pertains to the operation of a semi-State company, Dublin Port Company. Dublin port is a very important national asset and it is key to our economic recovery. If we as a nation are to do well, then it must also do well. It plays a very generous role in its community, financially and through other means. I have been to the port company and I have met the management. It is a very impressive operation with more than 4,000 people employed there. A total of 42% of the country's GDP goes through the port every year with 15 sailings every day between Ireland and the UK. The port is a vital strategic asset for this State and yet for nearly a decade it has ignored its obligations under the planning laws and has acted with something close to contempt in its dealings with local residents.

I will briefly outline the facts as I understand them. In 2002, three 30 metre high gantry cranes were erected in Dublin port on the south quay of the Liffey where Marine Terminal Limited operates. No planning permission was sought at the time for the erection or the operation of these cranes. The cranes are located in close proximity to a number of homes on Pigeon House Road. The cranes produce considerable noise pollution, often through the night, given the irregular operation of the port due to tidal considerations. The level of noise pollution has been shown to be in excess of both the World Health Organisation and Dublin City Council's noise pollution limits. This has had an impact on residents' lives. Dublin Port Company and Dublin City Council have been made aware of this serious disruption on a number of occasions, beginning in 2004. More recent protests have come to nothing and it has come to my attention that the head of Marine Terminal Limited at the time the cranes were constructed is now the head of Dublin Port Company, the landlord for Dublin port. Dublin Port Company has so far failed to engage appropriately with the residents, taking the position that the cranes do not require planning permission and offering minimal gestures regarding mitigating the noise caused by the operation of the cranes. This year, residents gained confirmation through the section 5 planning process that the cranes are not exempt development and that they required planning permission for their initial erection. This now raises a number of issues regarding the operation of the cranes, one being the question of insurance. Still nothing has been done and the cranes continue to operate through the night and every day. Given the continued operation of the cranes, residents now feel compelled to take the matter to the courts.

This is not a question of a group of people moving close to a busy industrial estate and then complaining about the noise or the activities emanating from that site; this is about the expansion of a business, a semi-state company, without proper observation of the laws of the land and in a manner that has shown wilful disrespect for its long-established neighbours. It is not right that people can be treated in this way by any company, let alone a semi-state one. It is not right that the residents of the Coastguard Cottages now feel that their only form of redress is through the courts, through a lengthy and expensive process for which they may well lack the finances and at this stage, the will, to take on. Dublin port and its tenants have to do business and they have to do it as best they can if we are to prosper as a nation but they cannot do it by their own rules and oblivious to the lives of those around them. It is this kind of attitude at a national level and on the part of the previous Government that has brought us to the precarious financial situation in which we find ourselves today. Surely we can do better and we must if we are to honour the commitments and the pledges we made in the recent campaign and if we are to live up to the commitments stated so clearly in the programme for Government. We must meet the people's expectations of what politics is meant to be about and their expectations of what public representation is all about. They lack a voice and we are elected to give it to them. I urge the Minister to investigate this matter immediately as a priority and to use his good offices to help find a resolution for all involved to address the legitimate problems residents face on a daily basis near Dublin port and to put Dublin Port Company back in good standing in relation to the law and in its dealings with local residents. This is a semi-state company and therefore it is our responsibility.

Comments

No comments

Log in or join to post a public comment.