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4 articles
From WS 45 (1995)
Perks Before People, DL Endorse Water Cut-Offs
The formation of the "Rainbow Coalition" in
December led to a number of promises of change in
the double taxation service charges which have been
vigorously opposed by residents' and community
groups throughout the state since their inception.
Legislation was promised to "delimit" the power of
County Councils to disconnect water supply for non-
payment of charges. Within hours of the
government's formation, newly-appointed Minister of
State Pat Rabbitte of Democratic Left was on RTE
television pledging that "there will be no more
disconnections" (or words to that effect).
Rabbitte's statement came at a particularly emotive
time. The previous three weeks had seen a massive
campaign where the power of local residents' groups
and the Federation of Dublin Anti-Water Charge
Campaigns had combined to defeat attempts by South
Dublin County Council to disconnect non-payers'
water supply.
- ************ Empty promise *************
As we go to press however (early April) - over
three months into the government's life - the
government has just announced its proposed
legislation and it is clear that the pledges in the
Programme for Government represented no more than
the usual empty political promises. The
"delimiting" of the Councils' power to disconnect
water simply means that Council officials will have
to get a court order to allow them to do so. For
Democratic Left this involves a total capitulation.
Having made the abolition of service charges one of
their main demands on entering the negotiations to
form a government and having met with stiff
resistance to this from both Labour and Fine Gael,
they opted for the social democrats' usual response
in sticky situations - fudge it, come up with a
formulation of words likely to keep everyone happy
for the time being. Thus the demand for complete
abolition of the charges was quietly shelved,
attention was focussed on disconnections and the
word "delimit" made its appearance. To DL it meant
that disconnections were finished. However to
Labour and Fine Gael (and according to the
dictionary) the meaning was somewhat different
(DELIMIT: to fix or mark the limit of - Chambers's
20th Century Dictionary).
It didn't take long for the County Managers to spot
the loophole. With Councils throughout the State
experiencing a dramatic fall-off in revenue as PAYE
taxpayers took Pat Rabbitte at his word and joined
the non-payment campaign (e.g. Meath County
Council's income from charges fell from ?122,000 in
January 1994 to ?79,000 in January 1995) Council
officials launched an intensive lobby on government
ministers to maintain the right to disconnect.
Far from sweet
As reports emerged that the issue of water charges
and disconnections had led to several rows among
cabinet ministers and crisis meetings between the
leaders of the three government parties, it began
to appear that the fudge was far from sweet. And
when the legislation was finally announced - just
days before DL's Annual Delegate Conference - the
capitulation was complete. A party which had
started out from a position of complete opposition
to service charges had endorsed the right of
Councils to disconnect water supply to non-payers -
provided they got a court order first!
The argument put forward - even by some DL
activists who had been involved in the fight
against service charges is that they are 'only a
small party', that the issue would not even be on
the agenda but for them and - of course - that it
is 'a step in the right direction'. They should
try telling that to the 900 people who had their
supply cut-off last year or to the hundreds now
likely to face court summonses. And while the DL
Conference did pass an amended motion criticising
the government for failing to call service charges
double taxation, they overwhelmingly rejected a
motion condemning the party leadership for not
gaining a government commitment to abolish the
charges.
The lesson for anti-service charge campaigners -
and indeed for all members of the working class -
should be clear. Trust no-one but yourselves, the
only way to victory is through solidarity action
and through a continuation and intensification of
the campaign. Those who claim to use
"parliamentary democracy" to achieve change will
eventually compromise and fudge - usually in the
cause of something called "the national interest".
We're not paying
County Councils in Dublin and elsewhere know that
the vast majority of people are not going to pay
these charges in 1995 just as they refused to pay
them in 1994. They also know that the threat of
disconnections or court action doesn't worry us.
When they tried their intimidatory tactics before,
they were sent packing. Anti-service charge
campaigners should now have but one message for
those who would attempt to fudge the issue - stop
trying to fool us, we know that your mercs and
perks are more important to you than your
principles (if you have any left).
Continue the campaign
The Federation of Dublin Anti-Water Charge
Campaigns has outlined a strategy to render the new
regulations on disconnections unworkable. This
strategy will include
- Every court case must be contested
- No householder will be isolated and there will be
a coordinated approach to all court hearings
- Legal advice and representation will be arranged
- In the event of disconnection being ordered, this
will be resisted by peaceful protest
- Where water is disconnected, reconnection will be
arranged
- Appeals will be made to local authority workers
and their trade unions to continue to refuse to co-
operate with disconnections
- ********************************************************
** Water charge campaigners ready for action **
NEW THREAT OF CUT-OFFS
DO YOU REMEMBER Democratic Left?s election promises? The
party who contested the last election on an anti-service
charges platform have convinced their Fine Gael and Labour
partners to drag non-payers through the courts instead of
immediately cutting off their water. Hooray! Like all
professional politicians, DL see no reason to stand by their
election promises. According to their way of doing things,
voters are merely sheep who can be told anything to get
their votes and then promptly forgotten about.
Before the Act was even passed householders in D?n
Laoghaire/Rathdown and Fingal got letters threatening them
with instant court action if they didn?t pay up without
delay. This scare tactic was intended to frighten people
into paying. It didn?t work. 60% (70,000 households) are
refusing to pay in the three Dublin county areas.
Under the legislation two further letters have to be
sent, with at least two weeks between them. The third one
has to be delivered either by hand or by recorded post.
Only then can the county manager seek a court date. It
looks like September may see the start of court cases, South
Dublin Council having already sent out the first two letters
to non-payers.
The Federation of Dublin Anti-Water Charge Campaigns is
ready for action. Local meetings have been held throughout
the three Dublin council areas, some attracting over 100
people. If enough people stick together we can follow the
hot summer with a hotter autumn. The courts can?t defeat us
if we stay united, and we have already shown that the
Federation can turn disconnections into reconnections within
hours.
Keep up the refusal to pay, get more information,
contact the campaign at 494 7025 (Gregor Kerr) or 820 1753
(Joe Higgins).
NATIONAL CONFERENCE
Anti-Charges campaigners from Cork, Limerick, Dundalk,
Galway, Offaly, Monaghan and the three Dublin council areas
met in May. Over 80 activists shared information and
reaffirmed their intention to resist double taxation,
whether it be called ?service charges?, ?rates?, or
?community development charges?.
One particularly petty response to the campaign was
reported from Limerick where the County Council is now
charging people for waiver application forms. Waivers are
supposed to be for people who cannot afford to pay the
charges! Hopefully householders in the county area will
take a lesson from the those in the Corporation area whose
campaigning led to the abolition of service charges back in
1991. The Corporation had employed contractors to wreck
water pipes leading into the homes of 140 non-payers on a
Friday afternoon, the local campaign had every one of them
reconnected by noon the next day. After that the
politicians admitted defeat and abolished charges in their
area.
OUTRAGEOUS ACCOUNTANTS AND OUTRAGED TAXPAYERS
When the government suggested that accountants be obliged to
report tax evasion by their clients they held a mass meeting
in Dublin?s RDS to protest at this "outrage". If some kid
robs a car radio these are the sort of people who scream for
harsher punishments and more garda? on the streets. When
they are told to report major frauds involving millions of
pounds they are indignant. Finance Minister Ruairi Quinn
agrees with them. Section 153 of the Finance Act allows
them to overlook ?5,000 in tax fraud.
Last year the average PAYE worker paid 34,115 in income
tax. Last year also saw a tax amnesty for rich tax didgers
and big business which wrote off at least ?500 million.
This amount would have funded all the service charges in the
country for the next ten years.
They had hardly started their meeting when a dozen people
from anti-water charge groups took over the stage and hung
up big banner inscribed with "When big business cheats, PAYE
workers pay". The meeting was held up for half an hour
while the accountants were given a lecture about how little
tax the wealthy pay and how much is taken from working
people. They all had to sit and listen as some dopey
accountant had locked the door of the hall to stop more
protesters getting in and then couldn?t open it again!
- ******************************************************
** Have I got news for you **
SUNDAY MAY 13th saw the first national conference of
anti-water charge campaigns from all around the
country. In Dublin a majority of eligible
householders are ignoring the law and refusing to
pay. Similar figures are available elsewhere. Yet
this conference received only one and a half column
inches in the Irish Times, and no mention in any
other paper.
Meanwhile the Finance Minister, Ruairi Quinn, was bringing
in a new law which will require accountants to report any of
their clients who they discover are breaking the law by
trying to cheat on tax. The accountants protested by
holding meetings and issuing press statements. Their side
was covered in all sections of the media: radio, newspapers
and television. Special TV programmes were made about them,
and they even had an accountant on Questions & Answers to
plead their case.
Biased reporting
This is a good example of the way reporting is carried
out. TV, radio and newspapers publish very bland accounts
of what is going on. They may make a big deal, and give us
all a laugh, out of the so-called sexual scandals of the
British Tory party. We also see a lot of articles
criticising working class people such as "dole spongers" or
people claiming "too much" on their insurance. But serious
investigative journalism is usually avoided when it comes to
business or politics. In general, the mass media is pro-
business and pro-state.
It is not a conspiracy
This is not a conspiracy theory. We do not belive
there is a secret force controlling mainstream media
reporting, intent on bending the truth one way or another.
There are very good reasons why the media is as it is.
It costs a fortune own a newspaper or TV company.
Anybody who does so, like Tony O'Reilly, Rupert Murdoch or
Conrad Black, is a millionaire. Media moguls are in the
same league as the rest of the rich. They hang pout in the
same clubs, they buy racehorses from each other and, more
importantly, they have similar economic interests.
They all want a stable economy, friendly to capitalists
like themselves. They support each other in trying to lower
their employees' wages and breaking strikes. They all want
to see lower public spending on services like health, and
more tax breaks for the rich. While it is true that they
complete with each other for audiences and advertising, it
is also true that they have far more in common with each
other than with the rest of us.
Power of advertising
There is a more direct link that connects the ruling
class with media coverage. That is advertising and
shareholding. Most papers and broadcasting stations depend
on advertising to stay afloat. It costs thousands of pounds
to put even a short advert. on TV or in a national
newspaper. That is why most of it comes from
multinationals, banks, insurance firms, etc.
If one newspaper published articles slagging off the
Bank of Ireland, they would soon find the bank refusing to
buy advertising space from them. There are only so many big
advertisers.
If a media outlet was to lose this advertising to a
competitor they would quickly find themselves in trouble.
Profits would fall, and the shareholders would threaten to
pull out. So no media company will be in hurry to publish
controversial news about a company that advertises with
them. Likewise, they are most unlikely to publish anything
controversial about people who own shares in their firm.
The process can be more subtle, harder to pinpoint.
Most media are dependent on advertising to be profitable,
and advertisers target certain groups in their campaigns
(e.g. people with high incomes). The paper or TV station,
then, will also have to target these groups if it is to
attract advertising, which further narrows the range of
opinions they are likely to broadcast.
These factors help to ensure that little of a
controversial nature gets into the mainstream propaganda
networks. It makes simple economic sense. That is why a
massive, if passive, revolt can take place in the suburbs of
Ireland and the media are not interested. And that is why
it takes amateurs putting in voluntary time and energy to
publish alternative news and ideas.
Andrew Blackmore