Hank Scorpio
Full Member
Last edited:
Couldn't care less tbh.
They are not a credible news outlet.
Their extremely shady (to say the least) funding runs muckraking exercises to try and destabilise confidence in our elected reps and public bodies.
Russian interference 101.
And that's in spades.
By your own admission you "couldnt care less" when FFG ministers are caught hole open gaming the system for their own benefit.
You are the biggest shill on PROC
I couldn't care less what some Russian funded web outfit report on.
Neither should you.
Unlike you - I care about it when OUR government ministers are corrupt and shown to be corrupt. F**K the Russians btw - tehy've nothing to do with that FF corrupt minister
You couldn't mark her neck with a blow torch - solid brass!
But shur the shill will ignore Smyth's wrong doing because it's in The Ditch. If it wasn't factual then of course they'd be successfully sued for libel but no, the problem according to the shills is those pointing the finger at FF corruption, not the corruption itself.
Fianna Fáil TD Niamh Smyth asked Cavan County Council to have unemployed people on a government placement carry out work on a site bought by her husband. Smyth was cathaoirleach of the council municipal district at the time.
Other councillors at the meeting agreed that people taking part in the state's Gateway Programme – which aimed to “boost” unemployed people’s “motivation and confidence” – should work on the entrance to a site on which Smyth’s family home was built.
The home was built on lakeside land despite being zoned for recreational use for the local community. Smyth’s husband received planning permission for the 2,750 square foot home in 2016 despite the planner’s report noting that the laneway to the site was “saturated with water and was not accessible”.
Last week The Ditch reported that Smyth failed to declare her interest in a commercial property she twice claimed to own in planning applications.
‘Calling on Cavan County Council to dedicate gateway staff to clear (the) stone wall’
Niamh Smyth on March 23, 2015 chaired a meeting of the Bailieborough Cootehill Municipal District. Councillors discussed three “member’s items”, according to the meeting’s minutes.
Smyth wanted to discuss the deployment of unemployed people on a state-funded work placement scheme.
“Calling on Cavan County Council to dedicate gateway staff to clear stone wall on Cavan Road at Bailieborough Town Lake to reveal the beautiful natural lake,” she asked.
The “gateway staff” to whom Smyth referred were people taking part in a Department of Social Protection scheme. The Gateway Programme aimed to “improve the employability and work readiness of participants by providing them with opportunities to put work skills into practice and to learn new ones”.
Council official Pat Gaynor saw no issue with Smyth’s request, saying, “There would be no problem dedicating gateway staff for this project once it did not involve council core work.”
The entrance to what would soon become Smyth’s residence was subsequently resurfaced, though it is unclear who funded the works.
‘It would be nice to see the lake’
Ten months after the meeting, in December 2015, Smyth’s husband James Conaty applied to Cavan County Council for permission to build a house on the site. Smyth, who married Conaty in 2013, wasn’t named on the planning application.
Speaking about Smyth’s request for work to be carried out on the entrance to the site, her council colleague Gaynor had “agreed it would be nice to see the lake and to perhaps lower a portion of the wall and erect a railing”.
It emerged in the planning application for Smyth’s new home that the same stone wall would need to be substantially lowered as a condition for receiving permission.
In their report the council planner concluded that Smyth’s husband needed to submit further information before a decision could be made on the application. One of these requests concerned the stone walls at the site’s entrance that Smyth had asked the council to clear.
“Existing stone walls obstruct sight lines. Applicant will need to secure permission to reduce the level of these stone walls,” read the report.
In correspondence dated April 1, 2016 Conaty’s agent, architect Niall Smith, responded to the council with proposals for lowering the walls. Neither Conaty nor Smyth had permission from the authorities to lower the wall, which acted as a boundary to the town lake, a public amenity.
The planner wrote that the laneway to the site was “saturated with water and was not accessible by either car or foot”, further noting that the municipal engineer had raised concerns about the “high water level in adjoining lake”.
The planner also acknowledged that a section of the site wasn’t zoned for residential development but rather for recreational use. “Part of site located within development envelope of Bailieborough and zoned recreation/amenity,” wrote the planner.
According to the 2014-2020 Cavan County Development Plan “only community facilities and other recreational uses will be considered” on land zoned for “amenity and recreation”.
Permission for the house was granted at the end
He's a pity at this stage. Clearly a shill. Expects you to answer all his questions while answering nothing himself.FFG Government Ministers caught again
is the name of this thread. Time and again you try to shill yer deflections but never want to address the issues about FFG politicians being caught at it.
Indeed, by your own admission you "couldn't care less".
But then you want to deflect again this time to Sinn Féin.
Time for a new Dinnybot, because this one needs to be taken back to the workshop for repair