Seanad debates
Wednesday, 15 May 2024
An tOrd Gnó - Order of Business
10:30 am
Victor Boyhan (Independent) | Oireachtas source
I, too, want to raise a housing issue. I am very much a strong advocate that housing need amendments should reflect the rural circumstances for communities. I have continually raised the issue of rural housing and the need for rural housing. I am sure that the Acting Leader will understand that as she represents County Kildare because many parts of that county are very rural and urban. Today, I call on the Government to ensure that all local authorities are obliged to plan, deliver and support housing in rural communities whether it is one-off housing or small clusters of housing. We do not need everyone to live in larger towns or villages. We need to support rural communities.We need to support families who have access to or own land on family farms that is suitable, as I have already mentioned, for housing. I am a member of the Oireachtas committee on agricultural as well as the Oireachtas Committee on Housing, Local Government and Heritage and I know a good deal about this issue of local housing and the need for it in rural communities. I understand the issues of rural housing and the need also for greater support for the help to build scheme. It is an important support and should be available alongside the help to buy scheme. They are two distinct and different issues but they are both important and provide for a housing need that would reflect on the nature of the market, in particular, in rural parts of the country and provide practical support for those wanting to pursue the self-build option which many people wish to pursue in rural parts of Ireland.
Rural housing fund guidance should encourage community stakeholders and local authorities to enter into appropriate affordable housing opportunities at all stages of life and foster greater community cohesion. Again, this is a very important fact if we are to sustain our rural communities. People should be allowed to remain in or return to their rural community and their rural roots and I support that.
Issues around homelessness should be properly recognised in rural communities and in many cases that is not being recognised and the traditional answer is that we will send people into county homes. In latter years, however, they are sent into the towns where they do not feel that they belong, have a place or want to live and are not necessarily connected to these places. Even if they do not have family they have that connection with local community and local supports. Rural housing policy, therefore, needs to address depopulation, to deliver affordable housing options, support community development and cohesion, as I have said, and grow and sustain rural communities.
Geographic equity is important for everyone who has a right to have a home in their place of origin or where they choose to live. I would favour local authorities being provided with financial resources for a strategic site assembly to secure land sites in particular priority areas.
Finally and I will close on this, the housing infrastructure fund has the potential to identify, resource and secure small infill sites in rural communities and I ask that we have a debate on these issues. I thank the Cathaoirleach.
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