Results 3,001-3,020 of 4,024 for speaker:Martin Kenny
- Ceisteanna - Questions - Priority Questions: Basic Payment Scheme (26 Apr 2018)
Martin Kenny: It is welcome that the Minister is considering the distribution of CAP payments and what options are available in that regard. We have had this discussion many times in the House and at committee. The current situation whereby entitlements are bought, sold, leased and used as commodities of a sort is inappropriate. We must have a flat-rate payment across the board in order that a farmer...
- Ceisteanna - Questions - Priority Questions: Basic Payment Scheme (26 Apr 2018)
Martin Kenny: The opposite.
- Ceisteanna - Questions - Priority Questions: Basic Payment Scheme (26 Apr 2018)
Martin Kenny: I am trying not only to protect the farmers whose case I am putting forward but also to enhance their position. Many farmers on smaller holdings have not gotten a fair crack of the whip. Going back to 2001 or 2002, farmers in the west of Ireland who had a few suckling cows discovered that their farms were not intensive enough to be able to receive the entitlements they deserved, whereas...
- Written Answers — Department of Agriculture, Food and the Marine: GLAS Administration (26 Apr 2018)
Martin Kenny: 17. To ask the Minister for Agriculture, Food and the Marine if the rules regarding the start and end dates for grazing and cutting of traditional hay meadow under GLAS will be relaxed to accommodate farmers in areas in which grass is only starting to grow and in areas in which hay meadow may be ready to cut before 1 July 2018 should good weather allow; and if he will make a statement on the...
- Written Answers — Department of Agriculture, Food and the Marine: Trade Agreements (26 Apr 2018)
Martin Kenny: 27. To ask the Minister for Agriculture, Food and the Marine the status of Mercosur negotiations in the context of the delisting of 20 Brazilian meat plants from the European Commission’s list of suppliers due to food safety concerns; and if he will make a statement on the matter. [18211/18]
- Written Answers — Department of Agriculture, Food and the Marine: Agriculture Scheme Penalties (26 Apr 2018)
Martin Kenny: 48. To ask the Minister for Agriculture, Food and the Marine his views on whether it is justifiable to penalise farmers whose land was burned in 2017 through no fault of their own by removing burned land from their 2018 BPS applications. [18214/18]
- Written Answers — Department of Agriculture, Food and the Marine: Areas of Natural Constraint Scheme Review (26 Apr 2018)
Martin Kenny: 49. To ask the Minister for Agriculture, Food and the Marine the status of the review of areas of natural constraint; when the report will be completed; when consultation with stakeholders will commence; when it will be submitted to the European Union; and if he will make a statement on the matter. [18212/18]
- Written Answers — Department of Health: Home Help Service Provision (26 Apr 2018)
Martin Kenny: 142. To ask the Minister for Health if he will address a matter in the case of a person (details supplied) regarding restoration of home help hours; and if he will make a statement on the matter. [18388/18]
- Select Committee on Rural and Community Development: Estimates for Public Services 2018
Vote 42 - Rural and Community Development (Revised) (25 Apr 2018) Martin Kenny: My apologies. I had to leave to speak in the Chamber. I was not here for the initial contribution and it was not from any disrespect to the Minister. We all need to see more money spent via the Leader programme throughout the country. I think the Minister would agree that there has been a much smaller rate of take-up and also a hesitancy on the part of an awful lot of community...
- Select Committee on Rural and Community Development: Estimates for Public Services 2018
Vote 42 - Rural and Community Development (Revised) (25 Apr 2018) Martin Kenny: In terms of the national rural development schemes, I am thinking about CLÁR and the existing walkways and tourism initiatives. I know some work has been done in different parts of the country. An excellent walkway has been built around a lake in Drumshambo, Country Leitrim. Another project in north Leitrim seeks funding to build a greenway. A number of projects in different places...
- Select Committee on Rural and Community Development: Estimates for Public Services 2018
Vote 42 - Rural and Community Development (Revised) (25 Apr 2018) Martin Kenny: Yes, plus the food hub.
- Select Committee on Rural and Community Development: Estimates for Public Services 2018
Vote 42 - Rural and Community Development (Revised) (25 Apr 2018) Martin Kenny: All of that is excellent and needs to happen, but the point I am making relates to a difficulty we have with tourism projects that make a significant difference in many places. Someone said to me recently that a lot of this stuff is for the benefit of people who make their money somewhere else and come to spend it in our local areas. We need stuff that allows people to make their money in...
- Select Committee on Rural and Community Development: Estimates for Public Services 2018
Vote 42 - Rural and Community Development (Revised) (25 Apr 2018) Martin Kenny: The Minister should not get me started on the digital hubs, given that the lack of broadband is a huge problem. It is the elephant in the room for rural Ireland.
- Select Committee on Rural and Community Development: Estimates for Public Services 2018
Vote 42 - Rural and Community Development (Revised) (25 Apr 2018) Martin Kenny: It is patchwork. There is a bit of broadband here and there. We are waiting to see how the gaps will be filled. It is really frustrating.
- Select Committee on Rural and Community Development: Estimates for Public Services 2018
Vote 42 - Rural and Community Development (Revised) (25 Apr 2018) Martin Kenny: On the issue of town and village renewal, there was a scheme for people who had a derelict house in a town and they could get €40,000 from the council to do it up. They had to rent the houses back to the local authority. The Minister of that Department at the time, Deputy Humphreys, had a scheme like that. It did not work because nobody took it up.
- Select Committee on Rural and Community Development: Estimates for Public Services 2018
Vote 42 - Rural and Community Development (Revised) (25 Apr 2018) Martin Kenny: There had to be a housing need in the area. It seemed to miss the point. The lesson was that some investment has to be put in. We need a grant where we tell people we will give them a 45% or 55% grant to do up the house. It has to be a grant of over 55% for a person to be able to borrow the rest and to be able to foresee getting the money back at some stage. If we do that, a person will...
- Select Committee on Rural and Community Development: Estimates for Public Services 2018
Vote 42 - Rural and Community Development (Revised) (25 Apr 2018) Martin Kenny: I was on the local authority in Leitrim for many years. The way it worked in Leitrim was that if one person applied to get a road done and was number ten and the next person who applied was down as number 11, then the person who was number ten came up on the list first and that person got the road done first. There was strict order. A person had to be living on the road or there had to be...
- Select Committee on Rural and Community Development: Estimates for Public Services 2018
Vote 42 - Rural and Community Development (Revised) (25 Apr 2018) Martin Kenny: I would caution against moving the scheme into the private sector. An excellent job is being done by most of the county councils. While I understand efficiencies need to be made, I think the local authorities know the roads best. They are working in these areas and should continue to do that work.
- Select Committee on Rural and Community Development: Estimates for Public Services 2018
Vote 42 - Rural and Community Development (Revised) (25 Apr 2018) Martin Kenny: Yes, I support it.
- Select Committee on Rural and Community Development: Estimates for Public Services 2018
Vote 42 - Rural and Community Development (Revised) (25 Apr 2018) Martin Kenny: Is there some statutory reason for us to read through them? Is the Chairman saying that we cannot just agree them?