Advertisement
Help Keep Boards Alive. Support us by going ad free today. See here: https://subscriptions.boards.ie/.
https://www.boards.ie/group/1878-subscribers-forum

Private Group for paid up members of Boards.ie. Join the club.
Hi all, please see this major site announcement: https://www.boards.ie/discussion/2058427594/boards-ie-2026

Irish Water pushing ahead with privatisation of Water Infrastructure on the DL?

12346

Comments

  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 577 ✭✭✭gerryirl


    Roger you are correct in what your saying. We must have fixed at Least 10 leaks in the space of ten yards not one main. Old and poor quality mains. Fix one the pressure finds another weak spot. This is where you require a new mains. Not every main like this is getting replaced. They will look at how much water you will save before they justify replacing it. In many instances mains will be replaced on age alone or if there are lead services off it rather than leakage. Things ain't as simple as some people seem to think


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


    I'm afraid there were at least 10 supposed fixes carried out on the exact same place. The shiny blue pipes begin about half a mile further up the road, so have no bearing on the original leak. I find it hard to understand how Irish Water (or their contractors) were able to successfully fix a leak after Local Authorities had 10 attempts. Though, to be fair to the LAs, the repair might last for a year before resurfacing. The LA team (a digger, truck and usually 4 men) could take a day to "fix" the leak temporarily, yet a similar team from IW (or their contractors) had same leak fixed permanently in a couple of hours.

    think about it though. What is leaking?
    What keeps breaking?
    A joint or pipe via a hole?
    something had to be replaced since the leak hasn't come back. You cant set a timer on a repair so that it only last a year or two. I reckon a pipe was replaced?
    (Or maybe its the reduced pressure in the mains since IW thats taking the strain of some of the pipes).

    (You reckon those LA lads enjoyed having to fix the same leak 10 times, and ever notice the different health and safety standards?)


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2, Paid Member Posts: 40,018 ✭✭✭✭Hotblack Desiato


    mada999 wrote: »
    no one at the moment.. but they are waiting until the taxpayers upgrade the infrastructure and then somone will swoop in an buy it.. max 10 years imo..

    This again. Why haven't the electricity and gas networks been privatised so? They're actually profitable.

    I'm partial to your abracadabra
    I'm raptured by the joy of it all



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 14,368 ✭✭✭✭jimmycrackcorm


    mada999 wrote:
    no one at the moment.. but they are waiting until the taxpayers upgrade the infrastructure and then somone will swoop in an buy it.. max 10 years imo..

    If that's the case then why hasn't the ESB been sold off? After all it is an almost identical model to IW.

    You've no actual basis for your scaremongering.


  • Posts: 17,847 ✭✭✭✭ [Deleted User]


    think about it though. What is leaking?
    What keeps breaking?
    A joint or pipe via a hole?
    something had to be replaced since the leak hasn't come back. You cant set a timer on a repair so that it only last a year or two. I reckon a pipe was replaced?
    (Or maybe its the reduced pressure in the mains since IW thats taking the strain of some of the pipes).

    (You reckon those LA lads enjoyed having to fix the same leak 10 times, and ever notice the different health and safety standards?)

    I don't know what the problem was, but it was in the exact same place every time! Whatever the IW lads did, it sorted it.

    My point (which I'm sure you will chose to ignore) is that one same sized team did in a couple of hours what another attempted 10 times and at least twice the length of time each attempt.

    Say you had a plumbing problem and had the same crew in time and again to fix it only for it to recur every time. If that crew was replaced by another, who spent half the time on your problem and seems to have sorted it permanently. Which would you call in the event of needing a plumber in the future?


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


    I don't know what the problem was, but it was in the exact same place every time! Whatever the IW lads did, it sorted it.

    My point (which I'm sure you will chose to ignore) is that one same sized team did in a couple of hours what another attempted 10 times and at least twice the length of time each attempt.

    Say you had a plumbing problem and had the same crew in time and again to fix it only for it to recur every time. If that crew was replaced by another, who spent half the time on your problem and seems to have sorted it permanently. Which would you call in the event of needing a plumber in the future?

    I see your point, you're not seeing mine!

    Using your analogy, rather than hiring a plumber you used your brother who only had a hammer and some tape.
    He needed a length of copper pipe to fix it permanently, but he wasn't allowed buy it...
    (see the difference?)


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 32,688 ✭✭✭✭ytpe2r5bxkn0c1


    This again. Why haven't the electricity and gas networks been privatised so? They're actually profitable.

    Correct and there's also the underlying fact that you don't privatise what is a natural monopoly like a network that is of state importance. Privatise water and you end up with separate mains for each private company. Security of supply dictates the need for state control. Plus, it's just not going to happen.


  • Posts: 17,847 ✭✭✭✭ [Deleted User]


    I see your point, you're not seeing mine!

    Using your analogy, rather than hiring a plumber you used your brother who only had a hammer and some tape.
    He needed a length of copper pipe to fix it permanently, but he wasn't allowed buy it...
    (see the difference?)

    All the more reason to have a system specifically for a purpose. In this case a system solely for the provision of water, staffed by people who know what they’re doing. As for asking my brother to sort my plumbing, I’ve more sense.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,478 ✭✭✭blackcard


    You do realize that under the SLA, the same people are carrying out repairs as previously? If Councils were carrying out repairs previously, they are still carrying out repairs. If contractors were carrying out repairs for Councils, they will be carrying out repairs for Irish Water. In either case, the works are organised by the LA


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 32,688 ✭✭✭✭ytpe2r5bxkn0c1


    blackcard wrote: »
    You do realize that under the SLA, the same people are carrying out repairs as previously? If Councils were carrying out repairs previously, they are still carrying out repairs. If contractors were carrying out repairs for Councils, they will be carrying out repairs for Irish Water. In either case, the works are organised by the LA

    You do realise the OP was about a change in this taking the contracting from the LA???


  • Advertisement
  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,478 ✭✭✭blackcard


    blackcard wrote: »
    You do realize that under the SLA, the same people are carrying out repairs as previously? If Councils were carrying out repairs previously, they are still carrying out repairs. If contractors were carrying out repairs for Councils, they will be carrying out repairs for Irish Water. In either case, the works are organised by the LA

    You do realise the OP was about a change in this taking the contracting from the LA???
    I was just responding to MaryAnne who seems to think that the reason her pipe remainded fixed was because IW were in charge. If you report a leak in a pipe, you contact a call centre, Abtran. They notify the LA through Maximo. The LA then arranges to repair the leak either directly or by contractor. IW have absolutely no input except paying for it


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,312 ✭✭✭Nettle Soup


    If that's the case then why hasn't the ESB been sold off? After all it is an almost identical model to IW.

    You've no actual basis for your scaremongering.

    Jesus Christ, people like you have extremely short memories or very good blinkers.

    The minister who set up Irish Water feared privatisation.

    Seriously open your eyes. So naive.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 29,787 ✭✭✭✭end of the road


    Correct and there's also the underlying fact that you don't privatise what is a natural monopoly like a network that is of state importance. Privatise water and you end up with separate mains for each private company. Security of supply dictates the need for state control. Plus, it's just not going to happen.


    britain did it, and we usually copy them eventually. i hope you are right and our government aren't as thick as britain's have been since 1979 but i wouldn't bank on it just yet.

    I'm very highly educated. I know words, i have the best words, nobody has better words then me.



  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,312 ✭✭✭Nettle Soup


    Duplicate post


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


    If that's the case then why hasn't the ESB been sold off? After all it is an almost identical model to IW.

    You've no actual basis for your scaremongering.

    Its half the model!
    There's no "waste" electricity where most of the costs are coming from, and where we seem to have a massive infrastructural deficit


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


    All the more reason to have a system specifically for a purpose. In this case a system solely for the provision of water, staffed by people who know what they’re doing. As for asking my brother to sort my plumbing, I’ve more sense.


    its an analogy Maryanne, not literal
    (Are you saying the Councils didn't know what they were doing?)


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


    Nout123 wrote: »
    I thought all the staff wear IW jackets now. And fixing leaks is not as easy as you may believe. Remember that part of the country without water for what a week. As they had to get a part tooled to fix it.

    word on the street is that's not the whole truth.
    Apparently there was also an issue with access and someone being owed money by IW... midnight phone calls by the Louth County Manger to landowners... not something the IW spin machine want in the public domain...


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


    Nout123 wrote: »
    Have they got rid off the 700 call centre staff that had the contract yet ? I assume they just charge the same amount with 10 people taking calls at this stage. Great if your the company.

    but sure we need it for the customer support for water charges?

    Oh wait...


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 696 ✭✭✭wordofwarning


    Jesus Christ, people like you have extremely short memories or very good blinkers.

    The minister who set up Irish Water feared privatisation.

    Seriously open your eyes. So naive.

    This person is not naive, they are real.

    Who owns the gas network? The state. Who owns the airports? The state. Who own the electrical grid? The state. Who owns the roads in the country? The state.

    Do you see a pattern? In case you don't, the state seems to keep important assets in state ownership.

    Explain to me why the state would privatise IW? It would be political suicide. Why would a government privatise IW, when they would finish their party off? The party that privatise IW is done. Therefore, it will never happen

    Seriously open your eyes. Don't be naive...


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 619 ✭✭✭NinetyTwoTeam


    Yep, this will all be done by stealth now. The government learned their lesson. They got the national ID cards that way with no protests etc., they're going to use that model from now on I'd say, no radio or TV ads just sneak it in.


  • Advertisement
  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 29,787 ✭✭✭✭end of the road


    This person is not naive, they are real.

    Who owns the gas network? The state. Who owns the airports? The state. Who own the electrical grid? The state. Who owns the roads in the country? The state.

    Do you see a pattern? In case you don't, the state seems to keep important assets in state ownership.

    Explain to me why the state would privatise IW? It would be political suicide. Why would a government privatise IW, when they would finish their party off? The party that privatise IW is done. Therefore, it will never happen

    Seriously open your eyes. Don't be naive...


    successive british governments privatized and sold off to cronies and all got re-elected. so to say it couldn't or wouldn't happen ever is naive, even if it may turn out to be correct.

    I'm very highly educated. I know words, i have the best words, nobody has better words then me.



  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,312 ✭✭✭Nettle Soup


    This person is not naive, they are real.

    Who owns the gas network? The state. Who owns the airports? The state. Who own the electrical grid? The state. Who owns the roads in the country? The state.

    Do you see a pattern? In case you don't, the state seems to keep important assets in state ownership.

    Explain to me why the state would privatise IW? It would be political suicide. Why would a government privatise IW, when they would finish their party off? The party that privatise IW is done. Therefore, it will never happen

    Seriously open your eyes. Don't be naive...

    No no no, you explain this speech from the Dail to me. How can you forget these things???? It put people on the streets.

    Are you saying that you naïve see-no-evil lapdogs know more than the minister and current FG TD who helped set up Irish Water



    Privatisation was always part of the Irish Water "plan"

    I await your analysis.

    You are real alright...really deluded.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 577 ✭✭✭gerryirl


    I met the very Minister in his office in the Dail when IW was been setup to talk about it as he wanted to meet with various people that were working in the water industry. In fairness to him he had a plan at the time an relayed it to me but in reality it never happened they way he thought it would


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,312 ✭✭✭Nettle Soup


    I am waiting...:rolleyes:

    In case you were afraid to watch the youtube...some more from the good Minister...

    http://www.irishexaminer.com/breakingnews/ireland/odowd-my-proposal-to-ban-irish-water-privatisation-was-deleted-654080.html
    The minister who set up Irish Water has said there are "forces" within the Department of the Environment who want to privatise the water network.

    Fergus O'Dowd said there was good reason to be concerned about the possibility of Irish Water being sold to private hands.

    The Fine Gael TD made his comments in the Dáil in the early hours of the morning, as TDs debated the Water Services Bill.
    "We have reason to be concerned," he said. "I am convinced there are other forces at work here - not necessarily political forces - that are active and they do have an influence."

    He said he wanted a ban on privatisation to be included in previous legislation, but that proposal was deleted.

    Seriously open your eyes. Don't be so so naïve after the fact...there is actually an awful lot to learn from the Irish Water story. Politics in Ireland will never be the same again.
    Arrogance is gone...except perhaps with Phil 'I will ll reduce your water to a trickle' Hogan who got rewarded for incompetence.

    The good people of Ireland dodged a bullet because we refused to pay those quango bills and took to the streets. It was brave and it was noble.

    Ask Labour who took their own bullet at the last GE.

    :)


  • Posts: 17,847 ✭✭✭✭ [Deleted User]


    I am waiting...:rolleyes:

    In case you were afraid to watch the youtube...some more from the good Minister...

    http://www.irishexaminer.com/breakingnews/ireland/odowd-my-proposal-to-ban-irish-water-privatisation-was-deleted-654080.html



    Seriously open your eyes. Don't be naive...

    The good people of Ireland dodged a bullet because we refused to pay those quango bills and took to the streets.

    Ask Labour who took their own bullet at the last GE.

    :)

    You seem to have missed the bit where Irish Water are still here as are charges for excessive use.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,312 ✭✭✭Nettle Soup


    You seem to have missed the bit where Irish Water are still here as are charges for excessive use.

    Give it up Mary, you lost. ;)

    This thread is about privatisation. Did you listen to the O'Dowd video?...he asks knowingly.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 981 ✭✭✭Bishopsback


    Give it up Mary, you lost. ;)

    This thread is about privatisation. Did you listen to the O'Dowd video?...he asks knowingly.

    Apart from a speech by O'Dowd, who says the forces weren't necessarily political, if there were forces at all, is there any evidence of a concerted effort. Bearing in mind where O'Dowd is sitting and maybe his political fears.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,312 ✭✭✭Nettle Soup


    Apart from a speech by O'Dowd, who says the forces weren't necessarily political, if there were forces at all, is there any evidence of a concerted effort. Bearing in mind where O'Dowd is sitting and maybe his political fears.

    Apart from a speech in the Dáil from a Government Minister who helped set up Irish Water??? What more do you want??? Are you saying he made it up???

    He was the Minister of State for Natural Resources! The guy was sent to the back benches by Hogan soon after.
    He said he wanted a ban on privatisation to be included in previous legislation, but that proposal was deleted.

    The question I would ask is how you people know better! :D
    Mr O’Dowd said he had also sought a commitment that Irish Water would never be privatised. But it had not been included in the legislation at the time and he had objected strongly.

    “That was absolutely wrong,’’ he added. “We were going back on an absolutely fundamental promise that I had made in the Oireachtas. ’’


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 13,365 ✭✭✭✭McMurphy


    Privatisation?

    I'll just leave this here.

    Screen-Shot-2015-09-07-at-09.41.23.png?w=1406
    Screen-Shot-2015-09-07-at-09.42.05.png?w=1550
    Taken from here

    Mind you, there's a lot of dancing on heads of pins going on in this thread. Much of it coming from people who favoured FG inspired wet dream.

    Oblivious to, or ignoring the fact that the same FG established a "expert commission" to examine our water system, and how it's funded.

    No one hardly needs reminded that the "expert commission" concluded that water should be funded by general taxation do they?

    Obviously the days of stuffing your commission full of insiders, where they're told what to conclude at the end is over. :D


  • Advertisement
  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,312 ✭✭✭Nettle Soup


    Remember the EU Eurostat test that Irish Water failed?

    http://www.broadsheet.ie/2015/09/07/privatisation-of-irish-water-is-ultimately-envisaged/
    Ken Foxe, in yesterday’s Sunday Times, reported:
    “A reference to plans for the future privatisation of Irish Water was removed from a Eurostat letter explaining its classification of the water utility following a request from the Central Statistics Office (CSO). The reference, which could have proved highly embarrassing to the government, was in a preliminary letter sent by the European statistics agency to the CSO last July.”

    “Eurostat had, in its original letter, said the “privatisation of Irish Water is ultimately envisaged” although ownership of the infrastructure could only be changed by referendum. However, the CSO asked that the reference to privatisation be removed, according to correspondence obtained by The Sunday Times following a document request to Eurostat.”

    It's like we are discussing some kind of revisionist history here. This was only 2-3 YEARS AGO. How do people forget this stuff and start think Irish Water wasn't too bad after all. I don't know...

    So naïve...


Advertisement