Successful Anti-Water Charges Forum

Over 100 people packed into the Teachers’ Club in Dublin, last Saturday, to attend an anti-water charges forum convened by Joe Higgins, Socialist Party MEP for Dublin.

Over 100 people packed into the Teachers’ Club in Dublin, last Saturday, to attend an anti-water charges forum convened by Joe Higgins, Socialist Party MEP for Dublin.

The forum was organised in response to the recent announcement by the government that water charges are to be re-introduced, most likely linked to the installation of water meters in every house in the country, and to discuss the establishment of an anti-water charges campaign.

People travelled to the meeting from all over the country, including from Tipperary, Galway, Cork, Kilkenny, Limerick and from many parts of Dublin. A number of elected public representatives from different parties and organisations were also in attendance.

The forum was addressed by Michael Taft, Chief Research Officer of the trade union, Unite, who outlined the criminal wealth disparity in Irish society where the top 5% of society have 40% of all wealth and the top 1% have 33% of all the financial wealth in this country and yet it is workers who are being hit with cuts in pay and will now be asked to pay water charges. He also showed how current stealth taxes, like bin charges, are a bigger burden on ordinary workers than they are on the wealthy.

Maurice Sweeney, an environmental engineer also addressed the forum and outlined, in great detail, the shambolic state of the water infrastructure around the country, which sees that, on average, 35% of our water is lost through pipe leakages, with over 50% lost in some areas. He argued that there is no evidence to suggest that installing meters will lead to a reduction in consumption, citing the example of England and Scotland, where water usage per household is slightly more than in Ireland, despite the fact that there are meters and charges in these countries already. Meters, he said, were simply a tool to commodify water in order to charge for it.

Swords Socialist Party Councillor Clare Daly outlined the basis on which a new campaign should be built. She stated that it will be a tough battle, that the government has demonstrated in the onslaught against workers in recent months, that it is determined to make ordinary people pay for the economic crisis and that the introduction of water charges is another step in that campaign.

There was agreement that all groups and individuals would come together in one campaign. The main platform of the campaign will be:

  • Build a mass campaign of non payment
  • Mass resistance to meter installation
  • Opposition to the privatisation of water provision

 

A large number of those in attendance volunteered to be part of an initial organising committee to discuss, in more detail, the mechanics of establishing a campaign. The first meeting of this committee will be in the coming weeks.

Activists left this very successful event with a determination to begin to build a strong mass campaign throughout the country.

 

Total
0
Shares
Previous Article

The health crisis hasn’t gone away

Next Article

Reinstate sacked Green Isle workers

Related Posts
Read More

Open forum: Fighting the water tax & austerity

First they asked us to pay for the crisis, now they are asking us to pay for the “recovery”! Hardly a day goes by without some new announcement in the media about economic recovery. But rather than seizing the so-called recovery to ease the burden, the government are actually stepping up their austerity agenda. A sharp edge of this continuing policy is the drive to impose water charges.
Read More

Warning – Water charges coming back!

By Councillor Mick Barry

GREEN PARTY Minister for the Environment John Gormley spoke in April of the inevitability of the return of domestic water charges. With the Commission on Taxation due to report to the government in July on methods of increasing tax revenue and with another Budget due in December, this represents a real threat to workers and their families. Minister Mary Hanafin told the Irish Times last December, “If we had domestic water charges in Ireland, families would be paying €700 or €800 per annum.”