Category Archives: Operations

Waterways Ireland disposals of property

When I heard that the North–South Ministerial Council had, at its fourteenth Waterways meeting on 12 October 2011, approved certain disposals of property by Waterways Ireland, I assumed that WI was probably flogging off property to fund capital projects. The reality is rather less exciting, and I am grateful to the Department of Arts, Heritage and the Gaeltacht for enlightening me by supplying this list of those properties:

(i) granting of an easement to Kildare County Council for services across the Grand Canal at Clonaghlis, Ardclough, Co. Kildare, as part of the Ardclough Flood Alleviation Scheme

(ii) granting of a 5 year lease to Thomas C Whelan and Brendan Whelan for an area of Shannon waterway measuring approximately 240.70 sq m and jetty (2 berths) at Gings Pub, Cortober, Carrick on Shannon

(iii) granting of an easement for services to Kildare County Council to facilitate a Grand Canal crossing at Boston, Co. Kildare as part of the Castlewarden to Ballygoran Pipeline & Reservoir Scheme

(iv) granting of an easement for services to Kildare County Council, to facilitate a Royal Canal crossing at Confey, Leixlip as part of the North Leixlip Sewerage Scheme

(v) granting of an easement for services to Kildare County Council to facilitate a Royal Canal crossing east of Pike Bridge, Donaghmore, Maynooth, Co. Kildare as part of the Ballygoran to Collinstown Watermain Scheme

(vi) granting of easements to Westmeath County Council to provide two sewerage pipes and two storm overflow discharges across the Shannon at Athlone as part of the Athlone Sewerage Scheme

(vii) granting of a 99 year lease to Córas Iompair Éireann for the proposed construction of a road bridge, crossing the Royal Canal at Ratoath Road, Dublin

(viii) granting of an easement to Dublin City Council for utility ducts installed in the towpath of the Grand Canal at Harcourt Terrace and Leeson Street, Dublin

(ix) granting of a licence to Dublin City Council to upgrade the towpath at Charlemont Place for use as a cycle trackway.

As I noted in my posting about waste collection, WI staff have to deal with a whole lot of issues that are not directly relevant to boating, with the result that whole areas of their work are not apparent to, and thus not appreciated by, outside observers. I am glad to be able to cast light on this small corner of WI activities.

 

Dredging

Here are some photos of dredging and related operations under way in Limerick. There are some pics of small workboats too.

Finding Lough Derg

The Mid-West Regional Authority is seeking tenders for developing a “Signage Audit & Strategy for the Lough Derg Destination Area”.

The strategy is to cover

the Lough Derg Destination Area from Portumna to Ballina/Killaloe including the major settlements within this boundary incorporating both sides of Lough Derg ….

It involves auditing existing signposts within three miles of Lough Derg, consulting “key stakeholders” and developing a new signposting plan for the region. The new signage is to guide visitors to and through the Lough Derg Destination Area, to benefit the “local host community” and to provide a “comprehensive, branded, co-ordinated signage strategy for the Lough Derg Destination Area which will also inform and direct signage in the future”.

 

 

 

Waterways technology

In 2010 Waterways Ireland spent €1,476,125 on “ICT, including staff costs, support and maintenance services, hardware, software, and external resources, including consultancies, contractors and service providers”.

Not a lot of people, apart from Billy Kelleher TD, know that.

And, thanks to Mary Lou McDonald TD, we know that WI had 359.81 whole-time equivalent staff on 30 September 2011.

Lough Derg 1839

Drawings now uploaded. Much more activity in these than in the Lough Ree equivalents, with steamers towing barges, turf boats, the surveyors’ cutter and other excitements.

 

 

Plot 8 has been NAMAed

The development of the Plot 8 site at the Grand Canal Docks, Ringsend, was to be the most valuable of three sites to be sold by Waterways Ireland, with Craggy Island hoping to use the proceeds to fund the Ulster Canal. The DDDA’s interest in Plot 8 has now passed to NAMA.

I provided background information from the Oireachtas Committee of Public Accounts here; the DDDA announcement is here but NAMA, alas, has no information at the moment.

DDDA had withdrawn permission for IWAI Dublin Branch to work on the graving docks at the site.

Lough Ree 1837

Here is a page showing eight of the drawings made by Commander Wolfe RN and Lieutenant Beechey RN while surveying Lough Ree in 1837.

A large green diseasel

According to the Sunday Business Post of 20 November 2011 (paywall),

There is growing momentum behind a proposal to abolish the use of a green dye in subsidised agricultural diesel because of its widespread abuse through diesel ‘washing’ facilities.

The Irish Road Haulage Association wants the Minister for Finance “to leave all diesel white in colour, but allow agricultural users like farmers and contractors to receive a rebate for the diesel they purchase for agricultural use.”

Were this proposal adopted, it would mean that owners of private pleasure craft would be relieved of the obligation to make an annual return of their propulsion fuel purchases to the Revenue Commissioners, a return that must be accompanied by a cheque for the difference between the low price they currently pay for green diesel and the full price for white diesel. As I an quite sure that all owners are making such returns, the IRHA proposal would not increase the cost of boat use and would remove the form-filling.

I am so confident that all owners of private pleasure craft pay in full that I have asked the Revenue Commissioners to tell me how much the owners paid in each of the last two years.

Note, by the way, that the SBP’s account is at odds with that in the Irish Times on 9 November 2011, which said:

THE GOVERNMENT has effectively ruled out a rebate system to farmers and other legitimate users of agricultural or marked diesel to combat fuel laundering.

No doubt much spinning is going on.

 

NI Programme for Government

The Northern Ireland Executive’s Programme for Government (PDF) is available for download here. The accompanying statement to the Northern Ireland Assembly by the First Minister and deputy First Minister (MW Word .docx) is downloadable here and can also be read on the Assembly’s website here.

There is no mention of waterways or canals in either document.

The Ulster Canal

A modest proposal here for funding the canal.