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Oireachtas.ie
i'm all arr-ears

Council tenants could have water charges taken from their rent by local authorities

One TD says it means councils will be “doing the dirty work” of Irish Water.

THOUSANDS OF COUNCIL tenants throughout Ireland could have unpaid water charges taken from their rent, according to a departmental document raised in the Dáil today.

According to a summary of the new plans announced yesterday by Environment Minister Alan Kelly, local authorities will be “required by law” to take water charges arrears from council tenants and “remit them to Irish Water.”

The provision was highlighted in the Dáil this afternoon by People Before Profit TD Richard Boyd-Barrett, who said it amounted to local councils “doing the dirty work” of Irish Water.

Here’s the relevant section of the November 13th departmental document, “Water Reforms – Key Elements”:

In the particular case of local authority tenants, where deposit arrangements do not apply, where a customer is in arrears for more than 12 months, and a late payment fee has accrued, Irish Water – having first provided the customer with the opportunity to pay the arrears, or enter into a payment plan – will advise the local authority concerned of the amount of arrears, and the local authority will be required by law, to recover the amount outstanding over a 12-month period.

rbb3 Richard Boyd-Barrett speaking in the Dáil today Oireachtas.ie Oireachtas.ie

A spokesperson for the Department of the Environment told TheJournal.ie that “the details in relation to local authority tenants have yet to be finalised, and will be provided in the forthcoming legislation.”

Boyd-Barrett, however, was clear in his interpretation of the departmental document:

So the councils are going to be doing the dirty work of Irish Water, and taking Irish Water’s arrears out of council tenants’ rent.
And this is against a background where huge numbers of council tenants at the moment cannot even pay their rent, or are in arrears and struggling, because of the impact of unemployment and recession…

rbb2 Oireachtas.ie Oireachtas.ie

The Department of the Environment this afternoon denied that the provision in question was a “directive to local authorities,” but the Dún Laoghaire TD said this was “semantics”.

“This is what is on the Environment website and South Dublin County Council had it,” he told TheJournal.ie.

So what do you call that? If that’s where South Dublin County Council is taking its guidance from in terms of this, is that not a directive?
That’s what they’re being told to do.

Minister Kelly’s speech yesterday also contained a provision for private landlords to “deduct unpaid water charges from their tenant’s deposits, if necessary.”

Read: Irish Water is asking councils for information on their tenants>

Irish Water will take on €130 million debt in uncollected water charges>

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