Results 22,541-22,560 of 24,567 for speaker:Róisín Shortall
- Public Transport. (2 Nov 2006)
Róisín Shortall: The Minister of State should tell that to people who sit in traffic for three hours a day.
- Public Transport. (2 Nov 2006)
Róisín Shortall: The Government has had nine years to sort it out.
- Public Transport. (2 Nov 2006)
Róisín Shortall: Nine years and increasing times of sitting in traffic.
- Public Transport. (2 Nov 2006)
Róisín Shortall: The Government has failed to sort out public transport.
- Public Transport. (2 Nov 2006)
Róisín Shortall: That is not what the Minister for Transport, Deputy Cullen, said.
- Public Transport. (2 Nov 2006)
Róisín Shortall: It is difficult for anybody who has travelled to another European city where there is integrated ticketing to understand how the Government could have made such a dog's dinner of the project. Proposals in this regard were first made in 1994 and the project was awarded to the Railway Procurement Agency, RPA, in 2000. Some â¬9.5 million has been spent since then and it seems to have gone...
- Public Transport. (2 Nov 2006)
Róisín Shortall: When is that likely to be?
- Public Transport. (2 Nov 2006)
Róisín Shortall: The Minister of State speaks of progress not happening "immediately", but this has been in the pipeline for 12 years.
- Road Safety. (2 Nov 2006)
Róisín Shortall: It is important we remind ourselves that we are talking about compulsory basic training for motorcyclists. There is the outrageous situation at present where any 16-year-old can buy a motorbike and ride off.
- Road Safety. (2 Nov 2006)
Róisín Shortall: Does the Minister of State accept that compulsory basic training for motorcyclists was part of the 2004 road safety strategy and that he has utterly failed in that regard? Does he further accept that it was legislated for in this year's Road Traffic Act but that he has failed to commence that part of it? Does he also accept, given that almost half motorcyclists killed on our roads are aged...
- Road Safety. (2 Nov 2006)
Róisín Shortall: Question 2: To ask the Minister for Transport his proposals for the reform of the driver licensing system; and the timescale proposed. [36052/06]
- Road Safety. (2 Nov 2006)
Róisín Shortall: On a point of order, we have heard ten minutes of this waffle.
- Road Safety. (2 Nov 2006)
Róisín Shortall: Can we take it that ten minutes will be allowed for each of the priority questions?
- Road Safety. (2 Nov 2006)
Róisín Shortall: The Minister should do something.
- Road Safety. (2 Nov 2006)
Róisín Shortall: The Minister only talks about it.
- Road Safety. (2 Nov 2006)
Róisín Shortall: What is the time limit for the Minister of State's second contribution?
- Road Safety. (2 Nov 2006)
Róisín Shortall: There is a second question within that 12 minutes which has not been mentioned yet.
- Road Safety. (2 Nov 2006)
Róisín Shortall: The Minister of State is not, he is just filling in time.
- Road Safety. (2 Nov 2006)
Róisín Shortall: The Minister of State is.
- Road Safety. (2 Nov 2006)
Róisín Shortall: The Minister of State's time is up. His four minutes are over.