Iwasfrozen wrote: » Why is it disgusting that an investment company owns the company that provides water? I just don't understand the mindset at play here...
FREETV wrote: » I have never voted before
Deleted User wrote: » Then YOU have NO voice. Your opinions count for NOTHING.
FREETV wrote: » Some people have more money than sense if they will pay Irish Water a cent for something they already pay for. There is no logic in that. Cut their wages in half in the Dail and stop the paying of bonuses across the board for a start.
DamagedTrax wrote: » because a ltd company is legally bound to provide continuous profits for its shareholders at the cost of everything else. and i cant understand the mindset of people that think that that is ok. everything else forsaken to profit. as if the world isnt in enough of a mess thanks to corporate law and international trade treaty. is that the kind of set up you want managing something we need to live? this isnt about property, this isnt about non essential luxuries... its about the very thing that is needed for ANYTHING on this planet to live. and now its a commodity to be traded? i will stand against this till i physically cant anymore and i suspect a lot more are beginning to think like me.
Iwasfrozen wrote: » The company provides me water in exchange for money, since this trade is continuous and since the company always wants money it is in the companies interests to always provide me with water. What's the problem? Should the system break or suffer excessive leaks the companies shareholders, fearful of losing profit will pressure the directors of the company to fix the faulty infrastructure.
Deleted User wrote: » Says he who has never voted!
DamagedTrax wrote: » or since there's no competition and since we need water to live, the company will run a shell of a service with little regard to public safety or social situations, as is the case in so many similiar situations (chile as an example).
Iwasfrozen wrote: » If the infrastructure falls into disrepair shareholders, fearful of losing profits will pressure the director of the company to fix the infrastructure to prevent leaks. Leaks cost the company money regardless of the absence of competition. The way you're presenting your argument is disingenuous. Yes we need water to live, but that water doesn't need to come from IW.
DamagedTrax wrote: » nothing disingenuous at all about it. i never said IW will end life on earth should they somehow survive all this and control our water supply, my point is that a company clearly set up for future privatisation shouldnt have any business being involved with a resource so precious, that it is a building block of life itself. and please let me know your thoughts on the chile situation. its been mentioned many times but no pro IW commentator has anything to say on the matter. and chile is only one example of many.
Larbre34 wrote: » Crikey lads, where are ye going with the "who will pay?" The 52% marginal tax rate on PAYE workers should give you a hint - ye are all already paying! My household paid €46,000 in direct and indirect taxes and charges last year; pardon me for not feeling guilty about refusing to pay any more.
DamagedTrax wrote: » im quite clear that im not arguing non payment long term.a flat 100 per annum, payable weekly at post office (if your situation needs it), would be perfectly acceptable to me and a lot more people BUT only if IW is kept as a national asset. privatisation needs to be binned and heads need to roll to get the councils up to standard. if they cant do it hire in new workers that can and cut the drift wood. there's a lot of skilled workers out of work in this country.. but i suppose nationalised job creation for the good of the country is looked on as being commie since cowboy Regan all but sold the planet to corporations in the 80s?
Iwasfrozen wrote: » Per house or per person? If per house then it's not enough. Nationalised job creation won't work because the government can't afford to pay them, the government is already in deficit. Private job creation is the only game in town.
DamagedTrax wrote: » per adult. if a good model is brought forward that guarantees clean water for all in a timeframe and creates paid work for people, then only the craziest of crazies could argue 2 euro a week into the post office, or taken from their wage. but it needs to be a model thats made bulletproof. one that benefits no-one but the citizens of the country and the country itself. the drift wood is just cut, new people brought in. no need to pay extra wages. i realise its very idealist but we're really at the bottom of the barrell now. the ideas being brought to fruition are made by greedy slef serving sociopaths. we NEED idealism or they'll just keep going and going.
Iwasfrozen wrote: » Sorry I read that wrong, 100 euro per adult per annum isn't enough. There are 3,638,662 adults living in Ireland, charging them all 100 euro will raise 363,866,200 source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Demographics_of_the_Republic_of_Ireland#Age_structure, while it costs 1.2 billion euro to only manage infrastructure, excluding the tens of billions needed to upgrade it. source: http://www.water.ie/why-value-water/
Iwasfrozen wrote: » Sorry I read that wrong, 100 euro per adult per annum isn't enough. There are 3,638,662 adults living in Ireland, charging them all 100 euro will raise 363,866,200 source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Demographics_of_the_Republic_of_Ireland#Age_structure, while it costs 1.2 billion euro to only manage infrastructure, excluding the tens of billions needed to upgrade it. source: http://www.water.ie/why-value-water/ If it was 400 euro per adult per annum we'd just about be breaking even but the infrastructure would continue to decay.
DamagedTrax wrote: » so add in what we currently pay thru taxation.
DamagedTrax wrote: » there's a lot of fat in this country that can be trimmed. the current goverment like to trim the skinny people to feed the fat. the recent budget proved that much.
RobertKK wrote: » Not all adults will be paying Irish water for water. Some have paid and continue to pay via private wells and water schemes, think it might be under 3 million adults.
Iwasfrozen wrote: » The country is deficit, we need to make cuts to balance the budget, if not here then we have to cut something else. Also we need a single body single body to oversea the upgrading of the water infrastructure, if not IW then who? If it were possible to "cut fat" in sufficient amounts to render water charges unnecessary don't you think a party as savy as Fine Gael would have jumped on it? It would have saved them a hell of a lot of votes.
also there's the little matter of the bailout money. this isnt a place for arguing the rights and wrongs of defaulting.. but it would certainly put a stop to all this BS and most likely a lot more of our financial woes.. also maybe someone should point out to the IMF that we recently handed the very bondholders we werent allowed burn, a huge chunk of nama properties at knock down prices. maybe we should stop financing these people and start financing our own people?
Iwasfrozen wrote: » Well I was replying to a poster who suggested instead of water charges we charge every adult a flat rate of 100 euro a year.
RobertKK wrote: » Sorry, I started at the end of this thread and that suggestion is ridiculous, given what I posted earlier.
Iwasfrozen wrote: » The country is deficit, we need to make cuts to balance the budget, if not here then we have to cut something else.
DamagedTrax wrote: » maybe someone should point out to the IMF that we recently handed the very bondholders we werent allowed burn, a huge chunk of nama properties at knock down prices. maybe we should stop financing these people and start financing our own people?