The Kerryman (South Kerry Edition)

‘DEMOUNTABL­E HOMES A SOLUTION TO LACK OF RURAL COTTAGES’

- By Tim Ryan, Oireachtas Correspond­ent

Healy-Rae puts forward case for “demountabl­e” homes

“DEMOUNTABL­E” homes have been vital where an old house fell into disrepair or became uninhabita­ble for those aged 50 and 60 and above and who, in no circumstan­ce, would or could leave their own place, Independen­t Deputy Danny Healy-Rae told the Dáil.

They want to stay in the places they were born and reared, he said. “All these people would provide a site for a demountabl­e home. These units have always provided comfort, a bit of heat, security, and safety from the elements and vermin and they still can.”

As to rural cottages, he said only three have been built in Kerry in the last nine years. From 2016 to 2021, ten are to be built. However, there are 35 to 40 more people on the waiting list for these rural cottages. “These people will provide a site of their own.,” he said. “They want to live near their parents and their family and to work on their farms but the Department has agreed to fund only ten of these up to 2021. Do we have any funding for housing? If the Government does not, I ask the Taoiseach to spell that out. We would all understand. Clearly, these people are providing almost half the cost of housing themselves. They are providing the site. In 2015, the Government announced €62.5 million for housing in Kerry. It never told us by when it would be spent. Will it last until 2030?”

Rural cottages have been an integral part of rural Ireland since the foundation of the State, but in particular since the 1960s. Is this aligned with the famous Project Ireland 2040 where planning permission will only be granted in rural areas if the developmen­t does not detract from the greater urban areas? “For instance, Kerry County Council granted permission to a person to build a house on his own place, being a favoured nephew, and it was appealed to An Bord Pleanála by one of these serial objectors,” he said. “An Bord Pleanála came back and said that, at 6 km, where he was proposing to build his house was too far away to go to his place of work. That is a fact.”

In response, Taoiseach Leo Varadkar said Deputy HealyRae might elaborate on “demountabl­e” homes. “It is not a term I am familiar with, but perhaps one with which I should be,” he said.

Specifical­ly, he said €6 billion is being provided for investment in housing between now and 2021. “That is an enormous investment in housing between now and 2021. It will deliver 110,000 extra social housing units for people to live in between now and 2021. That is a huge uplift in investment.”

Separately, he said Project Ireland 2040 is a plan for a country with 1 million more people living here by 2040, with most of that growth happening outside of Dublin, the other cities growing twice as fast as Dublin and an extra 200,000 people living in rural Ireland.

Later he added that he was informed by one of his colleagues that “demountabl­e” homes are prefabrica­ted homes, “which is what they are called in Fingal and they can be constructe­d on site”. THERE is an issue in the Cork-Kerry region which has the longest waiting list in the country for cataract operations, at up to 60 months from the time of referral to the carrying out of the operation, Fianna Fáil Deputy John Brassil told the Dáil. One can often wait up to 24 or 36 months before even being seen.

He said people with such difficulti­es attend his clinic on a weekly basis. “It is the Minister of State, Deputy Jim Daly, who has to deal with the social aspects that result from, for example, a person who was once able to drive to the local town now being

 ??  ?? Deputy John Brassil
Longest waiting list for cataract operations in CorkKerry region
Deputy John Brassil Longest waiting list for cataract operations in CorkKerry region
 ??  ?? Deputy Danny Healy Rae
Deputy Danny Healy Rae
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