serotoninsid
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I don't have any issues with any of the things you mentioned. I feel if I want to pay (which I dont right now), then it's not that difficult.Seems to me that they are using vast amounts of energy on problems and zero on solutions!
As Marion pointed out, it covers very little but the very basics. It doesn't cover grass cutting (and we have the same issue as Marion pointed out in this respect, i.e. 50% of people pay up.).And where do you think they should get the money to provide you with this basic service?
I didnt say that would happen,or elude to it..You think for one second that the moment we pay the household charge, our estate will be taken in charge? Don't be so naive!!
When you say "them getting their act together". Who exactly are you talking about?Most of the problem that we are having doesn't necessarily involve cost. It involves them getting their act together and accessing the bond the developer left (or did they take one from him at all? ....probably not seeing as they refuse to answer this question!).
And I also paid 48 thousand euro in stamp duty..The 'Basic Service' i'm talking about was well paid for in stamp duty - as you well know!
Did I say that I was against a property tax in principle? Speaking from a personal point of view, my estate needs to be taken in charge by the local authority before they will see one red cent from me. Furthermore, (as already outlined) I've had civil servants fobbing me off - not answering very basic questions - with a chain of letters in response saying Mary has passed the matter on to Jim, Jim has passed it on to someone else - and I will guarantee you, If I email them today, I will get exactly the same response (following a basic query submitted 12 months ago). And you think I should contribute to such "services". Theres nothing wrong with a property tax - but the fundamentals are wrong in the Irish context as it will be pee'd up against a wall!serotonised,So where do they get the money from
Varying reasons. Fear for some. And for others, the reasons you mentioned i.e. basic services. However, having had the experience of living abroad in a couple of european countries, if the fundamentals are not right (and they very much are NOT), then peoples hard earned money is going to be squandered!thedaras said:as a matter of interest, why do you think others are choosing to pay it?
Fair enough - but I think 6 years after us all moving in here, it's a reasonable expectation - either before or after paying said charge. In actual fact, it doesn't matter - as it shouldn't cost them anything IF they have taken an adequate bond from the developer (but they refuse to tell me this).thedaras said:I didnt say that would happen,or elude to it..
The local authority of course - who else?thedaras said:When you say "them getting their act together". Who exactly are you talking about?
Sure you did - everyone did. However, you understand the context in which I referred to stamp duty i.e. specific issue of them NOT taking my estate in charge relative to a major tax on that property at point of sale.thedaras said:And I also paid 48 thousand euro in stamp duty..
I'm fully aware of that. It is nevertheless a service charge insofar as the revenue stream is supposed to find its way into funding local services.Is a precursor property tax levied on property owners.
Did I say that I was against a property tax in principle? Speaking from a personal point of view, my estate needs to be taken in charge by the local authority before they will see one red cent from me. Furthermore, (as already outlined) I've had civil servants fobbing me off - not answering very basic questions - with a chain of letters in response saying Mary has passed the matter on to Jim, Jim has passed it on to someone else - and I will guarantee you, If I email them today, I will get exactly the same response (following a basic query submitted 12 months ago). And you think I should contribute to such "services". Theres nothing wrong with a property tax - but the fundamentals are wrong in the Irish context as it will be pee'd up against a wall!
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I don't have any issues with any of the things you mentioned. I feel if I want to pay (which I dont right now), then it's not that difficult.
However, until such time as the local council stop passing the parcel with my correspondence re. taking my estate in charge, then I won't be paying. I'm paying for services and they won't even answer my questions relating to this - before we even discuss the nuts and bolts of having the estate taken in charge! This is being played out up and down the country - with the same approach. This is a service charge - if you want to enforce a service charge, then you provide basic services.
NO - it's not! If you re-read what I have written, what I am asking for doesn't necessarily cost the Local Authority anything! They simply won't engage - that is to say, their existing staff WONT cooperate! Now, as I said before - I've lived in 2 european countries and know what services get delivered for taxes. When something is as fundamentally flawed as the example I've given, how could I (or the thousands of others affected by this same issue) have ANY confidence of their property tax converting effectively into services???Serotoninsid, your argument sounds a little like the argument people use not to pay their management fees in my estate. No services, not paying. How can you provide services, if people do not pay? Up until this year, the funds for local services came from another pot.
symantics. Ok, are local authority employees not public servants? If not, my bad - but that's what I meant - and in that way, my point stands!This is because you are getting onto the wrong place. Taking estates into charge is something that is dealt with at local authority level, not by central government. You need to contact your council, not any of the civil service organisations.
It would be totally RATIONAL to expect that Fiskar - but I've checked and our estate is NOT listed as exempt and NOT taken into charge. There are literally thousands of estates in the same position up and down the country.The legislation on the Household charge.ie website lists those estates not eligible to pay the household charge. You could safely take it that if your estate is not listed then it is liable for the charge and most likely taken into charge.
Ajapale - they won't even engage with us on the subject - this (or efforts simply to get answers to questions) has been ongoing for 12 months now. We are in the estate for 6 years! They won't even confirm the bond (I know there are other ways of obtaining that info - but why can't they just confirm if there is or no and if so, what is it?).Why should the local authority take your estate in charge in advance of all the requirements being met? Does youir estate meet the standards set out by your local authority (water, sewers, drainage, roads, footpaths) etc? If not then it is the responsibility of the developer / current owners to rectify.
On the back of that, you think anyone in my estate has any faith that the revenue stream raised will be utilised in the same way as it is in the UK, Germany, etc??
Ajapale - they won't even engage with us on the subject
Of course, blame lies with the developer - but the developer worked within the 'system' that was there. The remarkable thing is that the 'system' hasn't changed! There is no legislation in place for this - or if there is, it's not being enforced. We didn't have a management company in place - meaning that we had to get together as a group and organise grass cutting and the like - once the developer told us ..tough, I'm not doing it anymore. That means that we only get 50% of residents paying up - and there is no way we can make the rest pay!! That's just plain wrong! However, legislative change could easily address this! Likewise, I got an enforcement notice against the developer - but all it was was vapourware - they never followed through and enforced!I understand your frustration, Im in a very similar situation and we (through citizens advice) got in touch with an excellent FLAC lawyer who explained the process in detail. It transpired (in our case) that most of the "blame"/"procrastination" lies with the developer and the current owners of the estate (the management company set up by him) and not the home owners or the local authority.
Well, IF they were to get value for money, then they too would see a return on their €100. Many things that could be improved eg. broadband for rural dwellers ..and that's just the start of a whole list of things that could be addressed had we any confidence that half the revenue won't end up pee'd up against a wall - or used for the purposes of filling in the banking fiscal 'hole'.Spare a thought for rural house owners many of whom who pay for water, sewer, refuse, lighting, litter and even roads (where the road/laneway up to their house is privately owned). They still must pay the €100 property tax and the local authority will never-ever take over these services.
Thank you! Lets get the fundamentals right FIRST before we start handing over (even) more of our hard earned €€ to what is (at least right now) an incompetent administration.Short Answer is NO, it will be like giving an alcoholic access to an open bar.
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