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Decentralisation

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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 43,313 ✭✭✭✭K-9


    The details of how its is done are important. It's an issue that you constantly evade. Your approach is to use a sledgehammer to crack a nut.

    No, have countinuosly said it should better planned.
    Why do you keep raising this red herring? It's not an issue. Be aware though, that this cuts two ways.

    Off course.
    This is simply not true. Decentralisation has already happened. Most of the public serice is already located outside of Dublin. I favour further moves where there is a valid business case and it can be accomplished in a way that will minimise costs and risk to customer service. Similarly, failed decentralisation instances should be moved back to Dublin where appropriate.

    It shouldn't all be about economic cost and benefits and business cases. The Government has social costs and benefits too consider.
    Tell that to the people in Tallaght whose jobs you want to take.

    They don't own the jobs. Unfortunately, that's the reality. Nobody owns their job. They are being offered redeployment, which is more than some people get!

    Mad Men's Don Draper : What you call love was invented by guys like me, to sell nylons.



  • Closed Accounts Posts: 10 Clause


    You know- I agree with you Seanies32.
    These people do not own the jobs, they really need this to be hammered home to them. Just because they're in Dublin they get all the opportunities that we can only dream of. They should know that its the rest of the country that supports those smug people in Dublin- and not moan about moving a few jobs down to help us out. We really need those jobs to breath life into our villages and towns- and make them viable again. For far too long people from outside the Pale have had to migrate to the larger cities in search of work- well, the time to fight back against this has come. We need to make a stand and demand that our local politicians see how serious we are about getting these jobs that were promised to us. We deserve them- we are the life blood of the country- those dubliners have plenty of other things they can do anyway- there will be no trouble at all in finding other work for them. The idea of a cost/benefit analysis is crazy- you cannot put a cost on keeping the regions alive and vibrant. Sure- we pay the salaries of the civil servants anyway- surely we should have a say in where they are employed and make sure that our taxes are spent in our localities. Our unemployment rate in Donegal is almost double the national level- so we deserve these jobs. You know if we marched on the Dail and picketed the constituency offices of our representatives- I bet you something would happen quickly.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 8,111 ✭✭✭eigrod


    Clause wrote:
    You know- I agree with you Seanies32.
    These people do not own the jobs, they really need this to be hammered home to them. Just because they're in Dublin they get all the opportunities that we can only dream of. They should know that its the rest of the country that supports those smug people in Dublin- and not moan about moving a few jobs down to help us out. We really need those jobs to breath life into our villages and towns- and make them viable again. For far too long people from outside the Pale have had to migrate to the larger cities in search of work- well, the time to fight back against this has come. We need to make a stand and demand that our local politicians see how serious we are about getting these jobs that were promised to us. We deserve them- we are the life blood of the country- those dubliners have plenty of other things they can do anyway- there will be no trouble at all in finding other work for them. The idea of a cost/benefit analysis is crazy- you cannot put a cost on keeping the regions alive and vibrant. Sure- we pay the salaries of the civil servants anyway- surely we should have a say in where they are employed and make sure that our taxes are spent in our localities. Our unemployment rate in Donegal is almost double the national level- so we deserve these jobs. You know if we marched on the Dail and picketed the constituency offices of our representatives- I bet you something would happen quickly.

    Right, it's probably time to lock this thread now that you've put us all right on this topic. Let's just move Dublin to Donegal next Monday.
    Clause wrote:
    Just because they're in Dublin they get all the opportunities that we can only dream of.

    Come on down and live the dream then !


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,835 ✭✭✭Schuhart


    MG wrote:
    The current decentralisation plan does not do this, of course, but it does facilitate the future possibility by having trained civil servants on the ground.
    What you’re saying, put simply, is that there is no pool of people of sufficient calibre in the regions to staff local authorities. However, if that’s the case then surely that same problem will be encountered in trying to move Departments out of Dublin – as you would be saying you need the Dublin-based volunteers and they just are not there.

    However, this is hardly a real issue in any event. With real decentralisation you would expect, say, all local authorities to become responsible for running schools. How does Donegal County Council benefit in your scenario from civil servants with knowledge of administering education being located in Mullingar?
    MG wrote:
    Moreover, the transfer of the political power of the civil service to the regions will empower the regions.
    I know how Spock felt when he said ‘not logical, captain’. How is Donegal empowered by Education having an office in Mullingar? What actually happens is the public is disempowered, because an area of national policy becomes a local fief.

    There really is no obstacle to real decentralisation – if the regions really want to take control of their own destiny. The question is – do they?
    Clause wrote:
    They should know that its the rest of the country that supports those smug people in Dublin- and not moan about moving a few jobs down to help us out.
    An utter reversal of reality. Dublin households make a massive net contribution to state coffers, dwarfing the contribution of any other region. On the other hand, Donegal households are net recipients of State to the tune of about €140 millon. The regions simply could not afford their current standard of living without Dublin.

    I’ve made this point before and typically receive silly responses to it. Can I point out that I’m simply pointing out that Clause’s allegation that Dublin is subsidised by the regions is factually wrong – he is the one raising the topic of inter-regional financial transfers.

    Will the fact that he’s wrong change anyone’s mind? Of course not, the discussion will go on and no-one will pause for thought.
    Clause wrote:
    The idea of a cost/benefit analysis is crazy- you cannot put a cost on keeping the regions alive and vibrant.
    Money wasted on a pointless office relocation programme is money wasted, no matter how much superficially laudable rhetoric you mount up.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,615 ✭✭✭NewDubliner


    Clause wrote:
    You know if we marched on the Dail
    I can assure you that the people of Dublin would prepare a very special welcome for you!

    If grabbing other people's jobs and insisting that huge and unlimited sums of money be taken from Dublin's taxpayers to fund the scheme is all you can come up with, I'm not surprised that where you live is lacking in vibrancy. Why not create your own enterprises? Then, your regions would thrive and would not be subject to the whims of politicians.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 37,903 ✭✭✭✭Hotblack Desiato


    Been doing a bit of thinking on this and the complete inability of DC supporters to take on board the idea that spending huge amounts of taxpayers money to achieve eff-all might not be a great idea.

    So why don't we cut to the chase. Take a few billion taxpayers' euro and split it up among the lucky inhabitants of the 53 chosen towns. And leave all the jobs where they are. Everyone's a winner. Because buying votes is what it's all about anyway...

    I'm partial to your abracadabra,

    I'm raptured by the joy of it all.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 43,313 ✭✭✭✭K-9


    Schuhart wrote:
    But, objectively, there are no significant benefits to be obtained from decentralisation. So all we're left with is the possibility that some people get some kind of satisfaction from seeing something being ripped out of Dublin.

    If that's is being oblective, I'd love to see your subjective side!
    schuart wrote:
    And the point is relocation of central Government offices does very little for regional development as it doesn't address the identified problem - which is the need to concentrate within the regions, not the need to blindly rip stuff out of Dublin and scatter it about.

    What's being ripped out? I thought there was no redundancies, most wheren't decentralising and being redeployed. At least that's what everybody was giving out about on here.
    schuart wrote:
    The policy fails to address the issue you state to be important. So the only identifiable reason for you to support it is simply blind support for anything that mentions Donegal, regardless of whether it makes sense.

    Don't agree with you there. I can see the benefits for Donegal. You can't.
    schuart wrote:
    I'd ask again - is there any level of cost at which you would say 'yeah, its not worth doing it at that price'. Can you envisage a situation in which you would say 'I do not favour moving 100 civil servants from Dublin to Letterkenny'. Bear in mind, I would support moving 100 civil servants from Dublin to Letterkenny if it was demonstrated to be a more effective use of resources. But the simple fact it that it isn't.

    You fail to recognise the benefits of the current system. I can see the faults of decentralisation, you can't see any advantage of the current system.
    schuart wrote:
    An utter reversal of reality. Dublin households make a massive net contribution to state coffers, dwarfing the contribution of any other region. On the other hand, Donegal households are net recipients of State to the tune of about €140 millon. The regions simply could not afford their current standard of living without Dublin.

    I’ve made this point before and typically receive silly responses to it. Can I point out that I’m simply pointing out that Clause’s allegation that Dublin is subsidised by the regions is factually wrong – he is the one raising the topic of inter-regional financial transfers.

    Will the fact that he’s wrong change anyone’s mind? Of course not, the discussion will go on and no-one will pause for thought.

    Any figures on Ballymun? Where do you get €140 Million figure?

    Mad Men's Don Draper : What you call love was invented by guys like me, to sell nylons.



  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,615 ✭✭✭NewDubliner


    seanies32 wrote:
    What's being ripped out?.
    Money from Dublin taxpayer's wallets.
    pirelli wrote:
    Athlone might also suit a relocation for some people.
    Athlone is doing quite well, it doesn't need any more public service jobs.
    pirelli wrote:
    The garda ombudsman I wonder why they did not relocate
    It's near the courts and the majority of its customers outside of Donegal. Being in a city, it can be accessed more anonymously than if it were in a small town next to the local Garda station.

    Abbey Street is hardly 'exclusive', it's an inner-city area in need of jobs.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,835 ✭✭✭Schuhart


    Seanies32 wrote:
    What's being ripped out??
    Central government offices are being splintered across 53 locations, regardless of cost.
    Seanies32 wrote:
    Don't agree with you there. I can see the benefits for Donegal. You can't.
    What I've suggested is you don't care what cost is incurred on the rest of the community to deliver really quite marginal benefits for Donegal.
    Seanies32 wrote:
    You fail to recognise the benefits of the current system. I can see the faults of decentralisation, you can't see any advantage of the current system.
    I don't understand what you are trying to say here.
    Seanies32 wrote:
    Any figures on Ballymun? Where do you get €140 Million figure?
    The CSO regional income figures. Page 11. Deduct 'Social Transfers' from 'Taxes' to get the net figures. Donegal households get a net €140 million out of State funds. Dublin households pay a net €1.1 billion.

    I know you've probably been used to conversations in an environment where statements like 'Dublin gets everything' and 'we pay tax and its all spent in Dublin' are never challenged. But those statements are simply wrong. I'd suggest to need to reflect on this, as if you've been working on some different assumption this really does change things. Ballymun's renewal is not funded by rackrenting Mayo farmers.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 43,313 ✭✭✭✭K-9


    Money from Dublin taxpayer's wallets.

    County V. Country again. Is it only Dublin people that pay taxes, live in Ireland and have a say on the direction of this country?

    Mad Men's Don Draper : What you call love was invented by guys like me, to sell nylons.



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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 43,313 ✭✭✭✭K-9


    Schuhart wrote:
    Central government offices are being splintered across 53 locations, regardless of cost.What I've suggested is you don't care what cost is incurred on the rest of the community to deliver really quite marginal benefits for Donegal.

    The 53 locations aren't just in Donegal. Not 1 job has been delivered here. I don't think Donegal is responsible for all the decentralisation costs.
    schuart wrote:
    I don't understand what you are trying to say here.
    Don't think you ever will see the advantages of decentralisation.
    schuart wrote:
    The CSO regional income figures.

    Page 11. Deduct 'Social Transfers' from 'Taxes' to get the net figures. Donegal households get a net €140 million out of State funds. Dublin households pay a net €1.1 billion.

    I know you've probably been used to conversations in an environment where statements like 'Dublin gets everything' and 'we pay tax and its all spent in Dublin' are never challenged. But those statements are simply wrong. I'd suggest to need to reflect on this, as if you've been working on some different assumption this really does change things. Ballymun's renewal is not funded by rackrenting Mayo farmers.

    You really believe that's the mindset in the country? Money from Dublin should be used to help poorer areas. Akin to how EU Structural funds where used in the 80/90's, or maybe we shouldn't have accepted those funds.

    Why bother giving money or jobs to disadvantaged areas like Ballymun. If you want to keep Dublin taxpayers money in Dublin, declare independence;)

    Mad Men's Don Draper : What you call love was invented by guys like me, to sell nylons.



  • Moderators, Society & Culture Moderators Posts: 32,286 Mod ✭✭✭✭The_Conductor


    Seanies32 wrote:
    County V. Country again. Is it only Dublin people that pay taxes, live in Ireland and have a say on the direction of this country?

    Of course its not only Dublin people who pay taxes.
    The problem really is that people are very much engaged in parochial politics- what is best for their corner (be it Donegal or Dublin) and not looking at the larger picture- we're only a small country- what is best for Ireland as a whole.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 43,313 ✭✭✭✭K-9


    smccarrick wrote:
    Of course its not only Dublin people who pay taxes.
    The problem really is that people are very much engaged in parochial politics- what is best for their corner (be it Donegal or Dublin) and not looking at the larger picture- we're only a small country- what is best for Ireland as a whole.

    It's not parochial to bring jobs to rural areas. Reviving and sustaining rural areas is best for Ireland as a whole or else we'll all move to Dublin! Dublin has enough problems without adding more! :rolleyes:

    I'm for rural regeneration as a whole, not Donegal regeneration. It's a wider concept and not that petty. Tbh, the way it's going, Donegal might see very little of these jobs. Whereas, most of the anti decentralisation is pure anti-country sentiment.

    Mad Men's Don Draper : What you call love was invented by guys like me, to sell nylons.



  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,835 ✭✭✭Schuhart


    Seanies32 wrote:
    Is it only Dublin people that pay taxes, live in Ireland and have a say on the direction of this country?
    Clearly not, although as you'll see from the like I've provided, Dublin is the main net contributor to tax revenue. Cut out Dublin and the Mid East region and the rest of the country would be swinging in the breeze. This fact is rarely mentioned, whereas utterly wrong statements like Clause's to the effect that Dublin depends on tax raised elsewhere are commonplace and rarely challenged. If some are labouring under a massive misconception is it not right to point that out?

    Part of the rhetoric trotted out about decentralisation is an inaccurate picture of resources being sucked out of the regions by Dublin – with the ripping out and splintering of Government offices then being presented as a sort of crude way of getting the resources back.

    The actually situation is, far from sucking resources in, Dublin is a national profit centre that the regions can and do receive considerable support from. Hence, the idea that Donegal is languishing for lack of central government support is simply wrong. If Donegal is languishing, its despite a very high level of State support.

    If there’s a solution to regional development its to be found in the National Spatial Strategy. That solution is not relocating offices out of Dublin. Rather, it’s promoting concentration within the regions. The resources are there – it’s a matter of the regions using the resources given in a sensible manner.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,835 ✭✭✭Schuhart


    Seanies32 wrote:
    The 53 locations aren't just in Donegal. Not 1 job has been delivered here. I don't think Donegal is responsible for all the decentralisation costs.
    However, the point is the 'benefits' of decentralisation are marginal. The costs are immense.
    Seanies32 wrote:
    Don't think you ever will see the advantages of decentralisation.
    I don't think you'll ever tell us how much of a cost you would be willing to impose on the rest of the community for quite marginal benefits in Donegal.
    Seanies32 wrote:
    You really believe that's the mindset in the country? Money from Dublin should be used to help poorer areas. Akin to how EU Structural funds where used in the 80/90's, or maybe we shouldn't have accepted those funds.
    I support money being spent on things that acheive a result. Decentralisation doesn't achieve a result. Your position seems to be that you don't care how much money is wasted, so long as we waste it in Donegal.
    Seanies32 wrote:
    Why bother giving money or jobs to disadvantaged areas like Ballymun. If you want to keep Dublin taxpayers money in Dublin, declare independence;)
    Can I point out that my point was in response to yours seeking clarification. The conclusion I'm drawing from your reaction is, as Jack Nicholson would say, you can't handle the truth.

    The BMW region is a massive recipient of State funding, provided by the rest of the country. What are you doing with those resources that is achieving so little? Why demand decentralisation as window-dressing for problems that are obviously local?


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,615 ✭✭✭NewDubliner


    Seanies32 wrote:
    County V. Country again. Is it only Dublin people that pay taxes, live in Ireland and have a say on the direction of this country?
    There are far more public servants outside of Dublin than in Dublin. Isn't it enough?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 43,313 ✭✭✭✭K-9


    Schuhart wrote:
    Clearly not, although as you'll see from the like I've provided, Dublin is the main net contributor to tax revenue. Cut out Dublin and the Mid East region and the rest of the country would be swinging in the breeze. This fact is rarely mentioned, whereas utterly wrong statements like Clause's to the effect that Dublin depends on tax raised elsewhere are commonplace and rarely challenged. If some are labouring under a massive misconception is it not right to point that out?

    I take your point and the Government is trying to address this dependence on Dublin. We don't all believe that, you know! That's why we're disadvantaged.:rolleyes: Nothing wrong is seeing that.

    The problem with that is that the revenues from Dublin (that of course a lot of country people contribute to) should be used around the country. Something similar to what the Germans, French etc. did with structural funds for Ireland in the 80/90's. If you disagree with that, well Ireland shouldn't have received EU aid and you are agreeing with Maggie Thatchers' view of Europe. Dublin was a disadvantaged area once!
    schuart wrote:
    The actually situation is, far from sucking resources in, Dublin is a national profit centre that the regions can and do receive considerable support from. Hence, the idea that Donegal is languishing for lack of central government support is simply wrong. If Donegal is languishing, its despite a very high level of State support.
    It's roughly €700 per person. Thank God the EU didn't give up on structural funds after very little return in the 70/80 and early 90's.

    Mad Men's Don Draper : What you call love was invented by guys like me, to sell nylons.



  • Closed Accounts Posts: 8 boardmodstink


    The garda ombudsman is still in its exclusive location in dublin as it was for many years before. If you live in limerick You still have to travel all the way to dublin to make a complaint. If they did not de centralise and as they are in their old premises they must have the old staff. Or they kicked them all out and re hired new staff. I cant see that hapening, it might happen on boards.ie but probably not if your work in the service sector for the state. Why did they not de centralise to athlone or was Dublin easier for people to get too .??


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 43,313 ✭✭✭✭K-9


    Schuhart wrote:
    However, the point is the 'benefits' of decentralisation are marginal. The costs are immense.I don't think you'll ever tell us how much of a cost you would be willing to impose on the rest of the community for quite marginal benefits in Donegal.

    What immense costs as against what marginal benefits? You're not objective, so you can't recognise the unquantifiable benefits that rural regeneration brings to a country.
    schuart wrote:
    I support money being spent on things that acheive a result. Decentralisation doesn't achieve a result. Your position seems to be that you don't care how much money is wasted, so long as we waste it in Donegal.Can I point out that my point was in response to yours seeking clarification. The conclusion I'm drawing from your reaction is, as Jack Nicholson would say, you can't handle the truth.

    The Luas was a waste of money. Was it a good idea? Yes. I've pointed out Donegal hasn't received 1 job from decentralisation, yet, you keep referring to Donegal. Donegal actually has a very small percentage of the jobs in question. Doesn't bother me, as it's not about Donegal, it's about rural areas. Your opinion is, it's a waste to spend money on projects that don't produce results. Who's to say it wont provide a result and regenerate rural areas? The EU didn't give up on our "rural" country!

    If your results is purely economic and cost based, well thank God for the EU, they didn't take that one track view.
    Dublin was a recipient of EU funds in the 70/80/90's. The EU funded a "failed economy" where emigration was a "fact of life" in the 80's. The Germans and French showed more faith in the rest of Ireland than Dublin does, by the looks of it!
    schuart wrote:
    The BMW region is a massive recipient of State funding, provided by the rest of the country. What are you doing with those resources that is achieving so little? Why demand decentralisation as window-dressing for problems that are obviously local?

    The proper infrastructure is only being built now. Broadband etc. that's only starting to be roled out properly now. New technology, which gives rural areas a chance of a level playing field, is only starting to be provided. Or maybe Broadband should be stopped too? What a waste of resources!

    Seriously, look at the roads leading to Dublin and compare them to rural areas. We're not looking for M50's, thank God!, but decent roads. It takes time for Rural areas to get the benefit of economic booms.

    Mad Men's Don Draper : What you call love was invented by guys like me, to sell nylons.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 43,313 ✭✭✭✭K-9


    There are far more public servants outside of Dublin than in Dublin. Isn't it enough?

    The ones that don't want to decentralise aren't being moved, they're being redeployed.

    Mad Men's Don Draper : What you call love was invented by guys like me, to sell nylons.



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  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,835 ✭✭✭Schuhart


    Seanies32 wrote:
    The problem with that is that the revenues from Dublin (that of course a lot of country people contribute to) should be used around the country.
    Of course quite an amount of the 'country' people as you call them come to Dublin and never want to see the country again. They are quite happy to see the city develop and don't have this 'Dublin's too big' fetish.
    Seanies32 wrote:
    If you disagree with that, well Ireland shouldn't have received EU aid and you are agreeing with Maggie Thatchers' view of Europe. Dublin was a disadvantaged area once!
    You seem to assign some massive significance to EU aid. For what its worth (and bear in mind I'm not the one barrelling on about EU money) we joined the EU to benefit farmers and at the cost of an amount of our indigenous industry. Some of it, like car assembly, we're probably well shut of. But I think you need to recall that Dublin and the other cities didn't really benefit massively from EU support. That, again, was a rural thing.

    Which again brings us back to that point. The regions get massive support. The West is paved with airports - Donegal has one of its very own and the State has even given money to Derry airport to give even more air access to the area. There's an Institute of Technology in Letterkenny - again, evidence of how resources are placed in the regions. You've also got areas that get Gaeltacht grants on top of the usual grants to facilitate industry establishing outside Dublin.

    Alabama, you've got the rest of the Union to help you along. What's going wrong?


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,835 ✭✭✭Schuhart


    Seanies32 wrote:
    What immense costs as against what marginal benefits? You're not objective, so you can't recognise the unquantifiable benefits that rural regeneration brings to a country.
    The cost of reaccommodation alone runs to billions, with no sign of a break-even in costs for decades. And that's not to include the uncosted (but considerable) expense of moving people about, training, ongoing transport costs to name but a few.

    The benefits are unquantifiable because they are not there.
    Seanies32 wrote:
    The Luas was a waste of money. Was it a good idea? Yes.
    I don't think you're making much sense here. Luas probably cost more than it should, but so little has been invested in Dublin until very recent years (unlike the West coast, with its airports every fifty miles) that the massive demand for the service means that it still makes sense to do it..
    Seanies32 wrote:
    I've pointed out Donegal hasn't received 1 job from decentralisation, yet, you keep referring to Donegal.
    Why do you think that statement is meaningful? Very few staff have yet moved out of Dublin as part of the current decentralisation. But what we are talking about is the planned programme - which as you know includes Donegal.
    Seanies32 wrote:
    Your opinion is, it's a waste to spend money on projects that don't produce results. Who's to say it wont provide a result and regenerate rural areas?
    The considerable research done to inform the National Spatial Strategy, that's who. It identified (yet again, because its hardly a secret) that the problem with regional development is lack of concentration in the regions, not a psychological need to inflict damage on Dublin. Hence, rather than splintering central Government over 53 locations we should be trying to tidy up the damage already done by, for the sake of argument, moving the Garda training colllege from its splendid isolation to Waterford, where it could form useful links to WIT.
    Seanies32 wrote:
    If your results is purely economic and cost based, well thank God for the EU, they didn't take that one track view.
    My view is economic in the sense that all social costs and benefits should be taken into account. Decentralisation as proposed does nothing to address the problem of concentration identified by the National Spatial Strategy. Therefore it will fail to achieve anything apart from wasting a massive amount of public money. Therefore its a bad idea. QED.
    Seanies32 wrote:
    The Germans and French showed more faith in the rest of Ireland than Dublin does, by the looks of it!
    This is awful maudlin stuff. Can you not just accept your position is wrong?
    Seanies32 wrote:
    Or maybe Broadband should be stopped too? What a waste of resources!
    Who said anything about broadband? To the extent that it aids communication, it could actually be useful. Scattering Government offices over 53 locations won't. Why can't you leave this 'I must support everything that brushes off Donegal even if its a frightening waste of money' mindset behind and concentrate on things that actually matter?
    Seanies32 wrote:
    Seriously, look at the roads leading to Dublin and compare them to rural areas.
    Seriously, bear in mind that most people in Dublin are children of people who came from elsewhere so we are typically very well acquainted with other parts of the country. This idea that Dublin gets all the roads is just bunk. Roads around the country have improved over the years, and the well-known problems are being addressed. Problems remain - just as they remain in Dublin. Bear in mind in Dublin you shouldn't be so massively impressed at the sight of a two lane motorway. Have a look at the amount of traffic going down it and you'll find that the city is frequently served worse than Donegal. Something illustrated by this quote from the Western Development Commission's website
    75% of people in the West spend 30 minutes or less getting to work
    Average commute time is about 20 minutes
    1 in 7 people in the Dublin area have to travel for over an hour to get to work each day
    In the West it's only 1 in 20
    Whatever way you look at it, if Donegal has a problem its not down to lack of resourcing. Hence, the situation you are in is not 'Dublin should give us the money'. Its 'Dublin has already given us plenty of money and we're still not getting anywhere'.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 37,903 ✭✭✭✭Hotblack Desiato


    Seanies32 wrote:
    What immense costs as against what marginal benefits?
    I would have (perhaps naively, in an Irish political context) expected the proponents of decentralisation to give us the detailed costs and benefits and tell us at great length and in great detail just how it's in our compelling national interest. Can you sell it to us with, you know, facts?
    You're not objective, so you can't recognise the unquantifiable benefits that rural regeneration brings to a country.
    That's grade-A horse manure. They are most certainly quantifiable, the powers that be have chosen not to quantify them because they know they don't stack up against the immense and ongoing costs. Brendan who lives in Town A (not Dublin) and who now works in Town B, moving job to Town C slightly nearer to home and perhaps buying his lunchtime roll in Town C is hardly the stuff economic miracles are made of.
    The Luas was a waste of money.
    No, it wasn't. It's a profitable and highly used (too highly used, if anything) resource that provides ongoing benefits to our national economy. Sucks that you don't have one in Donegal but... we'd have to mention cost-benefit analysis again and people on this thread don't like those. Yes it should probably have been built for less money, but then, the decentralised offices certainly aren't being built cheaply...
    Your opinion is, it's a waste to spend money on projects that don't produce results.
    Absolutely. The results from decentralisation will be less efficient public services, greater car commuting into central Dublin, and a ten-digit-sized hole in our public finances.
    If your results is purely economic and cost based, well thank God for the EU, they didn't take that one track view.
    In the world populated by rational people, economics and costs are all-important in major projects such as this. Yet we are repeatedly asked to suspend disbelief. "If we build it, they will come 'twill be great lads."
    The Germans and French showed more faith in the rest of Ireland than Dublin does, by the looks of it!
    You've already been told the extent to which Dublin continuously transfers wealth to the rest of the country. Wouldn't you rather see that transfer spent on useful things rather than p***ed away on vote buying exercises like this one?

    I'm partial to your abracadabra,

    I'm raptured by the joy of it all.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 43,313 ✭✭✭✭K-9


    Schuhart wrote:
    Of course quite an amount of the 'country' people as you call them come to Dublin and never want to see the country again. They are quite happy to see the city develop and don't have this 'Dublin's too big' fetish.

    Off course, just as a lot of Dublin people have no problem, I'm sure, in wanting the country areas to develop! Plenty of country people want to go back too, doesn''t prove anything in particular. This Dublin v. country area thing seems to suit the anti decentralisation lobby better!
    schuart wrote:
    You seem to assign some massive significance to EU aid. For what its worth (and bear in mind I'm not the one barrelling on about EU money) we joined the EU to benefit farmers and at the cost of an amount of our indigenous industry. Some of it, like car assembly, we're probably well shut of. But I think you need to recall that Dublin and the other cities didn't really benefit massively from EU support. That, again, was a rural thing.

    The significance is that richer parts of the EU transferred funds to a poorer part. Something that Dublin people are begrudging in doing to the rest of their own country! No particular significance to what part of Ireland received what, just as Germany and France didn't care!

    It could be argued that the 12.5% Corporation benefitted us in the long run. We had a cheaper tax rate than the rest of the EU. Just because we joined the EU for some reasons, doesn't mean we didn't use it for our advantage and indeed Dublins for other reasons. Being part of the EU was used to Dublins and Ireland advantage.

    We didn't join the EU to have 12.5% tax rates. It was part of the advantages that later transpired. Obviously Dublin and surrounding areas benefitted from that.
    SCHUART wrote:
    Which again brings us back to that point. The regions get massive support. The West is paved with airports - Donegal has one of its very own and the State has even given money to Derry airport to give even more air access to the area. There's an Institute of Technology in Letterkenny - again, evidence of how resources are placed in the regions. You've also got areas that get Gaeltacht grants on top of the usual grants to facilitate industry establishing outside Dublin.

    Alabama, you've got the rest of the Union to help you along. What's going wrong?

    The EU should have said you've an airport and Universities, Dublin, its 1985, away yous go!. You ever see Carrickfin, you call it an airport! Sure why bother with broadband either?

    Dublin, you had the rest of Ireland and Europe to help you along in the 70/80's. You's where a wasteland. Everybody emigrated. You had an ISFC with 0% tax and you still failed. Dublin was a "failed economy" then. Yous can't see that now, or forget it, Dublin wants to forget the wasteland that it was. What unemployment rates where in Dublin in the 80's?

    Mad Men's Don Draper : What you call love was invented by guys like me, to sell nylons.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 43,313 ✭✭✭✭K-9


    Schuhart wrote:
    The cost of reaccommodation alone runs to billions, with no sign of a break-even in costs for decades. And that's not to include the uncosted (but considerable) expense of moving people about, training, ongoing transport costs to name but a few.

    As against rents saved, and real economic revenue replaced! How do you measure revenue of civil service workers?

    schuart wrote:
    The benefits are unquantifiable because they are not there.I don't think you're making much sense here.
    They're there. You want to measure everything in purely cost terms! Rural regeneration is there, you don't want to see it!
    schuart wrote:
    Luas probably cost more than it should, but so little has been invested in Dublin until very recent years (unlike the West coast, with its airports every fifty miles) that the massive demand for the service means that it still makes sense to do it..Why do you think that statement is meaningful?

    Open your eyes, look at the M50 and the pointless extra lane. Look at the dual carriageways/motorways.
    schuart wrote:
    Can you not just accept your position is wrong? Who said anything about broadband? To the extent that it aids communication, it could actually be useful. Scattering Government offices over 53 locations won't. Why can't you leave this 'I must support everything that brushes off Donegal even if its a frightening waste of money' mindset behind and concentrate on things that actually matter?

    Read my last few post about jobs in Donegal. Ah, but Broadband will mean the 53 locations will be able to communicate easier and the location wont matter as much! Rural economies matter just as Ireland mattered to the EU in the 80's.
    schuart wrote:
    Its 'Dublin has already given us plenty of money and we're still not getting anywhere'.

    Ah yeah, return the EU Money then!. But off course Dublin never benefited from it. Thank God for the EU and not Dublin!:rolleyes:

    Mad Men's Don Draper : What you call love was invented by guys like me, to sell nylons.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 37,903 ✭✭✭✭Hotblack Desiato


    Seanies32 wrote:
    Off course, just as a lot of Dublin people have no problem, I'm sure, in wanting the country areas to develop!
    I certainly don't have a problem with that. I hope they can do it in a more sensible and sustainble way than the greater Dublin area has, but given the fetish for one-off housing that's a folorn hope.
    Something (wealth transfer) that Dublin people are begrudging in doing to the rest of their own country!
    Begrudging or not, it's happening, it's happening in a big way and will keep on happening for the forseeable future. Please don't waste it.
    We didn't join the EU to have 12.5% tax rates. It was part of the advantages that later transpired.
    That's bollox. The traditional high-tax economies of the EU never wanted us to undercut them and they are objecting to it more and more strongly. If we never joined the EU we could have complete freedom in this area.
    Obviously Dublin and surrounding areas benefitted from that.
    Only because there were enterprises creating wealth. If all you have is socialised make-work in your area then corporation tax is the very least of your worries.
    The EU should have said you've an airport and Universities, Dublin, its 1985, away yous go!. You ever see Carrickfin, you call it an airport! Sure why bother with broadband either?
    That is simply incomprehensible. WTF has broadband got to do with Carrickfin airport?
    Dublin, you had the rest of Ireland and Europe to help you along in the 70/80's.
    Please provide figures showing the net weath transfer from the regions to Dublin in the 1970s and 1980s. I doubt you can, because I'm pretty damn certain that no such thing ever occurred.

    I'm partial to your abracadabra,

    I'm raptured by the joy of it all.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 43,313 ✭✭✭✭K-9


    On the M50, so a 3 lane motorway is going to solve it?

    On the rest of the post, we're going around in circles!


    The point remains!
    schuart wrote:
    Hence, the situation you are in is not 'Dublin should give us the money'. Its 'Dublin has already given us plenty of money and we're still not getting anywhere'.

    Thank God for the EU, or we wouldn't be talking about any money!

    Mad Men's Don Draper : What you call love was invented by guys like me, to sell nylons.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 43,313 ✭✭✭✭K-9


    ninja900 wrote:
    No, it wasn't. It's a profitable and highly used (too highly used, if anything) resource that provides ongoing benefits to our national economy.

    You factor in the Building costs and those economic costs yous are so fond off!

    Mad Men's Don Draper : What you call love was invented by guys like me, to sell nylons.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 43,313 ✭✭✭✭K-9


    ninja900 wrote:
    I certainly don't have a problem with that. I hope they can do it in a more sensible and sustainble way than the greater Dublin area has, but given the fetish for one-off housing that's a folorn hope.

    Obviously one off housing would be a bigger problem for Dublin!
    ninja900 wrote:
    That's bollox. The traditional high-tax economies of the EU never wanted us to undercut them and they are objecting to it more and more strongly. If we never joined the EU we could have complete freedom in this area.

    We had 0% and 10% before the 12.5% and we where still in the EU! We'd have no structural funds without the EU, be more isolated and we'd still be stuck in the 80's.
    ninja900 wrote:
    Only because there were enterprises creating wealth. If all you have is socialised make-work in your area then corporation tax is the very least of your worries.

    Then who cares if you lose those jobs?
    ninja900 wrote:
    That is simply incomprehensible.

    But EU funds for a backward, rural and "failed" Irish economy in the 80's was incomprehensible, including Dublin, was.
    ninja900 wrote:
    Please provide figures showing the net weath transfer from the regions to Dublin in the 1970s and 1980s. I doubt you can, because I'm pretty damn certain that no such thing ever occurred.

    Please provide figures for the net wealth transfer from Ireland back to the EU in 2006. I'm pretty damn certain that no such thing exists!

    Mad Men's Don Draper : What you call love was invented by guys like me, to sell nylons.



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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 37,903 ✭✭✭✭Hotblack Desiato


    Seanies32 wrote:
    On the rest of the post, we're going around in circles!
    Only because you repeatedly refuse to provide any facts or figures when your arguments are challenged.

    I haven't replied to your last post because not a word of it makes any sense I can figure out. If you think one-off housing is prevalent in Dublin you must be on something.

    I'm partial to your abracadabra,

    I'm raptured by the joy of it all.



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