Water Charges - Eat Shit Capitalist Pigs

I’m torn by the whole thing in that I think its only right that people who use the most pay the most. It is a utility like any other.
I also have no problem with the house tax as I think its a very equitable way of raising taxation.
However I’m sick of being taxed to the bollox while the spongers sit at home scratching their bollox.
I’m a mish mash of left and right on the issue.

Ideally I’d like to see welfare cut, Government spending cut, taxation thresholds levels raised, universal healthcare introduced, the house tax paid and water charges.
I’m like a Reagonomic socialist

[SIZE=5]What will I do if I have a water leak on my property?[/SIZE]
If the leak is within the boundary of your property it is your responsibility as the owner of the property to get it fixed. We would advise you to contact an accredited plumber who may assist you in determining the location of the leak and make a repair to the pipe.
If the leak is outside your property please [U]contact Irish Water.[/U]
http://www.water.ie/help-centre/questions-and-answers/what-do-i-do-if-i-have-a-water-leak-on-my-property/

[QUOTE=“Julio Geordio, post: 1028166, member: 332”]I’m torn by the whole thing in that I think its only right that people who use the most pay the most. It is a utility like any other.
I also have no problem with the house tax as I think its a very equitable way of raising taxation.
However I’m sick of being taxed to the bollox while the spongers sit at home scratching their bollox.
I’m a mish mash of left and right on the issue.

Ideally I’d like to see welfare cut, Government spending cut, taxation thresholds levels raised, universal healthcare introduced, the house tax paid and water charges.
I’m like a Reagonomic socialist[/QUOTE]

You already pay a water charge. What about the issue of water being privitixed and what the cunts can then do with it?

yeah heard her say the same too. and said they would pretty much just put in a whole new pipe from the meter to the house, one inlet, one outlet, and pull the pipe through the existing duct and it should solve it without having to dig up the whole ground.

[QUOTE=“TheUlteriorMotive, post: 1028167, member: 2272”][SIZE=5]What will I do if I have a water leak on my property?[/SIZE]
If the leak is within the boundary of your property it is your responsibility as the owner of the property to get it fixed. We would advise you to contact an accredited plumber who may assist you in determining the location of the leak and make a repair to the pipe.
If the leak is outside your property please [U]contact Irish Water.[/U]
http://www.water.ie/help-centre/questions-and-answers/what-do-i-do-if-i-have-a-water-leak-on-my-property/[/QUOTE]

:eek:

There is absolutely no mention of this supposed “First Fix Free” policy on the Irish Water website.
Yet when you search for the term there is numerous mentions of it in newspaper articles and I heard Elizabeth Arnett on the radio speak about it.

If it turns out they lied about this it will be the final straw for a lot of undecided people. I would be seething.

Who gives a fuck. Most of the world has privatised water companies.
I don’t see you protesting your privatised electricity?

[MEDIA=twitter]519459979351564288[/MEDIA]

website makes it clear that they lied or were at least deliberately vague

lots of houses have shared connections too because when houses were being built nobody contemplated water being charged for

going to be a great boost for plumber’s business when leaks have to be found and fixed

I would be ok with a fixed charge but lots of people are going to be stung badly and you are scaring people particularly older people about water use

[QUOTE=“Julio Geordio, post: 1028179, member: 332”]Who gives a fuck. Most of the world has privatised water companies.
I don’t see you protesting your privatised electricity?[/QUOTE]

You don’t need electricity in a tent.

[QUOTE=“ChocolateMice, post: 1028160, member: 168”]None.

Are you willing to sell your daughter’s* future down the drain, pal? What kind of a country do you want her to grow up in?

*Apologies if you have a son, pal! p.s, hope all is going well?[/QUOTE]

He’s flying it buddy. He’ll grow up in a world that’s not dominated by crusty fuckers, that’s all that matters.

The stuff falls for free from the sky mate, buy a bucket.

Water a human Right

And he will be walking like John Wayne from taking it up the shitter :clap:

[QUOTE=“TheUlteriorMotive, post: 1028181, member: 2272”]
I would be ok with a fixed charge but lots of people are going to be stung badly and you are scaring people particularly older people about water use[/QUOTE]

People have a seriously low opinion of old people, they are so thick its a wonder they managed to survive so long.

You’ve a right to access it, you don’t have a right to get it for free.

Here here!!

Where exactly are we initially charged for water?

In the ass

No no we pay too much already next tax air

We have the bastards on the run… From the IT.

The spectacle of Cabinet Ministers suddenly distancing themselves from Irish Water after the former minister with responsibility for the semi-State utility criticised the unpopular organisation has been striking.

Fergus O’Dowd, who was sent to the back benches in the reshuffle, uttered negative remarks that appeared to open the floodgates this morning, with senior members of Government taking turns to knock the company.

The tough-talking Minister for Foreign Affairs Charlie Flanagan targeted Irish Water’s customer relations. The company needed to be “more customer friendly” and improve the extent to which it engaged with the public, he said.

Minister for Justice Frances Fitzgerald too said Irish Water “really do have to work on customer relations”.

(As someone who had reason to phone the company recently, perhaps I should say I found their customer relations fine. Mr O’Dowd has stressed he was not criticising the company’s impressive head of communications Elizabeth Arnett, who he described as “top class”.)

Minister for Public Expenditure and Reform Brendan Howlin said there was “a job of work to be done” by Irish Water to “reconnect with ordinary people”, when he spoke to reporters on his way into the Cabinet meeting.

He mentioned other State companies that, he said, Irish people were proud of, such as ESB and Bord na Móna. Irish Water was not yet in that league, he implied.

“There is a rebuilding of trust that it is going to be efficient, that it is going to be value for money and that it is a State company that we’ll all be proud of.”

Taoiseach Enda Kenny’s response to reporters’ questions this morning was blander. Admitting he had not seen Mr O’Dowd’s statement in full, Mr Kenny played down the former minister of State for the environment’s outburst.

Mr O’Dowd had merely made the point that there was a need for constant engagement with the community, “so that everybody understands the need for setting up Irish Water and the need for making a contribution to a commodity that’s very precious”, Mr Kenny claimed.

In the Dáil this afternoon, Mr Kenny stated clearly he did not share Mr O’Dowd’s views. He also enraged the opposition by saying Irish Water had endured “teething problems”.

With byelections in the key constituencies of Dublin South West and Roscommon South Leitrim just days away, anti-water charge campaigners will undoubtedly be in their element.