> These proceedings will be heard in June and the outcome is, by its nature, unpredictable. Until the proceedings are decided, the Railway Order remains on hold.
Why are the proceedings for such vital infrastructure projects taking so long to come before the courts. This should have priority over everything else the courts are doing.
GlorEUW on
The government needs to start just passing bills in the dáil to individually approve the finished plans for these major infrastructure projects.
the possible minor downsides cannot be worse than the negative effects of constant delays to everything from objections in the courts
pauldavis1234 on
If your business has to suffer “severe” or “profound” changes to allow a public project go ahead you should be compensated in that regard
How this is not already in the legislation is beyond belief.
WickerMan111 on
I object to that statement.
MouseJiggler on
When your project messes with people’s livelihoods – it’s on you to compensate them and to make sure the disruption is temporary.
5 commenti
> These proceedings will be heard in June and the outcome is, by its nature, unpredictable. Until the proceedings are decided, the Railway Order remains on hold.
Why are the proceedings for such vital infrastructure projects taking so long to come before the courts. This should have priority over everything else the courts are doing.
The government needs to start just passing bills in the dáil to individually approve the finished plans for these major infrastructure projects.
the possible minor downsides cannot be worse than the negative effects of constant delays to everything from objections in the courts
If your business has to suffer “severe” or “profound” changes to allow a public project go ahead you should be compensated in that regard
How this is not already in the legislation is beyond belief.
I object to that statement.
When your project messes with people’s livelihoods – it’s on you to compensate them and to make sure the disruption is temporary.