Written answers

Tuesday, 27 February 2018

Department of Housing, Planning, and Local Government

National Planning Framework

Photo of Niamh SmythNiamh Smyth (Cavan-Monaghan, Fianna Fail)
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752. To ask the Minister for Housing, Planning, and Local Government if a motion by a group (details supplied) will be reviewed and its concerns addressed; if rural housing for persons living in rural areas will be facilitated in the plan; if the re-opening of the Ulster canal is a key infrastructural project; and if he will make a statement on the matter. [9989/18]

Photo of Eoghan MurphyEoghan Murphy (Dublin Bay South, Fine Gael)
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The National Planning Framework (NPF) was published by Government on 16 February 2018, alongside the National Development Plan 2018-2027 as part of Project Ireland 2040.

The NPF sets out an ambitious high-level, national vision for Ireland for 2040, and provides the framework and principles to manage future population and economic growth over the next 20 years (catering for around 1 million extra people, 660,000 extra jobs and 550,000 extra homes).

The framework will be followed by three Regional Spatial and Economic Strategies, being prepared by the Regional Assemblies over the course of 2018, which will link strategic planning and investment at the national level with the physical planning and local economic and community development functions of local authorities.

The NPF places a strong emphasis on maintaining the fabric of our rural communities, supporting the growth of rural towns while recognising the need for the open countryside to continue to be a living and lived-in landscape, and investing to support job creation. The NPF is a national plan, with a high-level ambition of creating a single vision, a shared set of goals for every community across the country, and to deliver on these in a way that makes sense for our communities, rural and urban alike.

In addition, the Action Plan for Rural Development, published on 23 January 2017, takes a whole-of-Government approach, led by my colleague, the Minister for Rural and Community Development, to the economic and social development of rural Ireland and will act as an overarching structure for the co-ordination and implementation of rural initiatives across Government Departments and other public bodies.

Section 4.3 of the National Development Plan commits the Government to the next stage of the restoration of the Ulster Canal in County Monaghan, while the NPF recognises the potential role of greenways such as the Ulster Canal Greenway for an enhanced tourism offering throughout the border area.

Photo of Éamon Ó CuívÉamon Ó Cuív (Galway West, Fianna Fail)
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753. To ask the Minister for Housing, Planning, and Local Government the implications for an organisation (details supplied) in being included in the recently published national planning framework; the schemes available for this organisation to assist it develop the projects; and if he will make a statement on the matter. [10041/18]

Photo of Eoghan MurphyEoghan Murphy (Dublin Bay South, Fine Gael)
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In developing the National Planning Framework (NPF) document, case studies aligned with the National Strategic Outcomes set out in Chapter 10 were included for demonstration purposes to highlight exemplary outcomes, whether for local communities or in terms of having a wider regional and national impact.

This case study referred to above was included as an exemplar of innovation, regional enterprise and community development in a remote rural area.

While the inclusion of specific case studies should not be construed as a commitment to funding support, Project Ireland 2040 sets out an array of capital investment proposals, as distinct from wider current expenditure programmes, that the organisations concerned may benefit from, subject to satisfying the relevant terms and criteria.

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