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Nick Rabbitts, 27 Sep
MAYOR John Moran says, as an openly gay man, he âcouldnât imagine a
scenario where he would have won an election in Limerickâ a decade ago.
Sitting in his top-floor council office, overlooking the River Shannon,
with his faithful dog Henri by his side, the mayor says his sexuality
was a ânon-issueâ on the doorsteps when he campaigned successfully to
be Limerickâs first directly elected first citizen this year.
Although he has never hidden his orientation - he is in a long-term
relationship with partner Damien Duggan - his Red Setter was more of a
talking point among Limerickâs electorate.
âThe new mayor of Belfast (Micky Murray) has been described as the
first openly gay mayor of Belfast. What I love is nobody has said this
in Limerick. Now, itâs like, âhe is the mayor with the dogâ. Thatâs
more of a conversation piece than Damien being my partner. That, to me,
is a huge vote of confidence in Limerick for the future, that
effectively it was a non-issue,â he says.
Mayor Moran admits that before he started campaigning for the role, the
thought did cross his mind that it might ârear its headâ.
âI donât think I could have done this 10 years ago. If this election
was 10 years ago, I probably would not have gone for the election. I
couldnât have imagined a scenario in which I would have won the
election in Limerick.â
He says he âabsolutelyâ feels like an ambassador, and adds: âHopefully
other people who have similar issues they want to not yet talk about in
public, at least know they do not need to feel afraid from a work or
personal perspective of it coming out.â
In the first part of an in-depth interview with Limerick Live last
week, Mayor Moran spoke of his early departure from the Department of
Finance, after just two years, outlining how he felt people were
âpryingâ into his private life.
Before that disclosure, there was some speculation that he would not
finish out his five-year term as directly elected mayor.
He shoots this suggestion down, pointing to his ambitious plan of over
100 pages which was unveiled last month.
READ MORE: Exhumation underway of Clare man killed in Bunratty more
than forty years ago
âI think itâs pretty obvious I am here to stay. This job is not going
to get done overnight. Itâs the first time in local government youâve
got five years. This is a pathway, I think, to a fairer and more
successful Limerick, and thatâs the place I want to live in.â
While his plan covers rural Limerick, Mayor Moran has placed a special
focus on the city centre, in particular housing and getting the local
economy moving.
He is envisaging Limerick and OâConnell Street, as a âplace which never
sleepsâ.
Arguably, it helps that he has a vested interest with his ownership of
properties in the cityâs heart - one of which he plans to live in soon.
âI have lived right in the heart of Georgian Limerick and I want to
live there again. I spend a lot of time in the city. I think if you
know you have five years, it is much easier. You canât fix everything
in one go, but you can start to come up with where you are going to go,
and how do you get there each year as the budget is available.â
One of the things he is proposing is a so-called Vienna Model of
housing, based on an approach taken in the Austrian capital.
Itâs not something which is in peopleâs everyday lexicon, Mayor Moran
acknowledges.
âItâs radical for Ireland. I donât think some people understand just
how radical an intervention I was proposing in the housing plan. The
first thing we need to see is a more significant government
intervention in public housing than we have seen,â he says.
âThe Department of Housingâs plan has been to buy existing homes, use
them for social housing, rather than send the cranes in and build them.
Essentially, the government is paying somebody elseâs mortgage. If you
take the view I would have that 25% of all the housing in Limerick
should be owned by government, that allows you to tame the market in
how you see them react to charging rent to people,â he continues.
âThe Vienna Model works on the principle that if you start now, instead
of renting homes from others, you build your own homes. You then use
the rent people are paying, plus the money the State would have paid
(to private landlords) to effectively pay down the mortgages on those
homes.â
The first citizen believes that, in 30 years time, the final parts of
these mortgages will be paid off.
âFrom that moment on, the rent on that property, be it an apartment or
house, will now be able to help them subsidise the rents for other
people,â he explains.
Mayor Moran does not have a role in crime prevention - but itâs
something he would like to see taken into his purview.
Something which is a major bugbear for people living in the city
centre, and retailers running businesses in the urban area has been an
increase in crime and drug abuse.
âThere is an acknowledgement the gardai are underresourced. What they
are doing is trying to use their resources as efficiently as they can.
We have been in conversations with them about whether we can introduce
during the day the community wardens idea. The guards are on the
streets a lot more. We see more squad cars going around. Itâs an
important part of the solution. But they need resources as well. They
put the van in OâConnell Street a couple of days and behaviour changed.
But they donât have that van full time. They only borrow it a couple of
times a year.
âWe need to try and get that van full-time,â Mayor Moran insists.
He says it goes back to his call - made in the first part of our
interview last week - to give the executive mayor his own envelope of
money which he can direct to where he sees fit.
In the past, people have complained the city can become something of a
âdead zoneâ from when offices close into the evening.
There is one element in Mayor Moranâs plan which he feels could be a
âgamechangerâ for the urban area - a cinema.
He has identified the former Theatre Royal building in Cecil Street.
âItâs an amazing building, but itâs in a really poor condition. It goes
back to what we said about having the funds. How does that currently
work? You have to wait until government decides they will have a
competitive call-out across the country for people who want to do
cinemas. Theyâll do it for the next three years, and itâs hard to find
funding. Thatâs why it all comes down to the concept Iâm trying to get
across in the budget. If we bring it down to Limerick, what itâll mean
is we have a debate here about whether in 2025, the most important
thing to do is have a cinema in Limerick, get a van for the guards. Or
do we plan homes. Then at least it is our decision,â he says.
One thing people can do now though, is patronise the Belltable Theatre
in OâConnell Street, which shows independent films every Monday
evening.
âItâs easier to justify a cinema in the city centre if the Belltable is
full every Monday, and they are trying to figure out do they do Tuesday
and Wednesday.â
While Mayor Moran acknowledges it can be frustrating to keep contacting
the gardai about crime in the city, it is necessary.
âIf we are to get more resources to deal with crime - the more you
should report. Even if youâre walking home at night and feeling
threatened. If that doesnât get reported to the gardai, they donât have
it in the crime stats so Limerick looks like it doesnât have these
issues,â he explains.
Away from the urban area, comments the mayor made in relation to rural
Ireland back in 2016 were brought up during the election campaign.
At the time, he warned the State can no longer afford to subsidise the
personal choices people make when they elect to live in the
countryside.
Although opponents of his seized on the comments, he said it was not
raised among any of the people he encountered throughout rural
Limerick.
âIt didnât come up at all. But two things have changed. We have nearly
âŹ40bn more money every year now. We were still in a situation where we
had unsustainable debt. What it meant is, if you take a decision
recognising that we are looking at one million to 1.5m more people
living in the country, if you want to continue building the State the
way we did it at the time, itâs a more expensive option.
âThatâs not anti-rural. In some respects, itâs saying the way we were
building rural Ireland will cost more money than we had,â he says.
Mayor Moran actually believes he was ahead of the curve - and he has
been proven correct, given how the construction of once-off houses
across rural Ireland is now restricted in development plans.
âWhat I was recommending at the time is, letâs have broadband put into
rural villages, into towns, and encourage people to live in these areas
rather than the once-off houses.
âItâs much better if I can walk to work. If I canât walk to work, itâs
better if I come in on public transport. We canât put public transport
to every house across Limerick,â he points out.
What with the Indian summer Limerick and Ireland has been enjoying in
late September, itâs hard to believe that Christmas is less than three
months away.
Limerick will see an improved festive offering over the coming years,
Mayor Moran has pledged.
He wants to see businesses working in tandem to provide an
unforgettable experience.
âHow can we change the way Limerick works so there isnât just one spot
in front of Penneys where Christmas happens? Where the whole of
Limerick, particularly the core historic part, feels Christmassy. It
might not happen in the first year. But that should evolve to being
that if youâre walking up OâConnell Street or Mallow Street, that there
is a Christmas tree in every window of every Georgian building.
âIt shouldnât be that difficult, but, collectively, if everybody can
take part in this...â he says. âWe can do competitions for people who
do the best shop fronts, for example.â
There are other plans - helped by what he feels was a successful period
in August when the Crescent area beside the Daniel OâConnell monument
was closed to traffic and became something of a public park.
âThe experiment I believe was really successful in changing the minds
particularly of people who live around that area of what that space can
be. I have asked before what would be the ramifications in terms of
inconveniencing people of having something like a Christmas market in
this area,â he states.
Also expected this year is the Santa Experience at the International
Rugby Experience, plus the ice rink in Arthurâs Quay Park.
âThen, what do we do in Bedford Row, and what do we do around King
Johnâs Castle? Thatâs how you animate the whole city then. All the
shops inbetween feel included.â
After Christmas, it will not be long before the St Patrickâs Day
celebrations kick in.
Donât expect Mayor Moran to join the exile of politicians leaving
Ireland to view parades overseas, however.
âIâll stay in Limerick,â he confirms.
âThis is what I mean by being in the community. It is where it is. I
can go to New York anytime,â he points out.
Mayor Moran believes some overseas travel is necessary, so he is
planning to allocate funding to individual councillors to afford them
the choice of how they want to âinternationaliseâ Limerick on the
national holiday.