Saturday, 1 December 2012

The Slightly Pink Flag

The Slightly Pink Flag or the Legion of the Mudguard
Jack, Rabbitte
Air: 'The Red Flag' (with apologies to Jim Connell)

The Labour Party’s flag is pink but not as pink as you might think.
They do the best that they can do but their flag is quickly turning blue.
So raise the faded banner high, ours is not to reason why
It flaps around just like a tail - it’s being wagged by Fine Gael.

Of leaders past their praises sing - O’Leary, Rabbite, Quinn and Spring
Come workers raise your champagne glass and toast these heroes of our class.
And best of all in our own time, a leader steadfast and sublime
In letters gold in the Hall of Fame inscribe bold Eamon Gilmore’s name.

The party’s getting muddied like the mudguard on the Blueshirt bike
They carry on without a moan – they’ll never lose their faith in Joan
This saint and martyr in the fight she will defend against the Right
Cut off one arm instead of two  - be grateful she’s protecting you.

They’re doing what they have to do, it hurts them more than it hurts you.
They’re weary now the fight is done - their conscience lost and they have won.
So here ‘s to Labour’s sacrifice, the onward march of little mice
For  Ministers’ pay to hell and back, their motto is “I’m alright, Jack.”

Friday, 28 September 2012

Reilly-Shortall row highlights primary care scandal


When this row broke out between James Reilly and Róisín Shotall it was obvious that there was deep dysfunction at the helm of our health services. That has been borne out with the resignation of Roisín Shortall.
In her resignation statement she said: "The public have a right to expect that decisions on health infrastructure and staffing will be made in the public interest based on health need and not driven by other concerns."
The Minister added 15 primary care centres to the original list of 20; two of the 15 are in his own constituency. He added new criteria to the criteria based on urban and rural deprivation. He claims these new criteria are : existing health facilities; GP to population ratio; Pressures on services, particularly Acute Services; Funding options, including exchequer funded (HSE) build or lease, and implementability of a PPP (size, site and scale). But he hasn’t told us how these criteria match the chosen locations.
And, clearly, he failed to satisfy his own Primary Care junior Minister Róisín Shortall that his criteria for choosing locations were correct. Again to quote Róisín Shortall in her Dáil speech last week: “Decisions on where staff are allocated and where primary care centres are located must be transparent and objective based on health need and no other consideration.”
There is another issue here which has got little attention. Minister Reilly is proposing to develop these centres by Public-Private Partnership only. In her Dáil speech Róisín Shortall said that primary care centres, just like schools, are essential public infrastructure and should be provided on the same basis. We agree with that.
Instead Minister Reilly is determined to continue the policy of his predecessor Mary Harney of developing primary care centres by public private partnership (PPP) only, thus allowing developers and vested interests in private healthcare – which he knows a little about himself - to have undue influence.
We have seen in the Comptroller & Auditor General report this week the millions of  public money squandered on PPPs  that have never materialised – including €4.1 million for radiation oncology that is now to be provided directly – a scandalous waste.

Sinn Féin asked Minister Reilly in the Dáil this week if he has an up to date cost benefit analysis of primary care centre development by PPP as against development by HSE - he failed to answer the question. 
The bottom line is that the public need these primary care centres – and they need to be provided not in the interest of developers or GPs or anyone else but in the interest of patients.

Friday, 20 July 2012

The Household Charge & the Coalition's attack on Local Democracy

I am publishing here in full the letter received today by all Dublin City Councillors telling us of the cuts to funding for the Council being imposed by Minister Phil Hogan. They have tied local government funding to the unjust and uncollectable Household Charge.

Funding for Dublin and other councils is being slashed for the rest of 2012 based on the extent of non-payment of the Household Charge in our Council area.

This is pure bully-boy tactics from the Fine Gael-Labour Government. An unjust tax which was brought in by central government, not by councils, the Household Charge is being boycotted by around half of Dublin City households. Because the figure for those paying includes property owners with multiple properties, the real proportion of actual home-owners is not reflected in the 66% payment figure for Dublin City.

Nearly €4.7 million is to be slashed from Dublin City Council's Budget by Hogan. This will hit vital services such as housing, environment, roads, community services etc. It is a disgraceful development and was only revealed this week by Hogan because the Dáil goes into recess for the summer and so the Fine Gael/Labour regime hopes to minimise opposition. It is exactly what we in Sinn Féin said would happen when the Household Charge was imposed. But this attack on Local Democracy must and will be opposed.


To each Member of Dublin City Council
20th July, 2012


Re:      Local Government Fund Allocations 2012


Dear Councillor


I attach a copy of Circular 09/2012.  This has obvious implications for the Budget for the current year and we will discuss this at the September Council meeting.

In the interim, we will review options to align spending commitments to funding resources.



Yours sincerely,


_____________
John Tierney
City Manager


Circular Fin 09/2012

Manager
Dublin City Council

LGF General Purpose Allocations 2012
A Chara,

I am directed by the Minister for the Environment, Community and Local Government to advise you of the approach to payments to be made in respect of the provisional General-Purpose Grant allocation from the Local Government Fund for Dublin City Council for the year 2012. 

In considering the approach to the 3rd quarter GPG payment, the Minister has taken the following into account:

  • the overall level of funds available in the Local Government Fund;
  • the level of household charge compliance achieved to date;
  • the position of individual local authorities in terms of scale and financial resilience; and
  • the objective of providing general purpose grants to authorities that enable them to provide a reasonable level of service to their communities.

The approach adopted in each case takes account of relative household charge compliance while not seeking to apply the full (current) level of shortfall.  While national and local information/compliance campaigns at political and official levels have been critical to the compliance levels achieved to date, this approach recognises that the administrative follow-up by individual local authorities (based on the data-sharing work) will now only begin to have a real bearing on the remaining compliance levels in local authority areas.  Furthermore, this allows for local authorities to progressively recoup their original GPG allocation through improved household charge compliance.
   
Details of the basis for the calculation of your revised grant are set out below.


Revised 2012 Allocations

The revised allocation for Dublin City Council consists of the following elements:

  • the original allocation of €54,805,761;
  • less €4,691,839 reflecting an adjustment based on the level of compliance achieved to date of  66%.

25% of the above deduction will be offset against the Q3 payment (see summary table below).  The final amount of General-Purpose Grants available for 2012 will be revisited and reviewed in Quarter 4 to take account of the financial position including progress on securing an increased household charge yield.

Local authorities are reminded of the requirement to achieve a balanced budget, taking into account the reduced income, and should reforecast expenditure for the remainder of the year to achieve balance.


Pension Related Deductions (PRD) reconciliation

An adjustment has been made to the Quarter 3 payment to reflect the final reconciliation of Pension Related Deductions (PRD) 2009 – 2011.

The adjustment in respect of pension related deductions is 376,632.



Quarter 3 payment



GPG Q3 (based on original allocation)
13,701,440
Less Household Charge adjustment
1,172,960
Less Advance

Pension related deduction adjustment
376,632
Actual Q3 payment
12,905,113



Any queries in respect of this letter should be made to Emma Reeves at Emma.Reeves@environ.ie or 053 911 7417.



Mise, le meas,


Colm Lavery
Principal Officer
Local Government Finance

Monday, 14 May 2012

Enda's Vision of Hell on Top of Croagh Patrick

Enda Kenny recently climbed Croagh Patrick. This is the result.



My name it is Enda and I’m here to send a
Most terrible warning to you one and all
In this plebiscite you have to vote right
Or this land into Hell-fire it surely will fall.
Take heed when I threaten and don’t be forgettin’
The words that I speak from the County Mayo
For the end will come soon, so prepare for your doom
If the people of Ireland they dare to vote No.

On Croagh Patrick I’m standing and a creature is landing
Out there in Clew Bay and his wings they are black
His eyes are red coals and he’s hunting for souls
It’s the Divil himself and he’s here to attack.
He’s gathering sinners - especially Shinners -
For satanic rites never known in Mayo
Your souls will be toasted, your hearts will be roasted
If the Divil prevails and the people vote No.

The sharks will surround you, the ocean will drown you
And icebergs will sink every ship in the sea
The mountains will shake and the bogs they will quake
Volcanoes will burst from Carnsore to Kilkee.
The sky will fall earthward and suffocate Jedward
With arsenic and sulphur the rivers will flow
Six-kilo hailstones will fall down and break bones
If you secretly mark the square box that says No.

All your teeth will fall out, you’ll be riddled with gout
Your head full of lice and your bed full of fleas
Soup kitchens and breadlines from Rooskey to Rathmines
Plague, pestilence, pox and the Black Death disease.
No song you’ll be croonin’ when you meet Michael Noonan
Down a dark lane in Limerick as you freeze in the snow
Your eye he will pocket and come back for the socket
If you dare to defy us and choose to vote No.

Tuesday, 1 May 2012

The slave mentality

We have 30 days left to save what is left of economic sovereignty in Ireland, 30 days to ensure that the Fine Gael/Labour Government does not succeed in putting failed austerity policies into the Constitution, 30 days to defeat an Austerity Treaty that means more cuts, more stealth taxes, more unemployment and more emigration.

The campaign has hardly begun and already the 'Yes' side are resorting to their customary threats and bullying. This afternoon Finance Minister Michael Noonan threatened an even more savage budget in 2013  if the people vote 'No'.

The big stick being wielded by the 'Yes' side, of course, is that if we vote 'No' we will not have access to further emergency funding from the European Union. Where does this threat come from? The Government says this is in another Treaty, the ESM Treaty. But the fact is that this Treaty has not yet been approved by the Irish Government and has not come into effect. This ESM Treaty, if approved, would make ESM funding conditional on us approving the Austerity Treaty.

So, the threat is a bogus threat because the Government itself has the ability to block and veto the very source of the threat - the proposed ESM Treaty. Yet this Fine Gael/Labour Coalition wants the ESM Treaty to go ahead as is and to get the people to approve the Austerity Treaty. It's crackers.

Did they not even consider delaying the referendum until later this year in order to get a better deal? The Treaty may well be changed anyway as there is growing opposition to it across Europe. And it is far more likely that it will be changed or scrapped altogether if we vote 'No'. But if we vote 'Yes' we will be tying this Government and future Governments to austerity policies of drastic cuts to public services and huge tax increases for many years to come.

How could a Government be so submissive and so incompetent as to take such a position? Where was their backbone? The truth is it was removed years ago. Fine Gael and Labour have been bowing the knee to Brussels to decades. They never question anything that comes from the European Commission or the powerful EU member states. Remember the Lisbon Treaty when they told us 'Vote Yes for Jobs'? Where are the jobs?

I believe their submissive attitude goes far deeper, especially in the case of Fine Gael. There is within Fine Gael a strand of slavishness that goes back to the days of the West Britons, people who bent the knee to the British when they ruled Ireland from Dublin Castle. That was confirmed last weekend when a former Taoiseach and Fine Gael leader, John Bruton, unveiled a plaque at Woodenbridge, Co. Wicklow. Incredibly, this plaque was to commemorate the place where in 1914 Irish Parliamentary Party leader John Redmond made a speech urging the Irish Volunteers to join the British Army. Thousands did so, persuaded by Redmond to fight for the British Empire and then dying in a futile war between the kings, warlords and capitalists of Europe.

There was always a Redmondite strand in Fine Gael but what of the Labour Party that claims the legacy of James Connolly? They are on the coat-tails of Fine Gael, once again urging the Irish people to abandon their rights and sacrifice themselves for the good of the wealthy and powerful in Europe.

Give them all their answer - Vote 'No'.

John Redmond urging the Irish to join the British Army.

Sunday, 1 April 2012

Fine Gael/Labour assault on Local Democracy



More than half of those liable have not paid the Household Charge and thousands of them took to the streets on Saturday 31 March to converge on the Fine Gael Ard Fheis and tell Phil Hogan and co. that enough is enough.

Already we can see the latest line of attack in response from the Fine Gael/Labour Coalition. They are going to try to blame those of us campaigning against the Household Charge for the crisis in funding for local government. It was this Government which slashed funding for local councils in Budget 2012. They then linked local government funding directly to the unjust and uncollectable Household Charge. This creates a major shortfall for local authority finances, threatening existing jobs and services. It is a massive con job and it is citizens, once again, who will suffer.

When we were considering the 2012 budget for Dublin City Council last year the Governmen had still not made clear how the Household Charge would work and what its relation to local government funding would be. We asked if it was the case that a shortfall in collection of the charge would mean a shortfall in local government funding. The Council management was far from clear on this. But the Government's Budget 2012 cut €166 million from the Local Government Fund, with the shortfall to be made up from the collection of the Household Charge. Because of this charge we voted against the Council's 2012 Budget.

So now, unless the Government introduces a Supplementary Budget for Local Government, we face the loss of vital services and jobs. This is nothing less than an assult on local democracy by Fine Gael and the Labour Party. And to add insult to injury, today in the Sunday Times, FG European Affairs Minister Lucinda Creighton has attacked local authorities for not puling their weight in collecting the charge. To add to the threats to householders of fines or even jail, we now have our councils being threatened - "Collect this tax because we're not going to fund your services any other way" say Hogan's Anti-Heroes in FG and Labour.

Local government is being forced into crisis. The only way to halt this is to repeal the Household Charge and to introduce a Supplementary Budget to fund councils and maintain existing services and jobs in 2012.

Make no mistake, we do need a better way of funding local government. That can be done centrally by reforming the tax system, taxing wealth and increasing the Local Government Fund which goes to local authorities. Or it can be done by bringing in a fair form of local taxation based on ability to pay and on wealth. Or a combination of both. There is no shortage of ideas but of course this Government and its predecessors would do anything but make the rich pay more so they impose the regressive Household Charge.

It is important that unity is maintained in the campaign to defeat the charge. We should not allow the Government to divide those who have paid and those who have not paid. All should be welcome in the drive to abolish Hogan's Tax. 



Cllr. Larry O'Toole, Brian Stanley TD (SF Spokesperson on Local Government) and myself at the launch of Sinn Féin's Bill to repeal the Household Charge.

Sunday, 18 March 2012

Reclaiming our country



First of all, thanks to all who attended Sinn Féin's public meeting in Kilbarrack (above) last Thursday 15th March, and especially to our excellent speakers. The meeting heard powerful testimony of the impact of cuts and charges and the failure of the political system on our communities. But it also heard calls to action and a message of hope.

Local community activist Cathleen O'Neill of Kilbarrack Community Development Programme spoke of the anger at the imposition of the Household Charge and this was one of the main themes of the meeting. Cathleen said that she is not paying this unjust tax and cited the scandal of the continuing payment of billions to Anglo-Irish Bank bond-holders while the low paid and the unemployed are punished by the Fine Gael/Labour Government.

Edward Matthews, Industrial Relations Officer of the Irish Nurses and Midwives Organisation in North Dublin - covering the North city and county - gave a hard-hitting account of what the health cuts mean for citizens. This includes not only over-crowded emergency departments and longer waiting lists for vital treatment in Beaumont and other hospitals, but also less care for older people with home help hours being cut and community nurses unable to provide the regular checks that they once could make to help ensure the safety of old people living alone.

Darren Kelly of the Priory Hall residents described their ordeal from the day they put their names down for the apartments until the present situation as they live in limbo and face possible bankruptcy. Scandalously, Minister Phil Hogan still refuses to meet the residents, spuriously claiming that he is prevented from doing so by continuing legal actions - even though the residents themselves are not in court.

Darren Kelly summed it all up well when he said that the residents had learned the need to campaign as they have been so badly let down by the State which allowed unscrupulous developer McFeeley to build such a disastrous complex as Priory Hall, and with the Government now refusing to intervene. "We have to reclaim our country, reclaim our Republic", said Darren.

This theme was taken up by Sinn Féin Deputy Leader Mary Lou  McDonald TD. She said she would not be paying the Household Charge. She spoke of the need for political action - this is not a time when anyone can leave politics to the politicians and people are getting active in their communities and around campaigns such as those against the Household Charge and the cuts to health and education. People power can make a difference as the Coalition's partial climb-down on cuts to disadvantaged schools has shown; that was a combination of action in the Dáil led by Sinn Féin and on the streets led by campaigning parents, pupils and teachers.

This was the first public meeting we had in the area since I was co-opted to Dublin City Council last May; I took the opportunty to thank all who have assisted me since then, especially Councillor Larry O'Toole, leader of our group on Dublin City Council. In summing up the meeting I reminded people that we will face many more years of cuts, unjust charges and mass unemployment if the EU Austerity Treaty is accepted - that's why we need a massive 'NO' vote in the referendum, whenever it is held.

Ní neart go cur le chéile - Unity is strength.

Sunday, 4 March 2012

Emigration


The RDS this weekend

The emigrant ship a century ago

The great Irish language writer and republican Máirtín Ó Cadhain wrote a short story called 'An Bhliain 1912' ('The Year 1912') about how emigration so dominated the lives and the thoughts of the people of his native Conamara as it was denuded of its youth. "Typical of a race whose guardian angel was the American trunk, whose guiding star was the exile ship, whose Red Sea was the Atlantic" he wrote.

As we mark the centenaries of great events in Irish history in the coming decade it looks like we will also be repeating the history of emigration which was bleeding this nation a century ago. Words fail me as I look at the pictures of long lines of people entering the emigration exhibition in the RDS this weekend. And who needs irony or satire when we realise that the Fianna Fáil Ard Fheis was on in the same venue?

We know the reasons why this is happening. The Irish economy was wrecked by the greed of developers, speculators and bankers and their puppets in Government. And the 'solutions' being imposed by the Fine Gael-Labour Government and the EU are making unemployment worse. We are back to the situation where the true figures for joblessness are disguised by the numbers of people leaving our shores.

It's easy to become despondent in the face of this catastrophe which we have seen so many times before in our history. But it should spur us on to more determined political action. This is OUR country. Our young people should not have to abandon Ireland and leave their families and friends to find work abroad. There ARE alternatives to the futile austerity policies currently being imposed and Sinn Féin, among others, have put them forward. Sinn Féin by no means has a monopoly of wisdom but we do have proposals based on fostering sustainable economic growth and jobs. And we have the proven determination to struggle against inequality and injustice and for real change and a new Ireland.

So what should people do? They should become politically active in campaigns to defend their rights, in their communities, in trade unions, students unions, lobby groups, protests large and small. Challenge the political establishment. Demand change. Join Sinn Féin.

Emigration used to be called an economic safety valve. It was always more of a safety valve for the political establishment, with potentially radical young people forced out of Ireland. That must not happen again. It's much easier now for our emigrants to keep contact with home and to exercise some political clout. So, as well as demanding economic policies to create jobs and help stop emigration, we also need to campaign for emigrants to be given the right to vote. They have a role to play in the fightback.

We look forward to the day when they return to reclaim their country.


Saturday, 25 February 2012

Duck! It's Joan Burton!



Remember the Lisbon Treaty referendum?
‘Vote Yes for Jobs’ said the unholy alliance of Fianna Fail, Fine Gael, the Labour Party, the Green Party, the Irish Congress of Trade Unions and the Irish Business and Employers Confederation. Where are the promised jobs? We have over 440,000 people unemployed in the 26 Counties and growing emigration and the only jobs are overseas.
That ‘Yes’ referendum campaign was a con job and unfortunately it succeeded in cajoling and scaring sufficient numbers of voters to ratify Lisbon. Like previous EU treaties it took away more democratic powers from the Irish people and gave them to the EU. And it has tied us to the disastrous economic strategy of the EU which is imposing austerity policies that are damaging our society and further weakening our economy.
Of course the EU has willing servants in Taoiseach Enda Kenny and Tanaiste Eamon Gilmore. It was pathetic to see Kenny tripping off for his dinner with German Chancellor Angela Merkel in the ornate Meseberg Palace near Berlin this week. It was even worse to read of Irish officials dismissing the very idea that Kenny might dare to mention any serious issues at the dinner – like the massive debt burden on Ireland. I wonder did he drop hints?
“Chancellor, would you have any interest in more sauce on your duck? How do you rate the pear?”  (They had Brandenberg duck and pear dessert.)
Inconveniently for Kenny and Gilmore, German sources confirmed that the wording of the Fiscal Treaty was specially crafted to avoid a referendum in Ireland. This Treaty for austerity would impose a failed and doomed anti-people economic strategy on the Irish people. Our sad losers in Government, the teacher’s pets of Europe, are scared stiff of losing their place at the top of the class if the Irish people are given the chance to reject this Treaty. There’d be no more cosy dinners in the Meseberg Palace then.
But back in Ireland it was time for another con job as Kenny joined Labour’s Social ‘Protection’ Minister to wheel out the Government’s ‘Pathways to Work’ document. Billed as a big plan to tackle unemployment, this is a collection of rehashed proposals with no new funding or no real stimulus to create jobs.  At its core it is an attack on the unemployed.
In Budget 2012 people on low incomes, including social welfare recipients, were targeted. To try to justify this, and with the help of the likes of Independent newspapers, there was much hype about social welfare fraud. Now, don’t get me wrong – such fraud needs to be tackled. But it is a drop in the ocean of unemployment and it is miniscule compared to the billions robbed from the Irish people by the wealthy fraudsters and their friends in Government who wrecked our economy.
You would think that the points I’ve just made might come from a Minister whose party purports to be successors of James Connolly. But no. Who needs Maggie Thatcher when you get this from Labour Minister Joan Burton:
"I am trying to ensure that people don’t find the security of the social welfare system more attractive than the risky world of work."
It’s enough to turn you off your Brandenberg duck!

Saturday, 18 February 2012

Housing - a right we had to fight for



Children of the slums in Cumberland St, behind Gardiner St., 1913.


A few days ago I picked up a haunting book. It's called 'Darkest Dublin' and it features photographs of the slums of Dublin in 1913. The photographs were taken mostly in the autumn and winter of that year, in the wake of the Church Street disaster when two tenement houses, Nos. 66 and 67 Church Street collapsed, killing seven people. This led to an inquiry into the housing conditions of Dublin's poor and the photographs were taken as part of that inquiry.

The Church Street disaster happened at the start of the Great Lockout and one of the dead, 17-year-old Hugh Sammon, was a locked out worker of Jacob's Biscuit Factory, a member of the ITGWU. His four and a half year old sister Elizabeth also died in the tragedy.

The pictures are shocking, even today, nearly 100 years later. We see not only the familiar delapidated tenement rooms in which large families were crammed, but also the crumbling houses and cottages in dim lanes, alleys and yards, in which families tried to survive. Scores of people had to share one or two toilets and one water tap in the yard. These hovels were not fit for animals. It was fitting that the ITGWU chose Horse Show Week to stop the trams when their conductors walked off the job. The horses of Dublin's wealthy were housed in far better conditions than the families of the exploited workers.

It is reckoned that over 100,000 people lived in slum housing in Dublin in 1913, out of a city population of 300,000.

One of the stark facts exposed by the housing inquiry was that three members of Dublin Corporation between them owned 46 tenement houses and 18 smallers houses. Many of these were grossly sub-standard, classed as third-class dwellings by the Corporation's own Sanitary Staff. These and other landlords were given tax rebates for their slum properties. One of the Corporation member's houses was certified as unfit for a rebate but was granted it anyway by the City authorities.

Sound familiar? You will recall that property developers, speculators and landlords benefited hugely from tax breaks during the Celtic Tiger property bubble. Because, while housing conditions have improved beyond recognition during the last century, property rights and the rights of developers and landlords still count for more in Ireland than the right to housing.

As a report showed ths week we have masses of people struggling with mortgage debt, the toxic legacy of the property bubble. Contrary to Enda Kenny's assertion that people 'went mad' during the Celtic Tiger, the reality was that people had no choice but to take out mortgages to purchase hugely over-priced houses and apartments. Or else they faced sky-high rents imposed by private landlords. Now these people are in deep trouble; many are skimping on essentials to meet mortgage repayments, or are facing repossession. Street homelessness continues, a shame on our counrry. Meanwhile many of the developers who were reponsible jointly with the Fianna Fáil Government for the property bubble are being bailed out by NAMA.

In this siutation it is doubly damning that the Fine Gael/Labour Government is continuing the retreat of central and local government from their obligation to provide housing. Social housing budgets have been slashed, continuing the trend begun by Fianna Fáil, which allowed the selling off of a huge part of the social housing stock in land and dwellings. The result is that the supposed safety net of social housing is threadbare. This is something that we as councillors encounter every day of the week as citizens seek housing that most often is simply not there.
Housing is a right. Generations of Irish people had to fight for that right, gradually forcing Government to improve conditions, end slums and develop council housing across the State, as well as facilitating affordable housing for those who wish to own their own homes. As we approach the centenary of the 1913 Lockout we should re-assert  not only the right to work and to decent pay and conditions but also the right to a home.

* 'Darkest Dublin' by Christiaan Corlett. Published by Wordwell, 2008.

Thursday, 16 February 2012

In Dublin's Unfair City

Fáilte romhaibh!

This is my first venture into the world of blogging.

It's been a long journey from writing articles on A4 refill pads with a blue biro in the offices of An Phoblacht in pre-computer days. Now we have instant communication, by-passing print altogether.

With this blog I'll try to do what can't be done on facebook and keep you up to date, as well as sample some of my ramblings on politics and other matters.

This week the focus of news has been unusually sharp on the tangled affairs of Dublin City Council. The bin privatisation has been an absolute fiasco, exactly as we in Sinn Féin predicted it would be. When this was raised in the Dáil Enda Kenny called on Greyhound to step back and not refuse to lift the some 18,000 bins from households who have not paid some or all of the annual €100 standing charge.

However, this is hypocrisy as Kenny's Environment Minister Phil Hogan presides over waste management and fully supports privatisation. He even falsely claimed in the Dáil earlier this week when challenged by Sinn Féin's Mary Lou McDonald TD that Dublin City Councillors voted for privatisation. False! Three times the Council voted by a majority to reject privatisation. But under legislation brought in by Fianna Fáil the City Manager was able to impose privatisation over the heads of the Councillors. Fine Gael and Labour in Government have done nothing to over-turn this legislation or to introduce a State-wide waiver scheme to exempt low-income households from the waste charges.

And a further note on the bins fiasco: I recently asked the Dublin City Manager what additional measures are being taken this year to compel the industrial and commerical producers of waste - excess packaging and the other stuff that fills our bins - to eliminate or reduce their waste. The answer was that no extra measures are being taken. There is still no real pressure on producers to eliminate or reduce their waste before it enters the waste stream, forcing citizens to pay for collection and the city to pay for land-fill.

The same Minister Hogan refuses to meet the residents of Priory Hall. They were marching for justice again last Sunday and I was privileged to join them and speak, together with councillors and TDs from other parties. The issues was raised by Mary Lou McDonald in the Dáil this morning (Thursday). Tánaiste Eamon Gilmore tried to score a few cheap political points by trying to link the Priory Hall developer to Sinn Féin. For the record this unscrupulous developer has nothing to do with Sinn Féin. He was an IRA prisoner and hunger striker in the early 1980s but long ago severed his connection with republicans and, by his treatment of the Priory Hall residents, he has betrayed everything he once stood for. But this is a distraction - the main point is to keep supporting the Priory Hall residents' fight for justice.