Written answers

Tuesday, 15 June 2021

Department of Housing, Planning, and Local Government

Derelict Sites

Photo of Thomas GouldThomas Gould (Cork North Central, Sinn Fein)
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579. To ask the Minister for Housing, Planning, and Local Government the number of full-time equivalent derelict sites inspectors by local authority in tabular form. [30705/21]

Photo of Peter BurkePeter Burke (Longford-Westmeath, Fine Gael)
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Under section 159 of the Local Government Act 2001, each Chief Executive is responsible for the staffing and organisational arrangements necessary for carrying out the functions of the local authority for which he or she is responsible.

My Department oversees workforce planning for the local government sector, including the monitoring of local government sector employment levels. To this end, my Department gathers aggregate quarterly data on staff numbers in each local authority on a whole time equivalent basis.

However, granular data, in terms of the detailed breakdown of the number of full-time equivalent derelict sites inspectors employed by local authorities, is not collected and consequently is not available in my Department. The relevant information would be available on request from individual local authorities.

Photo of Thomas GouldThomas Gould (Cork North Central, Sinn Fein)
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580. To ask the Minister for Housing, Planning, and Local Government the levies applied by each local authority on derelict sites in 2020, in tabular form. [30706/21]

Photo of Peter BurkePeter Burke (Longford-Westmeath, Fine Gael)
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My Department collects statistics relating to the Derelicts Sites Act 1990 on an annual basis in Q3 of the following year. Therefore the information requested in respect of 2020 is not yet available. The latest available statistics in this regard relate to 2019 and these are set out in the following table.

Local Authority Amount levied 2019
Carlow € 18,300.00
Cavan € -
Clare € -
Cork County € 37,765.00
Cork City € 629,700.00
Donegal € -
Dublin City € 444,029.00
Dun Laoghaire Rathdown € 201,108.00
Fingal € -
Galway City € 123,900.00
Galway County € -
Kerry € 49,290.00
Kildare € 25,763.00
Kilkenny € 5,250.00
Laois € -
Leitrim € -
Limerick City & County € 127,680.00
Longford € -
Louth € 2,325.00
Mayo € 1,000.00
Meath € 78,821.00
Monaghan € -
Offaly € 3,335.00
Roscommon € -
Sligo € -
South Dublin € 45,000.00
Tipperary € 40,568.00
Waterford City & County € -
Westmeath € 101,550.00
Wexford € 103,410.00
Wicklow € 42,000.00
Total € 2,080,794.00

Photo of Thomas GouldThomas Gould (Cork North Central, Sinn Fein)
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581. To ask the Minister for Housing, Planning, and Local Government if there is a legislative requirement for a site to have been on the derelict sites register for two years before it can be compulsorily purchased. [30707/21]

Photo of Peter BurkePeter Burke (Longford-Westmeath, Fine Gael)
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Local authorities have been provided with a number of powers and measures to deal with the issue of derelict properties, both in larger urban conglomerations and in smaller rural towns and villages. There also exists a framework of overarching policy and capital funding which provides support to development, including urban regeneration.

The Derelict Sites Act 1990 (the Act) imposes a general duty on every owner and occupier of land to take all reasonable steps to ensure that the land does not become, or continue to be, a derelict site. The Act also imposes a duty on local authorities to take all reasonable steps, including the exercise of appropriate statutory powers, to ensure that any land within their functional area does not become, or continue to be, a derelict site.

Local authority powers include requiring owners or occupiers to take appropriate measures on derelict sites, acquiring derelict sites by agreement, or compulsorily, and applying a derelict sites levy on derelict sites. It is a matter for local authorities to determine the most appropriate use of the legislation within their respective functional areas.

Under the Act, local authorities are required to maintain a derelict sites register, which includes the name and address of each owner and occupier, where these can be ascertained by reasonable enquiry, of any land which, in the opinion of the local authority, is a derelict site. Under section 8(5) of the Act, a copy of the derelict sites register for any local authority can be inspected at the offices of that authority during office hours. Members of the public can engage with their local authority in relation to addressing individual derelict sites in their local areas.

Should a local authority decide to acquire a site on the register by compulsory purchase, an objection can be made by the person served by the order, and the matter will be ultimately decided by An Bord Pleanála.

There is no minimum prescribed timeline under the Act that a site must be on the derelict sites register before a local authority can initiate the compulsory purchase procedures in respect of any site. As indicated, it is a matter for the relevant local authority to determine the most appropriate use of the legislative provisions in carrying out its functions under the Act.

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