Tuesday, April 15, 2014

THE DEATH OF CARRICKMACROSS TOWN COUNCIL


Speech delivered at special dinner to mark the abolition of Carrickmacross Town Council

Carrickmacross, Saturday 12 April 2014

Ladies and gentleman, it is a genuine pleasure for me to be with you tonight although in some ways it is a sad occasion. When I receive an invitation to speak at a conference or a seminar, I usually take my time, weigh up the pros and cons and, ultimately, accept some of the invitations and reject others. As my wife will confirm, I had no hesitation in accepting this invitation. There are two reasons for this. First, I was intrigued at the prospect of speaking at what is effectively a funeral or a wake for a public institution.

 
Secondly, I accepted because of the issue concerned – I am, and always have been, a firm believer in local self-government, local democracy and the principle of subsidiarity. Accordingly I am appalled at the decision to abolish town councils. As a country I believe we will be all the poorer. Essentially what we are witnessing is a disgusting power grab by central government – it is about power, it is about control and it is about greed.

When I am not reading about local government, my nose is usually stuck in a book of crime fiction. There is a Dutch crime writer called de Wetering who has written the following words – ‘Greed is a fat demon with a small mouth and whatever you feed it is never enough.’ I think central government and the Custom House will not be satisfied until local government is completely obliterated.

Greed is also a kind of fear – fear of losing control.

Since the founding legislation of 1898 we have moved from over 600 local authorities to 114 and now down to 31. Colm McCarthy recommended a number of 22 local authorities in the Bord Snip Report. Where is it going to end? How is it the case that local government lacks protection in Bunreacht na hÉireann? The Seanad, a marginally relevant institution, could not be abolished without reference to the people. Yet, a whole tier of local democracy and 83 directly elected councils, can be removed through legislation without reference to the people.

The Council of Europe report from 2013, entitled ‘Local Democracy in Ireland’ slammed Ireland for its lack of constitutional protection for sub-national government and correctly claimed that it was indicative of a fundamental lack of respect for local government. This lack of respect has existed and thrived since the foundation of the state with government after government prioritising intense centralisation over local democracy.

Where is the evidence that big is better? I can accept arguments about efficiencies and economies of scale if they are soundly based on evidence but not if they are built on nothing. The international evidence refutes the notion that a smaller number of larger local authorities yields improvements, savings and efficiencies. Instead the evidence from other jurisdictions that have been down this road clearly points to the fact that structural reform and the redrawing of local authority boundaries is not a cost-free exercise and frequently results in dis-economies of scale, especially with one-off costs arising from amalgamations.

We cannot and should not be fooled by the concept of municipal districts. Firstly, these are not political institutions or organs of democracy if there are no specific elections to them. Secondly, with no link between revenue raising and expenditure then municipal districts will not be legitimate as local government entities. In other words, if Minister Hogan’s grand plan is to create municipal districts with no rating function - but they will be part of a county council which has a rating function - then let us call the municipal districts what they are – glorified county council area committees.

In truth, town councils have been on a life support system for some time and it has been a long-term strategic aim of the Custom House to get rid of them. Back in the year 2000 I spoke at an AMAI seminar in Inchydoney following the publication of a local government bill that removed water and sanitary functions from town councils. I predicted then that town councils would be abolished inside 10 years. I was a bit out on my time-frame but the trend was an obvious one. I also argued in Inchydoney that water services would be nationalised before eventually being privatised.

Let us recall the fine words of Fine Gael’s New Politics document in 2010 - ‘We are committed to building strong local government. The over-centralisation of government in Ireland is, in our view, inefficient and fundamentally incompatible with a healthy Republic’. Well, if it was incompatible with a healthy Republic in 2010 it sure as hell is incompatible in 2014. Are there many centralisation success stories in Ireland? Has Irish Water had a good start? What about the student grant scheme operated through SUSI? I wish someone would explain to the students in my university who had to withdraw from education last year due to non-payment of their grant that centralisation works? Has the driving license process improved with centralisation?

Why are we not debating these issues? Why have town councils died without a discussion? The national media is complicit in this and their refusal to address local government issues is shameful. Of course, the national media is Dublin-based and they do not care one iota about town councils. There is only one town council in Dublin, in Balbriggan. This was a former Town Commissioners and its abolition means nothing to Dubliners.  Predictably, the media has failed to engage with the issue and the only matter which is suddenly gaining some traction in the media is the directly elected mayor for the capital.

In my opinion towns matter and towns which have a local council are healthier and stronger than those without. I am acutely aware of the fact that I am in Patrick Kavanagh country and in one of his famous poems, ‘Lines Written on a Seat on the Grand Canal’ Kavanagh refers to the mythology of towns.

Something which is a fact rather than a myth is that town councils have been the most efficient element within the local government system in terms of being self-financing and maintaining commercial rates at a lower level that their county council counterparts. Removing the rating power from towns will lead to an increase in commercial rates for the hard-pressed business people in the towns of Ireland.

Town or municipal councils should be at the heart of our local government system. The very nature of local government is that civic society is up close and personal. Local councils and the services they provide have a far more immediate, continuous and comprehensive impact on our daily lives than many issues which dominate nationally. Local councils and councillors have to deal with a range of issues and factors that are not of their making and for which they may have no formal responsibility.

These issues include migration, multi-culturalism, homelessness, social exclusion and other social problems such as drug addiction, prostitution, and petty crime. Many of the social problems faced by Irish communities today are most sharply evident in urban settings and towns. Sub-county authorities should be strengthened to address these problems. Instead they are being destroyed.

 
Again I turn to Patrick Kavanagh who wrote the following words in his poem, ‘Literary Adventure

 
It's as simple as that, it's a matter

Of walking with the little gods, the ignored

Who are so seldom asked to write the letter

Containing the word.

No need for Art anymore

When Authority whispers like Tyranny

 
We live in a dangerous time when the tyranny of central government means that not only can you be ignored but you can be removed from history without debate.

 I thank you for the warm welcome you have afforded me tonight. I hope to return in happier times when some new, improved version of Carrickmacross Town Council will be created; a local authority which will drive the local economy and which will be a jewel in the crown of County Monaghan which – after all – is God’s own country. Thank you.

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