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Cork City boundary extension

245

Comments

  • Registered Users Posts: 573 ✭✭✭rebs23


    No in reality it's 152,000. Ballincollig, Midleton, Carrigaline are not in the Cork Urban Area. There is clear open country side between them and the City.

    That is utter rubbish. The population of Cork City and suburbs is 198'000 according to the 2011 census and this excludes Carrigaline, Carrigtohill, Passage West and all the outlying towns. Look at the map, http://census.cso.ie/areaprofiles/PDF/ST/corkcityandsuburbs.pdf
    If you include all the outlying suburban areas including Cobh, Midleton, etc the urban population within a radius of 20 miles from the city centre reaches 380,000 people. http://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Metropolitan_Cork
    The total population of Cork City and County is 520,000.
    You really don't know Cork that well.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,088 ✭✭✭Reputable Rog


    rebs23 wrote: »
    That is utter rubbish. The population of Cork City and suburbs is 198'000 according to the 2011 census and this excludes Carrigaline, Carrigtohill, Passage West and all the outlying towns. Look at the map, http://census.cso.ie/areaprofiles/PDF/ST/corkcityandsuburbs.pdf
    If you include all the outlying suburban areas including Cobh, Midleton, etc the urban population within a radius of 20 miles from the city centre reaches 380,000 people. http://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Metropolitan_Cork
    The total population of Cork City and County is 520,000.
    You really don't know Cork that well

    http://www.corkcocodevplan.com/images/documents/stage1/213717622.pdf
    289,000 according to this doc in the Metro.
    Believe me I know a lot more about the governance of the region than you.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,561 ✭✭✭AugustusMinimus


    rebs23 wrote: »
    That is utter rubbish. The population of Cork City and suburbs is 198'000 according to the 2011 census and this excludes Carrigaline, Carrigtohill, Passage West and all the outlying towns. Look at the map, http://census.cso.ie/areaprofiles/PDF/ST/corkcityandsuburbs.pdf
    If you include all the outlying suburban areas including Cobh, Midleton, etc the urban population within a radius of 20 miles from the city centre reaches 380,000 people. http://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Metropolitan_Cork
    The total population of Cork City and County is 520,000.
    You really don't know Cork that well

    http://www.corkcocodevplan.com/images/documents/stage1/213717622.pdf
    289,000 according to this doc in the Metro.
    Believe me I know a lot more about the governance of the region than you.


    The 152k figure you quote isn't anywhere in that document.

    The 198k figure includes Ballincollig (rightfully or wrongly) but includes Glanmire and Little Island (correctly in my view). Remove Ballincollig (population of 17,000) and you are down to 181k.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 2,376 ✭✭✭54kroc




    The 152k figure you quote isn't anywhere in that document.

    The 198k figure includes Ballincollig (rightfully or wrongly) but includes Glanmire and Little Island (correctly in my view). Remove Ballincollig (population of 17,000) and you are down to 181k.

    Just curious why you say Glanmire and Little Island are correctly included and Ballincollig is rightfully of wrongly included, why wouldn't it be the same as Glanmire?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,561 ✭✭✭AugustusMinimus


    54kroc wrote: »

    Just curious why you say Glanmire and Little Island are correctly included and Ballincollig is rightfully of wrongly included, why wouldn't it be the same as Glanmire?

    Well in my mind, both Little Island and Glanmire are now effectively attached to the city. They would be completely attached but for the geography of the area (The Glashaboy River and the Sea doesn't allow much development between them.)

    Ballincollig is a bit different with more open space between it and the city. I'd have no issue at all though seeing it brought within the city. I know on the continent, a lot of cities would encompass out lying settlements like Ballincollig and Carrigaline are presently.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,088 ✭✭✭Reputable Rog


    Well in my mind, both Little Island and Glanmire are now effectively attached to the city. They would be completely attached but for the geography of the area (The Glashaboy River and the Sea doesn't allow much development between them.)

    Ballincollig is a bit different with more open space between it and the city. I'd have no issue at all though seeing it brought within the city. I know on the continent, a lot of cities would encompass out lying settlements like Ballincollig and Carrigaline are presently.

    How do you know this? In France they don't , they don't in Belgium or Spain. They started doing it last year in Italy I'll give you that.
    Local Government in Europe is even more fragmented than here.


  • Registered Users Posts: 573 ✭✭✭rebs23


    http://www.corkcocodevplan.com/images/documents/stage1/213717622.pdf
    289,000 according to this doc in the Metro.
    Believe me I know a lot more about the governance of the region than you.[/QUOTE]

    You're not displaying your knowledge of governance in the region very well when you can't even get the population figures right for Cork City and suburbs. Still haven't produced link for your ridiculous claim of a population of 151,000 which kind of destroys your claim of knowing what can or cannot be considered in the context of a City boundary extension or what suburban areas of Cork City should be included in a boundary extension.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,088 ✭✭✭Reputable Rog


    http://www.corkcoco.ie/co/pdf/781930758.pdf. Pages 359-361. Cork North and South Environs.


  • Registered Users Posts: 573 ✭✭✭rebs23


    http://www.corkcoco.ie/co/pdf/781930758.pdf. Pages 359-361. Cork North and South Environs.
    I think you will find the key word there "environs" which is the area surrounding the city and excluding the city council area. What point are you trying to prove with that link?
    It is as simple as this the Central Statistics Ofiice, link provided already states the population of Cork City and suburbs is 198,000.
    Many people however would consider that areas such as Carrigaline, Passage West, Carrigtohill, Blarney, Tower and possibly even Cobh or Midleton which are urban areas that ring the City and suburbs (but currently not enumerated as being suburbs by the CSO) should be included in any city boundary extension thereby giving the city the space for expansion and ensure that we won't have the same problem in 20 years time where the city boundary does not accurately reflect the actual population of the city.

    A proper extension of the city boundary to capture all the current urban centres that are close and ring the city would see a new Cork City with a population of between 250,000 to 300,000 people and would cater for future expansion and growth.
    As it stands Cork City and the surrounding urban area is larger than the combined populations of Waterford, Limerick and Galway City and suburbs and we need a proper extension to reflect the actual urban population of Cork so we can secure much needed public and private investment.


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  • Closed Accounts Posts: 8,555 ✭✭✭Roger Hassenforder


    rebs23 wrote: »
    I think you will find the key word there "environs" which is the area surrounding the city and excluding the city council area. What point are you trying to prove with that link?
    It is as simple as this the Central Statistics Ofiice, link provided already states the population of Cork City and suburbs is 198,000.
    Many people however would consider that areas such as Carrigaline, Passage West, Carrigtohill, Blarney, Tower and possibly even Cobh or Midleton which are urban areas that ring the City and suburbs (but currently not enumerated as being suburbs by the CSO) should be included in any city boundary extension thereby giving the city the space for expansion and ensure that we won't have the same problem in 20 years time where the city boundary does not accurately reflect the actual population of the city.

    A proper extension of the city boundary to capture all the current urban centres that are close and ring the city would see a new Cork City with a population of between 250,000 to 300,000 people and would cater for future expansion and growth.
    As it stands Cork City and the surrounding urban area is larger than the combined populations of Waterford, Limerick and Galway City and suburbs and we need a proper extension to reflect the actual urban population of Cork so we can secure much needed public and private investment.

    you think the city should be extended out to Midleton?:rolleyes:
    Why not Mallow and Bandon while you are at it?


  • Registered Users Posts: 490 ✭✭mire


    you think the city should be extended out to Midleton?:rolleyes:
    Why not Mallow and Bandon while you are at it?

    Because Mallow and Bandon are less integrally and functionally connected to the city proper than Midleton is. In commuting, accessibility, economic terms, Midleton is becoming more and more integrated with the city than those places. Mainly because if its very strong transport connectivity.


  • Registered Users Posts: 573 ✭✭✭rebs23


    you think the city should be extended out to Midleton?:rolleyes:
    Why not Mallow and Bandon while you are at it?
    I only said possibly about Cobh and Midleton. Just think any extension needs to be big enough to last 50'years. Cobh and Midleton with the commuter rail service and their closeness to the city would justify being included in a boundary extension. Politically however that is probably not going to happen which is a pity.
    In fairness abandon and Mallow are much further out.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,088 ✭✭✭Reputable Rog


    rebs23 wrote: »
    I think you will find the key word there "environs" which is the area surrounding the city and excluding the city council area. What point are you trying to prove with that link?
    It is as simple as this the Central Statistics Ofiice, link provided already states the population of Cork City and suburbs is 198,000.
    Many people however would consider that areas such as Carrigaline, Passage West, Carrigtohill, Blarney, Tower and possibly even Cobh or Midleton which are urban areas that ring the City and suburbs (but currently not enumerated as being suburbs by the CSO) should be included in any city boundary extension thereby giving the city the space for expansion and ensure that we won't have the same problem in 20 years time where the city boundary does not accurately reflect the actual population of the city.

    A proper extension of the city boundary to capture all the current urban centres that are close and ring the city would see a new Cork City with a population of between 250,000 to 300,000 people and would cater for future expansion and growth.
    As it stands Cork City and the surrounding urban area is larger than the combined populations of Waterford, Limerick and Galway City and suburbs and we need a proper extension to reflect the actual urban population of Cork so we can secure much needed public and private investment.
    North and south environs are the built up area of Cork City under the jurisdiction of Cork County Council. Combined with the city proper this forms the Cork a Urban Area.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,088 ✭✭✭Reputable Rog


    rebs23 wrote: »
    I only said possibly about Cobh and Midleton. Just think any extension needs to be big enough to last 50'years. Cobh and Midleton with the commuter rail service and their closeness to the city would justify being included in a boundary extension. Politically however that is probably not going to happen which is a pity.
    In fairness abandon and Mallow are much further out.

    Mallow is 4 miles further from Cork than both Midleton and Queenstown, as is Bandon.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,492 ✭✭✭KCAccidental


    It doesn't. nowhere in the document it cited did it say that only the environs and the city itself form a "Cork Urban Area".

    Metropolitan Cork has been a definition used in countless studies of the city and its suburbs, including Ballincollig, Blarney/Tower, Glanmire and others to define an enlarged urban area. Read up on CASP and LUTS.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 6,555 ✭✭✭kub


    There is a simple solution to this debate, draw the line wherever the City's Fire department get to a call out before their colleagues in the County do.


  • Registered Users Posts: 573 ✭✭✭rebs23


    North and south environs are the built up area of Cork City under the jurisdiction of Cork County Council. Combined with the city proper this forms the Cork a Urban Area.
    Am thanks for that... what's your point?


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 8,555 ✭✭✭Roger Hassenforder


    rebs23 wrote: »
    I think you will find the key word there "environs" which is the area surrounding the city and excluding the city council area. What point are you trying to prove with that link?
    It is as simple as this the Central Statistics Ofiice, link provided already states the population of Cork City and suburbs is 198,000.
    Many people however would consider that areas such as Carrigaline, Passage West, Carrigtohill, Blarney, Tower and possibly even Cobh or Midleton which are urban areas that ring the City and suburbs (but currently not enumerated as being suburbs by the CSO) should be included in any city boundary extension thereby giving the city the space for expansion and ensure that we won't have the same problem in 20 years time where the city boundary does not accurately reflect the actual population of the city.

    A proper extension of the city boundary to capture all the current urban centres that are close and ring the city would see a new Cork City with a population of between 250,000 to 300,000 people and would cater for future expansion and growth.
    As it stands Cork City and the surrounding urban area is larger than the combined populations of Waterford, Limerick and Galway City and suburbs and we need a proper extension to reflect the actual urban population of Cork so we can secure much needed public and private investment.

    Current population of Metropolitan Cork, as already stated in thread is 289,739.
    Metropolitan Cork is City, North and South Environs, and the "satellite town" of Ballincollig, Blarney, Carrigaline, Carrigtohill, Cobh, Glanmire, Midleton and Passage West. http://epublications.snap.com.au/ebook/ebook?id=10040632#/0

    Population of the city on its own is 119,230
    http://epublications.snap.com.au/ebook/ebook?id=10036632#/18


    Little talk of the green belt to the North of the City, the open space near Blarney. An Expansion of the City towards and to Tower, Blarney, , Ballincollig/Ovens, Whitechurch, Upper and lower Glanmire would spatially more than double the city's size. Increasing the spatial size of the City may not be a good thing. Why is there the need to grow out? Grow up. Design better. Urban sprawls with dependencies on roads are clearly not the answer.

    Your use of the term "capture" is interesting. The expansion is what it is, a land grab, but more importantly, a grab for a share of the rate base Cork County enjoys. It's almost Putinesque!


  • Registered Users Posts: 490 ✭✭mire


    Current population of Metropolitan Cork, as already stated in thread is 289,739.
    Metropolitan Cork is City, North and South Environs, and the "satellite town" of Ballincollig, Blarney, Carrigaline, Carrigtohill, Cobh, Glanmire, Midleton and Passage West. http://epublications.snap.com.au/ebook/ebook?id=10040632#/0

    Population of the city on its own is 119,230
    http://epublications.snap.com.au/ebook/ebook?id=10036632#/18


    Little talk of the green belt to the North of the City, the open space near Blarney. An Expansion of the City towards and to Tower, Blarney, , Ballincollig/Ovens, Whitechurch, Upper and lower Glanmire would spatially more than double the city's size. Increasing the spatial size of the City may not be a good thing. Why is there the need to grow out? Grow up. Design better. Urban sprawls with dependencies on roads are clearly not the answer.

    Your use of the term "capture" is interesting. The expansion is what it is, a land grab, but more importantly, a grab for a share of the rate base Cork County enjoys. It's almost Putinesque!

    This last sentence about land grabs and Putin shows why this boundary extension needs to be sorted at a national level and how important it is to encourage a mature debate. Cork's boundary is 50 years out of date, and it shoudl have been changed many years ago.

    The councils don't 'own' the land, they administer the territory. This childish land grab stuff has no place in a proper debate about Cork


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 6,438 ✭✭✭j8wk2feszrnpao


    What if these towns (Cobh, Midleton, Carrigaline) don't want to be part of the City boundaries?

    Genuinely just asking the question, I can't say I've an issue either way.


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  • Registered Users Posts: 490 ✭✭mire


    What if these towns (Cobh, Midleton, Carrigaline) don't want to be part of the City boundaries?

    Genuinely just asking the question, I can't say I've an issue either way.

    It depends. How do you gauge this? A vote?


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 8,555 ✭✭✭Roger Hassenforder


    mire wrote: »
    This last sentence about land grabs and Putin shows why this boundary extension needs to be sorted at a national level and how important it is to encourage a mature debate. Cork's boundary is 50 years out of date, and it shoudl have been changed many years ago.

    The councils don't 'own' the land, they administer the territory. This childish land grab stuff has no place in a proper debate about Cork

    apologies for offending your senior sensibilities with my childish comments. :(
    However, not only do local authorities "administer" their functional areas, they also actually own parcels of land. its a bit more complicated see, but sure I'm only a child so you might have to explain it to me... :rolleyes:
    (it is a land grab BTW!)

    Why should this be sorted at a national level? By who, The Dail? Its a local issue. Abdication of decision to central authority is symptomatic of the current disconnect between local and central government. We've ratified the Lisbon (subsidiarity) treaty, but are one of the worst countries to implement it.

    a A local plebiscite is probably the way to go, but should this vote be confined to areas potentially affected, or to the entire county as well? its a Cork issue and should be decided by Cork people.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 6,438 ✭✭✭j8wk2feszrnpao


    mire wrote: »
    It depends. How do you gauge this? A vote?
    I've no idea. I guess each town would have it's own 'council/reps/admin' already in place that would have a good gauge of the people.

    It just seems that there's an argument that it benefits the City to add these areas to its boundary, without thinking that maybe they don't want to be included.

    Again, it wouldn't bother me either way (I suppose I don't know what impact it would lead to, either positive or negative); but I can imagine that others may be more inclined to be added/excluded.


  • Registered Users Posts: 490 ✭✭mire


    apologies for offending your senior sensibilities with my childish comments. :(
    However, not only do local authorities "administer" their functional areas, they also actually own parcels of land. its a bit more complicated see, but sure I'm only a child so you might have to explain it to me... :rolleyes:
    (it is a land grab BTW!)

    Why should this be sorted at a national level? By who, The Dail? Its a local issue. Abdication of decision to central authority is symptomatic of the current disconnect between local and central government. We've ratified the Lisbon (subsidiarity) treaty, but are one of the worst countries to implement it.

    a A local plebiscite is probably the way to go, but should this vote be confined to areas potentially affected, or to the entire county as well? its a Cork issue and should be decided by Cork people.

    When the debate descends to 'land grabbing accusations', it slips towards and irrelevant blather about lebelsraum, putinesque rubbish (your contribution) and childish jibes about who owns what. This matter has largely been ignored for the last 50 years because of that attitiude. Don't worry, I am not offended, but I'll admit that I find that stuff a bit depressing to read. It's so predictable.

    BTW, it is not simply a 'local' issue and is in my opinion too important to be decided simply on the basis of knee jerk localist parish pump politics. This issue has been detrimental for Cork and it is an issue of national importance - Cork is the state's second city - it deserves a governing unit big enough to represent its metropolitan area.

    Your point about land ownership is entirely irrelavant. When a boundary extension happens, one authority pays the other for any land and property transferred. In Ireland also, local authorities own very little land and property - relative to almost all countries in Europe. It's actually not an important issue at all. It's a techincal detail. Most cities expand their boundaries evry so often - it's what happens as cities expand. No big deal really.

    Although a local plebiscite sounds interesting I think it is impractical and has no real precedent. Government is elected to make these types of decisions. I do agree though that Cork should influence the decision and should not allow itself to be subjected to bad decisions - like waterford and limerick for example.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 8,555 ✭✭✭Roger Hassenforder


    mire wrote: »
    When the debate descends to 'land grabbing accusations', it slips towards and irrelevant blather about lebelsraum, putinesque rubbish (your contribution) and childish jibes about who owns what. This matter has largely been ignored for the last 50 years because of that attitiude. Don't worry, I am not offended, but I'll admit that I find that stuff a bit depressing to read. It's so predictable.

    BTW, it is not simply a 'local' issue and is in my opinion too important to be decided simply on the basis of knee jerk localist parish pump politics. This issue has been detrimental for Cork and it is an issue of national importance - Cork is the state's second city - it deserves a governing unit big enough to represent its metropolitan area.

    Your point about land ownership is entirely irrelavant. When a boundary extension happens, one authority pays the other for any land and property transferred. In Ireland also, local authorities own very little land and property - relative to almost all countries in Europe. It's actually not an important issue at all. It's a techincal detail. Most cities expand their boundaries evry so often - it's what happens as cities expand. No big deal really.

    Although a local plebiscite sounds interesting I think it is impractical and has no real precedent. Government is elected to make these types of decisions. I do agree though that Cork should influence the decision and should not allow itself to be subjected to bad decisions - like waterford and limerick for example.

    Leben...
    But anyway, aside from the personal stuff, you wouldn't see it AH, your cliché ridden ramble reflects the democratic inversion we endure in Ireland.
    We elect politicians to a national parliament to continuously engage primarily in parish pump politics to ensure their re-election, rather than legislate and debate national issues; and we elect local politicians to an effective talking shop, due to a failure to devolve powers. This issue should be decided by Cork, if it takes a plebiscite, so be it.
    We're losing the run of ourselves making towns cities (Kilkenny anyone), and then growing out again into the country side, Yea, let it expand a bit, it's overdue, but lets not lose the run of ourselves, this talk of expanding to Ringaskiddy, Midleton etc is nuts.
    The 2007 boundary proposal certainly didn't envisage these areas. East of Blarney, South of Whitechurch to glashaboy, slight kink around little island, down through harbour to Monkstown creek (excluding Carrigaline) poulavone roundabout (excluding ballincollig), along by Ballygarvan via waterfall. I.e., the land yes, the population no.

    Precedents were once themselves unprecedented...


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 365 ✭✭Frostybrew


    I feel the best scenario for both councils would be the creation of a strong Cork Metropolitan County stretching from Ovens to Midleton, and from Blarney to Fountainstown. Essentially the original LUTS study area. This entire area is now urban in character separated only by short stretches of green belt.

    The benefits outweigh the cons for both councils. Having a strong cohesive marketable urban area will be a huge boon to attracting inward investment, which will also benefit the county as jobs will be created leading to an expansion of commuter towns in the county area. Towns such as Mallow, Mitchelstown, Youghal, Bandon and Fermoy will benefit, leading to an increase in rates and revenue.

    The biggest gain will be the existence of an urban council for an urban area and a rural council for a predominately rural one.

    The county council will lose out in the short term due to the reduction in income, and a mechanism should be put in place to ease this transition.


  • Registered Users Posts: 573 ✭✭✭rebs23


    Yea, let it expand a bit, it's overdue, but lets not lose the run of ourselves, this talk of expanding to Ringaskiddy, Midleton etc is nuts.
    Letting it expand a bit will only mean in 20 years time the boundary we will be in the exact same position as we are now. A situation where the city boundary does not reflect the actual population of the City and Suburbs.
    You are clearly in favour of a boundary extension so after that its a matter of opinion but whats best for Cork attracting inward investment both private and public?

    What sounds better a City with a population of 198,000 (an extension to include all the areas the CSO define as the City and Suburbs) or a City with a population of say 298,000 (an extension to include all the outlying towns and suburban areas that are close and linked by a continuous urban corridor)?


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 8,555 ✭✭✭Roger Hassenforder


    rebs23 wrote: »
    Letting it expand a bit will only mean in 20 years time the boundary we will be in the exact same position as we are now. A situation where the city boundary does not reflect the actual population of the City and Suburbs.
    You are clearly in favour of a boundary extension so after that its a matter of opinion but whats best for Cork attracting inward investment both private and public?

    What sounds better a City with a population of 198,000 (an extension to include all the areas the CSO define as the City and Suburbs) or a City with a population of say 298,000 (an extension to include all the outlying towns and suburban areas that are close and linked by a continuous urban corridor)?

    I'm in favour of that which makes Cork a better place to live, not a desire to have the population reach some figure. That's what is so attractive about Cork, it's small and compact, isn't a Dublin sprawl. An expansion is needed, but I fear this quality will be lost.
    I suppose I'd be in favour of a stronger regional authority with properly devolved powers that advocates on behalf of both.

    Apple et al. didn't set up in Cork because the population of the city was whatever it was back then


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 7,224 ✭✭✭alaimacerc


    I'm in favour of that which makes Cork a better place to live, not a desire to have the population reach some figure. That's what is so attractive about Cork, it's small and compact, isn't a Dublin sprawl. An expansion is needed, but I fear this quality will be lost.

    But it's not as if the modest existing amount of sprawl magically stops at the city boundary: the contiguous suburbs haven't exactly been tightly constrained by the CoCo, either. (I live in one of them, and any human geographer watching from 10,000ft would say it's part of the city in objective, organic terms.) Who is best placed to manage the "green belt" between those neighbourhoods and the exurbs/commuter towns seems to me to be highly arguable. A good planning policy would be a good start, though, regardless of which LA gets to play football with it.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,236 ✭✭✭Dannyboy83


    http://www.eveningecho.ie/cork-news/billion-euro-loss-for-the-county-in-metropolitan-boundary-change/
    In its submission the county council examined five separate options before recommending a single combined city and county council.
    Option one was a do-nothing approach and maintaining the current boundary. Option two was the addition of urban areas directly connected to the city such as Douglas and parts of Ballyvolane. Option three adds the suburban areas of Ballincollig, Glanmire and Little Island to the city but keeps areas such as Carrigaline and Blarney in the county. Option four expands the city to cover the entire metropolitan area stretching from Ovens to Midleton and from Blarney to Ringaskiddy. The final option they examined was a fully combined city and county council.While favoured by County Hall a combined super council has been rejected by the city council. The chief executive of Cork City Council Ann Doherty said recently that a combined council would not allow the city of Cork to grow to its full potential.

    I would be interested to hear the reasons why a combined super council is objectionable to the city council and why it would prevent Cork growing to it's full potential.

    Does anyone have further info?


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  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,492 ✭✭✭KCAccidental


    Dannyboy83 wrote: »
    I would be interested to hear the reasons why a combined super council is objectionable to the city council and why it would prevent Cork growing to it's full potential.

    Does anyone have further info?


    City rates would be drained by having to budget for the entire county as well. It would paralyze the city. There is no local authority in the state that has to cater for a population any where near 480,000.

    It makes me laugh to see the county council play the poor mouth on this. They have been leeching off of the immediate suburbs for years to the detriment of the City.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 7,224 ✭✭✭alaimacerc


    Dannyboy83 wrote: »
    I would be interested to hear the reasons why a combined super council is objectionable to the city council and why it would prevent Cork growing to it's full potential.

    Does anyone have further info?

    None at all, but I'm guessing if you suggest this to a City politician, it sounds a lot like "we're abolishing the city council". Why, that'd be to imply Cork was no more super-special-snowflake than the likes of -- gasp! -- Waterford!


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,492 ✭✭✭KCAccidental


    alaimacerc wrote: »
    None at all, but I'm guessing if you suggest this to a City politician, it sounds a lot like "we're abolishing the city council". Why, that'd be to imply Cork was no more super-special-snowflake than the likes of -- gasp! -- Waterford!

    There is a hell of a lot of difference. For instance there are more people living in the Cork City council area alone than the entire population of the Waterford combined city & county council.


    A single authority for a population of 480,000 people spread over an area of 7,500 km² would be the worst option by far. The city itself would suffer by having to divert funds to the upkeep of the far flung periphery areas of the county.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Local_government_in_the_Republic_of_Ireland

    for instance, Corks regional & local roads of which upkeep has to come from local authority budget accounts for about 1/9th of the total R & L roads in the entire state!

    xSpdVVgl.png

    http://www.thejournal.ie/national-road-network-pq-1784448-Nov2014/

    the roads issue alone is a big enough reason to not unite the councils.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 8,555 ✭✭✭Roger Hassenforder


    City rates would be drained by having to budget for the entire county as well. It would paralyze the city. There is no local authority in the state that has to cater for a population any where near 480,000.

    It makes me laugh to see the county council play the poor mouth on this. They have been leeching off of the immediate suburbs for years to the detriment of the City.


    on a lap top, can finally post proposed expansion:
    CorkCityboundaryextension2006_large.jpg

    Funny they don't want Ballincollig or Carrigaline, but do want Little Island, the Airport when they want to grow the City's population...
    Douglas, Togher, Glanmire and Frankfield should be part of the city though, makes no sense not to be.


    interesting use of the term "leeches", wonder do you know where the leeches might actually be?
    from: Report of the Local Government Efficiency Review Group
    No. staff/1000 population at end of 2009
    Cork City: 11.9
    report notes: "an excessive level of senior management staffing when compared with levels nationally"
    Cork County: 6.5

    from 2008 to 2013, 879 staff have left Cork County Council — a 29.6% reduction. However, Cork City Council has seen its number drop by a more modest 263 employees — a drop of 17.2%. Ref. https://www.google.ie/url?sa=t&rct=j&q=&esrc=s&source=web&cd=1&cad=rja&uact=8&ved=0CCMQFjAA&url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.irishexaminer.com%2Fireland%2Fstaff-levels-at-local-authorities-fall-25-234278.html&ei=9FwkVYO1ItX1auzZgPAO&usg=AFQjCNEIHK3I428_priFsyo0xw-2LwK_mg&sig2=6q_o8UUdF2bvLd4beFAFNg&bvm=bv.89947451,bs.1,d.ZGU


    some comparable KPIs (albeit 2010) from here

    % days lost as sickies:
    City: 1.17
    County: 0.89

    Unaccounted for water:
    City: 55.2%
    County: 49.5%

    Time to re-let housing stock:
    City: 31.5weeks
    County:16.3weeks

    Drill into the stats, you'll see one organization is lean, comparable staffing levels, and fairly efficiently run, the other, well, not so...

    I agree merging the two would be an absolute shambles. Rural needs are very different from Urban. You'd have Cllrs from Alihees rowing with Cllrs from Mayfield about road surfacing allocations V. housing repairs. There's an argument for absorbing Cork City into Carrigaline Municipal District all right...


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 7,224 ✭✭✭alaimacerc


    on a lap top, can finally post proposed expansion:
    CorkCityboundaryextension2006_large.jpg
    That's the old proposal, back from 2006. Unless I'm wildly misunderstanding!


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 8,555 ✭✭✭Roger Hassenforder


    alaimacerc wrote: »
    That's the old proposal, back from 2006. Unless I'm wildly misunderstanding!

    I think it's the same?
    Can't find latest one


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,236 ✭✭✭Dannyboy83


    City rates would be drained by having to budget for the entire county as well.

    This I don't understand.
    The city and county budget will be combined, including the subvention, so it should lead to a net loss of 0.
    What am I missing here?

    The idea is that reducing duplication of roles within the two councils would lead to a much more cost effective single organisation.
    Phil Hogan suggested such reforms would save the country almost half a billion euro by reducing the number of councillors by up to 40%.
    It would paralyze the city. There is no local authority in the state that has to cater for a population any where near 480,000.

    For years, examples such as Manchester in the UK have been used as something Cork or even Munster should aspire to.

    The Greater Manchester Combined Authority combine 10 separate councils and serve a vastly larger population than Cork.

    Minister for the Environment Alan Kelly:
    http://www.environ.ie/en/LocalGovernment/LocalGovernmentReform/News/MainBody,40018,en.htm
    “The option of unifying the city and county structures in Cork should also be considered in view of the potential benefits such as strengthening local government, elimination of administrative duplication, improved service delivery, greater efficiency, economies of scale and more cohesive and effective economic development,” said Mr Kelly

    If the county and city council were combined into the Greater Cork Combined Authority, it may mean job losses.

    Is it not a case of turkeys just not voting for xmas?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,088 ✭✭✭Reputable Rog


    on a lap top, can finally post proposed expansion:
    CorkCityboundaryextension2006_large.jpg

    Funny they don't want Ballincollig or Carrigaline, but do want Little Island, the Airport when they want to grow the City's population...
    Douglas, Togher, Glanmire and Frankfield should be part of the city though, makes no sense not to be.


    interesting use of the term "leeches", wonder do you know where the leeches might actually be?
    from: Report of the Local Government Efficiency Review Group
    No. staff/1000 population at end of 2009
    Cork City: 11.9
    report notes: "an excessive level of senior management staffing when compared with levels nationally"
    Cork County: 6.5

    from 2008 to 2013, 879 staff have left Cork County Council — a 29.6% reduction. However, Cork City Council has seen its number drop by a more modest 263 employees — a drop of 17.2%. Ref. https://www.google.ie/url?sa=t&rct=j&q=&esrc=s&source=web&cd=1&cad=rja&uact=8&ved=0CCMQFjAA&url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.irishexaminer.com%2Fireland%2Fstaff-levels-at-local-authorities-fall-25-234278.html&ei=9FwkVYO1ItX1auzZgPAO&usg=AFQjCNEIHK3I428_priFsyo0xw-2LwK_mg&sig2=6q_o8UUdF2bvLd4beFAFNg&bvm=bv.89947451,bs.1,d.ZGU


    some comparable KPIs (albeit 2010) from here

    % days lost as sickies:
    City: 1.17
    County: 0.89

    Unaccounted for water:
    City: 55.2%
    County: 49.5%

    Time to re-let housing stock:
    City: 31.5weeks
    County:16.3weeks

    Drill into the stats, you'll see one organization is lean, comparable staffing levels, and fairly efficiently run, the other, well, not so...

    I agree merging the two would be an absolute shambles. Rural needs are very different from Urban. You'd have Cllrs from Alihees rowing with Cllrs from Mayfield about road surfacing allocations V. housing repairs. There's an argument for absorbing Cork City into Carrigaline Municipal District all right...
    Cork City would become a Metropolitan City District in the new Authority and will have its own separate budget and have its own elected body within the council do deal with Cork city matters.
    The boundaries of the city will be revised to give the Metropolitan District greater population and land area and will probably be exactly the same land area the city are currently looking for.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 655 ✭✭✭Pablo Escobar


    I think it's the same?
    Can't find latest one

    It's not the same. The latest one is much wider:

    http://www.eveningecho.ie/cork-news/billion-euro-loss-for-the-county-in-metropolitan-boundary-change/


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 7,516 ✭✭✭Outkast_IRE


    Hope the city boundary is simply extended, the county council is not fit for purpose in urban areas such as togher etc. The city does a far better job at maintenace of amenity sites and walks, grass cutting and regular cleanups of areas.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 7,224 ✭✭✭alaimacerc


    Hope the city boundary is simply extended, the county council is not fit for purpose in urban areas such as togher etc.

    What offends against my sense of order -- what little's left with it at this stage! -- is that we have Togher Outside the Walls, and we have City Togher, too. Likewise with "Wilton". Ontological madness!


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 7,224 ✭✭✭alaimacerc



    Metro-Boundary-458x325.jpg
    Huh. Pretty wide, all right!


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,800 ✭✭✭CHealy


    Thats ridiculous haha. I'm all for a proper extension of the boundary but if thats what the city council are looking for, then I really can't blame the county for throwing the toys out.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,492 ✭✭✭KCAccidental


    Yup, far too big in my opinion as well.

    way too much rural land within that boundary, the councils road budget will be eaten up by trying to fix the roads to all the one off housing!

    My own view is to take the immediate the suburbs like ballincollig, glanmire & carraigaline along with little island, Ringaskiddy and some rural land that can be zoned appropriately for future growth. Including Whitegate, Cobh and Midleton just isn't feasible.

    something roughly like this. (Love to get the crayolas out)

    KAdhfqS.jpg


    The only thing I can assume is that the proposal above is a bargaining ploy. Start big and haggle your way to something acceptable.


  • Registered Users Posts: 573 ✭✭✭rebs23


    alaimacerc wrote: »
    Metro-Boundary-458x325.jpg
    Huh. Pretty wide, all right!
    It seems a realistic expansion if it is to last for the next 50 years.


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  • Closed Accounts Posts: 8,555 ✭✭✭Roger Hassenforder



    that's metropolitan Cork Strategic Planning area, not the proposed expansion?

    That's pulling the pish if the City thinks they can expand that much, roughly 1000% increase in land area? (very rough!)
    That would make it spatially comparable in size to Dublin


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 18,329 ✭✭✭✭namloc1980


    The proposed boundary extension of the City submitted by the City Council:

    IMG_0023.jpg

    Of course the County Council want a single amalgamated council area for the entire city and county which would be a terrible outcome.

    Link


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,236 ✭✭✭Dannyboy83


    namloc1980 wrote: »
    Of course the County Council want a single amalgamated council area for the entire city and county which would be a terrible outcome.
    Link

    While there are definitely certain drawbacks to a single amalgamated council area, there is 1 crucial advantage; with a single amalgamated council, it would near impossible for national government to resist an increase in powers for local government.

    Two separate councils = two marginalised regions competing with 100 other regions in the country for resources, against Dublin which by virtue of it's population density will usually win.

    Option i)
    continue with the broken model inherited from the British, with the separate councils model, with weak local government, with paying massive amounts into the exchequer and subsidising the rest of the country outside Dublin;

    continue with inadequate revenue raising abilities, remain marginalised as a 'region' & waiting until the National Government publish the 'National Planning Framework' & pray that they actually implement it this time unlike the National Spatial Strategy and it's many predecessors;

    continue watching as Cabinet Ministers enrich their local parishes at the expense of the country; continue with the famine mentality and begging for the scraps of our own food off the National government's table

    or

    Option ii)
    Abandon the broken British model in favour of a Swiss style model;
    Unite the councils;
    push hard for strong local government powers;
    thereby providing a mechanism for local government to raise revenue, to plan long term spending & to allocate investment in the city and county,
    thereby allowing us to decide ourselves what infrastructure will be developed and when;


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 8,555 ✭✭✭Roger Hassenforder


    Dannyboy83 wrote: »
    While there are definitely certain drawbacks to a single amalgamated council area, there is 1 crucial advantage; with a single amalgamated council, it would near impossible for national government to resist an increase in powers for local government.

    Two separate councils = two marginalised regions competing with 100 other regions in the country for resources, against Dublin which by virtue of it's population density will usually win.

    Option i)
    continue with the broken model inherited from the British, with the separate councils model, with weak local government, with paying massive amounts into the exchequer and subsidising the rest of the country outside Dublin;

    continue with inadequate revenue raising abilities, remain marginalised as a 'region' & waiting until the National Government publish the 'National Planning Framework' & pray that they actually implement it this time unlike the National Spatial Strategy and it's many predecessors;

    continue watching as Cabinet Ministers enrich their local parishes at the expense of the country; continue with the famine mentality and begging for the scraps of our own food off the National government's table

    or

    Option ii)
    Abandon the broken British model in favour of a Swiss style model;
    Unite the councils;
    push hard for strong local government powers;
    thereby providing a mechanism for local government to raise revenue, to plan long term spending & to allocate investment in the city and county,
    thereby allowing us to decide ourselves what infrastructure will be developed and when;

    like the curate's egg there's good and bad here! :D
    Agree with the gist of it, except the merger, i think that would be detrimental to local democracy. I agree re the need for greater devolution of authority, and for the need for LAs to be self financing, the need for the likes of the name of cute Kerry hoor politician deleted to be removed from national legislative parliaments. We should have a smaller National Parliment made of up elected members representing the votes of each LA, but each LA having greater autonomy. Turn current model upside down powers wise.

    not sure where the 100 regions are, there's only 31 local authorities in Ireland?
    The Swiss model of Canton>Muncipality>Commune model is very intricate.
    They've 26 cantons; 3000 communes for a population of ~8million? Communes have a lot of devolved authority including revenue. It took until this year to ger the LPT for Ireland!


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 18,329 ✭✭✭✭namloc1980


    Looks like the amalgamation of the two council areas is going to be recommended by the working group. Although there is a split in the group of 5 with 3 in favour of a merger and 2 in favour of expanded city area.

    Super Council merger is on


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