Sweet.Science wrote: » The need for social housing is not sustainable. The more that are built the more that will sign on and pursue one and live a certain lifestyle to try get one. I dont know what the solution is.
yourdeadwright wrote: » I think its the timing of the whole thing that has people upset New Garda commissioner with Mi5 links is only in the door, Then that van last registered to the Manchester police force turns up in Dublin with English reg ,Masked men and not taxed and no insurances, No id (some claim they didn't need them so say they did) The Garda released in there statement they checked and the Van was taxed , which is a lie you can check online yourself, It hasn;t been taxed since 2014 , I'm not saying any of the above is right or wrong but its what has upset some people Then on top of that the new commissioner made a statement last month that the biggest threat currently to Irish people is " Republican paramilitaries " which raised serious eyebrows , As its clear its the drug gangs and the problems they have been causing are far worse in current times Its easy to see why the Sinn Fein heads are worried when that came from a former PSI officer's mouth whos father was killed by the IRA, Its very very out of touch of what currently happing and seems obvious he would have problem with Republicans due to his past, who wouldn't to be fair to the man , Again i'm not saying i agree or its right , I'm just saying this is why u'll see a lot of people on Facebook and what not giving out,
A Tyrant Named Miltiades! wrote: » Weren't local representatives from every political party opposed to that development? I know that I've heard Labour and FG councillors on the radio, speaking in opposition to it.
HeidiHeidi wrote: » Two things strike me from your post above, and since you seem to be well clued up on all of this maybe you might answer my questions?
Firstly, if you want "widespread deflation" in the rental market, is that not going to lead to an even bigger scramble of landlords getting out of the rental business than is currently underway, as it will no longer be in any way profitable
(being a landlord is a business they're entitled to make a profit, they too have to live after all).
Secondly, almost all of the developments you sing the praises of have been demolished, Dolphin House is the only one I know of that's being redveloped in anything like its previous form. Does this not say something - like, that model failed?
Clustering social housing in small areas like that was a disaster, the government seems determined not to go down that road again.
yourdeadwright wrote: » The Garda released in there statement they checked and the Van was taxed , which is a lie you can check online yourself, It hasn;t been taxed since 2014,
Dravokivich wrote: » My need is for affordable housing. Social housing is a terrible way to call it, because it doesn't properly relate to the majority of people that it's built for.
Amirani wrote: » We're in a housing crises, we need emergency measures. If we're happy have CPOs on private land across the city, then these 500 homes should be built. This is just 1 example of the hypocrisy of political parties across the spectrum. Sinn Fein continuously block large density schemes in Dublin City Council and yet blame the Government for all the homelessness. They're equally as responsible.
Amirani wrote: » We're in a housing crises, we need emergency measures. If we're happy have CPOs on private land across the city, then these 500 homes should be built.
Deleted User wrote: » Coppinger on Tonight there now "I wouldn't have the right to vote if people hadn't broken the law" Jesus wept.
A Tyrant Named Miltiades! wrote: » Here's something I genuinely don't understand. Irish households are earning more now than we did during the boom; rental and property prices are higher than they were during the boom, and the country is almost at full employment.
hatrickpatrick wrote: » Which specific part of this do you regard as untrue?
A Tyrant Named Miltiades! wrote: » i know, and I happen to agree that the opposition to that development is hysterial -- it was to be built on a tiny section of a very large park, and where better to build a developemnt like that, than next to a large sporting and recreational area? It seemed ideal to me. My point is simply that it's a local, NIMBY issue. Was there are local representative, from any party, who *didn't* oppose it? If so, they're a brave councillor. Aodhán O' Ríordan (lab), Seán haughey (FF) and Naoise Ó Muirí (FG) were the most vocal opponents to the development that I'd heard of, up until now.
Bethany Long Pensioner wrote: » "So what you're saying is..." Yeah there is utterly zero odd about my original stated position which was: directly comparing tenants being cruelly evicted from their home in the 1800s to the removal of squatters who accessed a private property without permission... is grossly dishonest. Nothing more. All the other bits were added by you.
the_syco wrote: » Was 34 Fredrick Street even a house, though? Or was it offices? I know 41 Belvedere Place was 10 bedsits, and planning permission was given in June 26th. It seems that making apartments to house people is not what the activists wanted. Or will they call the planning permission being granted about 2 and half months ago a win, somehow?
hatrickpatrick wrote: » Why is people being charged unfairly high rents and being cruelly evicted from their homes in the 1800s a legitimate issue to protest and agitate about, but people being charged unfairly high rents and being cruelly evicted from their homes in 2018 is not a legitimate issue to protest and agitate about? The people of the 1800s are more deserving of housing than the people of 2018? What's the distinction? The situation is the same except for the date, FFS.
Sweet.Science wrote: » Can you define affordable housing ?
Dravokivich wrote: » Single earner supporting a kid on less than the average wage.
hatrickpatrick wrote: » They want them to be public / council owned apartments, so they can be rented for rents that are below market rates and are calculated based on what's reasonable, not what is maximally possible given the shortage.
PlaneSpeeking wrote: » And sadly as rare as unicorn s***e these days. Plenty of non earners doing it though.
hatrickpatrick wrote: » Just to add, I have quite the backlog of quoted posts from yesterday to reply to which I didn't get around to last night, so I'm replying to everyone's arguments in order today as I get a chance - I'm not ignoring any arguments or running away from backing up my positions, lest anyone make such scurrilous accusations
Sweet.Science wrote: » That system would be taken advantage of like HAP is now . No couple would get married then . The mother can get an affordable home and the father can move in .
Wheeliebin30 wrote: » Why? What’s the difference without a mask?
Amirani wrote: » Yep, agreed on all of that. It's a cross party problem. Another is the reduction in allowable heights by Dublin City Council in certain areas of Dublin during this housing crisis. For the past number of years, Sinn Fein has been the largest party in Dublin City Council and has fueled this: https://www.irishtimes.com/news/environment/dublin-city-council-asked-to-reverse-apartment-height-limits-1.2759551
A Tyrant Named Miltiades! wrote: » It isn't reported in that article, but you should know that the height restrictions were agreed to by councillors within all the major parties. Sinn Fein, contrary to popular opinion, does not control DCC.