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Council ‘dumps’ public

This article is from page 3 of the 2005-10-18 edition of The Clare People. OCR mistakes are to be expected so download the original SWF or the rendered page 3 JPG

CLARE County Council was last night ac- cused of failing the Clare public in not tack- ling illegal dumping in County Clare. The charge was made by Clarecastle council- lor Joe Carey (FG), as it emerged that the number of detected dumps cleaned up by Clare County Council was already 60 per cent more this year than for the entire of Aue

Figures supplied by the council’s Head of the Environment, Ger Dollard, showed that 51 tonnes of waste from illegal dumps had been cleared to date this year, compared to 32 tonnes for the whole of 2004. Mr Dol- lard said that, so far this year, approximately 40 illegal dumps had been removed by the elton ep

Cllr Joe Carey said, “Illegal dumping is a

huge problem in Clare and is not being prop- erly tackled by the council. There is a need to dramatically increase the budget for waste enforcement.”

Over the past three years, the council has spent €1.13 million on waste enforce- ment, with the grant from the Department of the Environment being €403,000 this year alone. Cllr Carey told the meeting that there was a clear obligation on the council to remove illegal dumps, demanding that a report be brought before the council on the improvements made.

Cllr Madeleine Taylor-Quinn (FG) said that the large increase was a sign of in- creased vigilance by the council, but also a disastrous sign that illegal dumping was on the increase. Cllr Martin Conway (FG) urged the council to employ additional Envi- ronmental Patrol Wardens.

In response, the Director of Services Ger Dollard said, “The amount of resources de- voted to investigation and follow-up of illegal dumping is significant. One aspect of illegal dumping 1s fly tipping, which is visible from public areas and generates the majority of public complaints. However, a large resource is also devoted to sites not visible from public spaces by means of aerial surveys, checking of movements of waste collectors and so on. I am satisfied that the current complement of three wardens is adequate to meet current needs and requirements. The council would see benefit in the deployment of the EPWs directly to area offices and will consider such an approach, along with other issues which are currently being addressed.”

However, Cllr Conway said that Mr Dol- lard’s claim that three EPWs was enough to cover the county was “fanciful”.

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