SUBMISSION TO IRELAND 2040 – OUR PLAN.
BY COUNCILLOR MARY ROCHE
WATERFORD CITY & COUNTY COUNCIL, MARCH 2017
During the next 20 years Ireland needs to plan for and invest
in serious growth. The failure of the National Spatial Strategy was not in its
aspiration but rather in its implementation. Investment did not follow policy
and government departments (and indeed politicians) continued to act in a
piecemeal fashion with no joined up thinking as if the plan didn’t exist at
all. This new plan needs statutory backing in order to ensure that policies
coming out of all departments are in line with it. If the opportunity to put in
place the correct strategies is lost now Ireland may never achieve its full
potential. Equally if the plan once in place can be ignored on the basis of
Ministerial geography then we may as well not invest in the effort of even
providing a National Planning Framework. Ireland needs to grow up and act in a
strategic way, in the national interest in order to extract best value for
money on every cent that we invest and to provide the best opportunities for
our citizens and for future generations.
Primarily, though not exclusively this submission focuses on
Waterford City and the South East Region. In June 2016 Drs Ray Griffin and
Cormac O’Keeffe from the School of Business in Waterford Institute of
Technology produced a South East Economic Monitor. You can access it here South East Economic Monitor
and I include it as a part of this submission. This demonstrated clearly the
inequity of investment in the South East Region in comparison with other
regions. I would like nothing more than, at the end of this new National
Planning Framework phase, to be able to read in a future Economic Monitor that
the South East had received its fair share of the national pie. If this is to
have happened in 20 years, the South East will have transformed from
underperforming to becoming a net contributor to Ireland Inc., delivering in
terms of jobs, lifestyle and opportunity for the South East region. We will top
lists that we are currently bottom of and we will be acting, along with other cities
and regions as a functioning counter-balance to Dublin.
Waterford and the South East is the closest region to the
Dublin area and it is located in a naturally rich and fertile area of Ireland.
It is also the closest geographically to the UK and Europe. We are the only
Irish City which can claim to be fully flood proofed. With a fair share of
investment and focus Waterford can and will deliver spectacularly for the
future of Ireland.
I believe that the South East Region needs to be recognised
as an identifiable structure. As should all regions. A unified, recognised,
regional structure should then be embedded into every Government Department.
When every department - as they do now - uses a different geographical
structure it becomes impossible to compare or even hold to account their
delivery or lack of it, in comparison to other regions.
For example Waterford & Wexford are now tied together in
the ETB set-up; the HSE has Waterford located with Cork and Kerry; Garda
regions are structured differently and the IDA have their own geographical
areas. It makes consistency of investment, measurement and indeed target
setting - which should be on-going requirements of the new NPF - almost
impossible. Perhaps the regions used by the Central Statistics Office is the
structure that all departments should adopt.
Waterford City has suffered from a lack of joined up thinking
and needs a number of higher order investments to allow it to achieve its full
potential as a regional (and even national) economic driver. I am sure that
Waterford City and County Councils submission will give the detail of specific
priorities and more information in terms of numbers and justifications. From my perspective I have always argued
that, given the tools, Waterford can and will deliver. Unfortunately, without
an arsenal of investment and support (commensurate with other regional cities,
no more and no less) it will continue to be unable to fully deliver on the
potential of this region for Ireland. The city needs to be facilitated to take
a quantum leap to double in size with the consequent infrastructural, social
and environmental investment that this requires.
I am not blind to the fact that prioritising Waterford City
in the South East region presents political challenges. The South East region,
unlike any other region, is home to substantial population centres that have
seen themselves as alternatives to Waterford City (although the largest of
these is less than half its’ size). The National Spatial Strategy bottled it
when it came to this very issue. Perhaps another reason we have not seen the
development of the South East region that we should? We need to make brave
decisions in order to reap the rewards and I would entreat the drafters not to
repeat this fudge. The entire region needs focus and is submitting a regional
document as far as I am aware but if Waterford City is not prioritised we
condemn the entire South East to further decades of unjustifiable stagnation
where we see each other as the competition as opposed to other regions, Dublin
and indeed, other countries. We have seen (indeed we live) the results of
failing to do so.
As it has already been through a statutory process I will
briefly mention the Boundary Extension. I assume I do not need to rehash the
arguments other than to say that its implementation or otherwise will
demonstrate the seriousness of the Minister and the Department in tackling the
spatial and strategic anomalies that will present. The case was made, and
against the tide, the case was won. I and others will watch carefully to see
what happens on this front. Needless to say I am of the opinion that it should
be implemented as recommended by the Independent Commission.
Infrastructurally the PLUTZ along with the recommended 3rd
River Crossing needs to be progressed as does the €50m investment required to
support the planned €300m development of the North Quays SDZ. This is a gift to
the NPF and single-handedly could facilitate the significant growth of
Waterford city as well as deliver on aspirations in relation to concentric and
balanced growth on the north side of the river along with the potential to
deliver 3,000 permanent jobs and 1-2 million tourists annually.
University development is critical to redressing the
educational apartheid that the whole South East region has suffered for
decades. WIT is crucial to growth across many headings. I (unlike most other
submissions I am sure) am not on board with the Technological University status
being mooted. It has already cost the region 5 years at least in delays and is
an unnecessary and internationally valueless construct in my opinion. But be
that as it may, whatever it is called Waterford and the South East needs
EQUALITY of third level provision in terms of autonomy and funding across the
Teaching & Learning and Research & Development spectrums. A question
which needs to be asked is simply, will TU designation mean equality of third
level provision for Waterford with other cities? As currently proposed, it will
not. I would urge government to get on with the business of University
provision. Although, on a negative note, the specific actions of the Department
of Education and the HEA in continually undermining the reputation of WIT and
starving it of investment and funding in recent years does not give one hope
and is a prime example of where strategic national priorities will be required
to stand up to departmental bias.
The same goes for Health funding (see attached Economic
Monitor). It is difficult to juxtaposition the aspirations of Ireland 2040 with
the actions of the HSE in continually underfunding and indeed divesting the
South East of services. UHW needs to be equal in funding and services with
acute hospitals in the other regional cities of Cork, Limerick and Galway. The
restructuring of the South East Hospital grouping and its hiving off to other
groups in Cork, Limerick and Dublin has not bedded down and has not delivered
improvements in leadership or patient care. It should be reversed. It has led
to fracturing and indeed an arguable dis-improvement in services and in public
confidence for people in the South East region.
An exercise in workforce planning and an examination of inequitable
resource allocation would be no harm in the HSE and I cite the untenable fiasco
of 24/7 cardiac care provision – more precisely the lack of it - and the lack
of core funding for the hospice services in the South East region (unique, even
in Ireland) as examples that should not be tolerated by central government if
the regions are to fairly compete, but pertain nonetheless.
The physical linkage between regional cities needs to be
improved. The N25 Waterford to Cork route and the N24 Waterford to Limerick route (which was the number one
priority of the disbanded South East Regional Assembly) need to be progressed.
The midlands should also be opened up to the South East north of Kilkenny or
Carlow with further road improvement from there on to the North West. Needless
to say Inter City train services where they are provided should be protected
and improved. In particular the train service from Waterford to Dublin needs
serious improvement. It is hard to justify a 2 hour 20 minute train journey
when the motorway access means a travel time of just 1 hour 50 minutes. Here I
also think it is worth mentioning that the Toll on the Waterford City by-pass
is counterproductive and it should be removed, ideally through a buy-out or
failing that, it should be relocated away from the by-pass.
The development of Waterford Regional Airport with a longer
runway would undoubtedly unlock the potential of the entire South East region
not just with access outwards but indeed with the development of inward tourist
routes. Without a runway extension the Airport as it has in recent years
suffers from being an afterthought and the first casualty for regional
provision. This in turn leads to a self-fulfilling downward spiral as people
abandon flying from Waterford due to constant service breaks.
While I would have welcomed the inclusion of the Port of
Waterford as part of the Boundary Extension report I accept that this will not
happen. Nonetheless the Port has major natural advantages that should be
exploited to deliver for the region and the country. I am sure the Port will be
making their own submission.
A cruise terminal at the new North Quays (for smaller
vessels) should also be provided especially with the emphasis in the new North
Quays on a substantial tourism offering of International standard. The delivery
of a terminal for larger cruise vessels should be considered at Great Island.
Other effective projects such as aggressive investment in
disadvantaged communities, greening of our cities, continued investment in
cycling and cycle ways and a substantial rural regeneration programme in
association with identified community needs should go hand in hand with the
focus on enabling cities to be economic drivers for their regions. Ireland is a
small country with incredible potential for all our people. Ireland 2040
represents a real opportunity to deliver a more equitable distribution of our
resources and a better future for all citizens.
Apropos of nothing, I would also respectfully suggest that
consideration should be given to include the development of our inland
waterways. This would help Ireland capitalise on the growth of activity tourism and the opening up of
greenways and blue ways. It should be possible, for example, to leave Dublin by
barge or boat and travel the Grand Canal, down the Barrow, up the Suir and
along the St.John's/George Lane-Fox canal to the seaside resort of Tramore in County
Waterford. The St. John’s/George Lane-Fox canal was never finished and perhaps
now is the time to consider completing it. Tramore could be connected with the
west, midlands, east and the North of Ireland through our inland waterways. The
entire country – especially the almost invisible midlands – should be opened up
to this growth area in tourism.
Finally, what Waterford seeks, in a nutshell, is merely fair
play. An equitable share of the cake, commensurate with the investments already
made in our sister regional cities. We desire deeply to fulfil our role as a
regional driver, delivering for all of the South East. We have achieved much
although that always seems to be despite, rather than because of central
government. All we are asking for is the tools.
SUMMARY
• A unified
regional structure to be embedded in all Government Departments
• South East
region to be a recognised unit
• Prioritise
development & investment in Waterford City as South East regional driver
• Waterford
City Boundary extension to be implemented
• Progress and
invest in PLUTZ and North Quays SDZ development
• Deliver
University to South East region at Waterford Institute of Technology and
partners
• Re-organise
HSE regional structures and deliver equity of funding and services
• Improve N25
and N24 Inter Regional City routes
• Open routes
to midlands and North West
• Improve rail
services
• Eliminate or
relocate Toll away from Waterford City Bypass
• Lengthen
runway at Waterford Regional Airport
• Invest in
Port of Waterford
• Provide
berthing facilities for Cruise ships
• Aggressive
investment in disadvantaged communities
• Greening of
urban areas
• Invest in
urban Cycling
• Invest in
rural regeneration in conjunction with community needs
• Develop our
Inland Waterways
• Target
setting and measurement should be embedded in Ireland 2040 plan
• Plan needs to
have Statutory authority
• Ensure
consistency of investment across regions
Perhaps Ireland 2040 will be the means of releasing Waterford
and the South East region from decades of underinvestment and consequent
underperformance and will empower us to realise the untapped potential of our
City and the Region in the service of our Country.
Waterford is ready, willing and able to respond.
Kind regards,
Councillor Mary Roche
Waterford City & County Council
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