Dáil debates

Wednesday, 26 June 2024

Saincheisteanna Tráthúla - Topical Issue Debate

Antisocial Behaviour

9:40 am

Photo of Gary GannonGary Gannon (Dublin Central, Social Democrats) | Oireachtas source

This is my fifth, potentially sixth, time having a Topical issue during this Dáil year on the matter of crime in and around the constituency of Dublin Central. On none of those occasions has a Minister with responsibility for justice been here. While I appreciate that cannot always be the case, I would have expected that it would have happened on at least one of those occasions.

I frequently raise the issue of antisocial behaviour in my own area in Dublin Central not because I want to talk the area down, not because I do not have pride in the area, and not because I do not see all the other wonderful aspects of the community that I live in and am proud to represent, but because very frequently there is an issue of antisocial behaviour. Such is the nature of the city centre in most capital cities. Whenever I am canvassing, knocking on doors and going to public meetings, as an opposition TD, I am consistently asked what I am doing to combat antisocial behaviour in the city centre. I am massively frustrated that consistently I have to come into the Dáil, raise an issue, receive a written response but then not see any follow-up action. In opposition I do not have allocation of budget or responsibility for policy.

There is huge frustration because throughout the central parts of Dublin - I am sure the southside is the same - we do not feel we have the right level of Garda response time when it comes to issues of criminality. I raise Dublin 7 specifically today because previously I have mentioned other parts of the constituency. Dublin 7 is an old and incredibly beautiful part of Dublin with a huge amount of history. Someone driving down Dorset Street towards Bolton Street, the gateway into the city for anybody coming from the airport, will see huge levels of dereliction that would not be tolerated anywhere else. Down any one of the lanes in the area, you can see drug dealing taking place openly, as well as poor human souls with a degree of chaos in their lives who are not receiving treatment from the State and are dealing with their trauma by self-medicating. We have been facilitating that for far too long.

In one of the great assets of the city, one of its great unknown gems, the Blessington Basin, known locally as the duck pond, once again you will see open drug dealing, antisocial behaviour and scrambler bikes coming through very frequently. The residents and business people in the area frequently send me videos of people fighting and people in various stages of intoxication. However, what they do not see with any degree of frequency is a Garda presence, which is massively frustrating.

I took a walk along Manor Place just off Stoneybatter last week and I know a number of business representatives from the area, including Ray from Slice who makes an incredible contribution to that community. Their frustrations are the exact same. They try to run their businesses and try to present the best vision they can for their customers and the people who live in the area. Too often, there is antisocial behaviour. That antisocial behaviour often begins with a form of dereliction that is allowed to occur by inaction by another part of the State, Dublin City Council, not providing rental or cleaning services, other buildings in states of decay, bins left out etc. Once those factors are present in an area, inevitably it brings in antisocial behaviour.

Once again, I am bringing to the attention of a representative of the Government that my community in Dublin Central is not happy with the standard of service we are receiving from the State when it comes to the enforcement of the law or the minimum expectations that other communities in the State would have. Too often, there is open drug dealing, open intoxication of people who themselves need assistance, or antisocial behaviour that inevitably seems to take the form of scrambler bikes with very little Garda presence. This is not a criticism of the Garda; we need more gardaí and the Garda needs to be supported by the State.

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