I am an Independent member of Waterford City & County Council. Deputy Mayor Waterford City Metropolitan District.
Monday, October 4, 2021
Submission to NDP Review to Renew
ISSUE (i) REGIONAL INVESTMENT (SPECIFICALLY IN RELATION TO THE SOUTH EAST)
UNIVERSITY/TECHNOLOGICAL UNIVERSITY There is a gap between the rhetoric of the
National Development Plan and the governments actual capital expenditure. The
National Planning Framework commits to supporting double the growth rate in
regional cities relative to Dublin. However the projects funded in Dublin
represent over 60% of the committed funding with all other regions receiving
less than a fair share based on their populations especially the South East
region. This starkly demonstrates the growing regional inequity in Ireland and
in a practical way why the South East economy is unlikely to close the gap with
the rest of the country until alternative, more equitable measures actually
reflecting the stated aims of the government are adopted. Until the reality
reflects the rhetoric, in short. This review is an opportunity for just such
rebalancing if it is grasped. Notwithstanding the performance of indigenous
companies in the South East and success in attracting and sustaining FDI in
these industries, the SE economy has only partially participated in the
knowledge-led transformation of the Irish economy, with around 60% per capita
GDP, 56% of per capita IDA supported jobs, 45% per capita income tax returns,
persistently higher unemployment, and lower labour market participation. Though
the potential exists for much higher performance, and despite concentrated
effort on the part of regional enterprise, the region’s economy has
significantly under-performed compared to the state since 1980, tumbling from
being the 2nd richest NUTS3 region to now being the 3rd poorest region in
Ireland. - Ireland 2040 and the Southern Regional RSES signal a way forward for
the region that involves rebalancing national priorities in a way that enables
the South East to realise its potential. The national and regional plans both
strongly endorse the transformation of the South East region through the further
transformation of Waterford city, intensifying investment in innovation,
technology, and learning to drive sustainable regional growth. - Adding higher
education capacity to the region is a core tool in strengthening the regional
economy. Right-sizing higher-education capacity would contribute €1bn to the
regional economy, as it does in other regions. Having appropriate higher
education capacity creates a pool of graduate talent, is a magnet for FDI and
investors, generates the knowledge intensity that produces ideas, information
and practices for entrepreneurship, all of which produces wealth and resilience.
This in turn supports high quality social infrastructure—health care, education,
services, vibrant communities and cultural life. In practice, to complete this
transformation means scaling up current higher education provision to create a
university of substance and critical mass in the region and involves doubling
the number of degree-level undergraduate places through new courses, new
buildings and quality initiatives, coupled with transformative growth of
postgraduate and research activity. - The foundation for this university of
substance exists in Waterford Institute of Technology. Where the new
knowledge-led economy has emerged in the region, it has done so in association
with Waterford Institute of Technology. WIT, working with a hinterland that
acutely feels the need for university-type services has developed into degree,
postgraduate and research and is the leading provider to leaving certificate
students with 32% market share. Carlow, for comparison is the fourth largest
provider in the region with an 8% share. WIT’s research and innovation
performance is unmatched by any other Institute, making a €1bn impact over the
past 20 years, ranking 2nd amongst all Irish HEIs in attracting competitive
European funding in ICT, hosting the only technology gateway in the sector with
leading research capacity in advanced manufacturing and biopharma. Advancing
higher education in the region needs to build on existing clear strengths and
high performance and to focus on the regional city. A properly funded TU (which
is not what’s on offer) is a unique opportunity for the NDP to deliver a step
change, once in a century opportunity to actually give the South East the tools
to tackle all those parameters and become nett contributors to Ireland Inc. -
the last new teaching building delivered in WIT was designed in 1998 and finally
delivered in 2005. Since 2008 some €996m was provided in capital funding to
higher education in other regions. The SE’s higher education platform needs to
be put on an equivalent funding platform to other regions, to encompass capital
programmes, borrowing capability and supports, state grant, research income and
access to other voted expenditure programmes. Current total institutional income
of the SE institutions of €125m, is €97m below a pro-rata share. The region is
closed out of the borrowing framework facilitated between the European
Investment Bank (EIB) and the Universities (and also TUD through the
Grangegorman Development Agency Act 2005) and is limited in its ability to
compete for SFI funds. Progressively over the next five years (2021-2026), the
Government needs to commit to bring the SE institutions into line with the
funding that flows into comparable regions. Much of the region’s difficulties
emerge from the political challenge of developing urban services, with other
cities contesting to deliver these to the region, and the significant towns and
historical city in the region contesting within the region — this is evident in
health, retail, the boundary extension debate and in cultural projects. I see no
other way of delivering the economic and social transformation than building on
the raw material of WIT. The entire TU process emerged in response to WIT’s
university application in 2005, which itself was a manifestation of the pressure
to add higher education capacity in the SE. A decade after the TU was offered as
the pathway forward for the region there is no plan or ambition to add capacity
in the region. The Department of Further and Higher Education, Research,
Innovation and Science stoodaside and watched this unproductive decade-long mess
emerge, whilst equally supporting significant strategic advances elsewhere - in
Grangegorman, RCSI, in the universities, in Limerick IoT and elsewhere; it does
look as if the Department (and by extension, the Government) are erring on the
side of suppressing the emergence of a university of substance in the region at
the expense of our region’s economy. At this moment it is as likely that the TU
as currently constituted might in fact halt the region’s economic
transformation, taking from the impact of the region’s IoTs as these
institutions wrestle themselves together. We need a Waterford-led University/TU
that addresses the acute need for a university of substance in the region. ISSUE
(ii) REGIONAL INVESTMENT (SPECIFICALLY IN RELATION TO THE SOUTH EAST) POPULATION
OF WATERFORD CITY FOR THE PURPOSES OF INVESTMENT Based on analysis the Waterford
Metropolitan Area currently has a functional population of approximately
104,000. In fact a more expansionary and ambitious metropolitan area based on
high-quality corridor access to Waterford CBD from Kilkenny, Wexford and Clonmel
would indicate a metropolitan area population of approximately 225,000 within a
45-minute isochrone. A comparative study of all five MASP boundaries in Ireland
demonstrates there is no consistency in their development. Dublin, Cork,
Limerick and Waterford appear to be based on CSO electoral district boundaries:
Galway appears to be based more on CSO small areas analysis. Both Cork and
Dublin have metro zones created during previous studies involving the Department
of Housing, Planning and Local Government. Given that the statutory Boundary
Review Committee decision on Waterford City was set aside by political
intervention, it is important a technical, evidence-based approach be taken that
reports the actual scale of Waterford City to ensure regional service delivery.
Supressing the population of Waterford Metropolitan Area is used to further
diminish service provision in the region in acute healthcare, retail, higher
education, MNC marketing and support activity, entrepreneurship support and
cultural/tourist investment - particularly across the Ireland 2040 investments.
Estimates indicate a spend of €800m in Limerick MASP, €1.1bn in Cork and around
only €110m in Waterford. There is no clear articulation of the existence of
these regional imbalances, or a consideration of if, and how, these regional
imbalances might be addressed. The artificial suppression of the Waterford City
population relative to other Irish cities leads to consequent knock-on under
investment in Waterford as the ‘smallest city’. A label which I vehemently
contest. The current population of Waterford City does not represent the truth.
Limerick’s Metropolitan Area includes the Clare town of Shannon (10k people |
23.5km). Cork’s Metropolitan Area includes Carrigaline (15k people | 15.7km),
Ballincollig (18k people | 8.9km) and Middleton (12k people | 23.5k ).
Waterford’s Metropolitan Area excludes Tramore (10k people | 12.6km), New Ross
(9k people | 23km), Carrick on Suir (6k people | 27km), and smaller settlements
of Mooncoin, Mulinavat, Kilmathomas, Dunmore East and Passage East that are
suburban to Waterford. We estimate that approximately 45,000 people living in
the Waterford hinterland are artificially excluded by only using 20-30% of the
land area of the other metropolitan areas. At the very least Waterford can claim
a population of that 104,000 making it Irelands 3rd city highlighting an even
further gap in the investment the city has and continues to receive. ISSUE (iii)
REGIONAL INVESTMENT (SPECIFICALLY IN RELATION TO THE SOUTH EAST) REGIONAL ROADS
N24 / RAIL / PORTS / AIRPORT The exclusion of the N24 solution as proposed by
the South East County Councils should be reconsidered. The decision to exclude
Waterford/Wexford from the regional motorway ring (N24 solution) is crippling to
regional cohesion and equality. It will create a Galway-Limerick-Cork
Atlantic-corridor that strategically excludes the South East. This is the single
biggest investment in regional infrastructure that should be included. Rail
Given the commitments to compact urban development and addressing climate goals,
there needs to be more strategic thinking around the region’s rail
infrastructure. In particular, rail freight is essential to delivering on our
climate goals. With carbon pricing likely to emerge within the life of the plan
a full-throated articulation of how rail fits into the region’s transport plans
is desirable. Ports The ports in the SE represent a significant infrastructural
anchor of the region’s economy and an ambitious NDP would surely contain the
aspiration to develop the ports from Core Ten-T ports to the more strategic
Comprehensive designation (which is the status held by Limerick-Foynes, Cork and
Dublin ports). We can observe significant investments being orchestrated and
enabled in Dublin and Cork suggesting that over time the South Eastregion’s
ports will decline in relative scale and importance. Those investments are
stimulating demand for further linked infrastructure investments (such as the
N28, and Dublin outer ring-road). Policies and strategies to support the usage
and development of the South East Ports are critical in terms of carbon/climate,
regionalisation, smart multi modal logistics, access to markets and development
of the regional economy. The NDP is simply not ambitious or specific enough in
offering a vision for the region’s ports, which is surprising given the
significant capacity of the ports, the significant capacity in linked
infrastructure and the relative congestion (and consequently higher pricing) of
other ports. Airport The NDP should take a positive, expansionary position on
the development of Waterford-South East regional airport, which is currently
preparing for a runway expansion, as critical regional infrastructure. The
additional cost is insignificant in comparison to the Dublin Airport runway
project and could permit Waterford Airport to be a counterbalance to the
unconstrained growth of Dublin Airport. Sent from Cllr Mary Roche’s iPad Mobile
087 2273206 Twitter @maryroche
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