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Dáil Éireann - Volume 238 - 19 February, 1969 Ceisteanna—Questions. Oral Answers. - Abandonment of Derelict Cars. Mr. Sweetman Mr. Sweetman 33. Mr. Sweetman asked the Minister for Local Government what arrangements he proposes to make to prevent old derelict cars being abandoned to despoil the countryside. Mr. Boland Mr. Boland Mr. Boland: Some legislative action has already been taken to provide improved powers for dealing with the problem to which the Deputy refers. Section 63 of the Road Traffic Act, 1968, substituted a new section for section 97 of the Road Traffic Act, 1961, and the new provision empowers me to make regulations authorising and providing for the removal, storage and disposal of vehicles which have been, or appear to have been, abandoned on public road or public car park or which have been parked illegally. Regulations under the section are at present being prepared. 1216 As regards the use of privatelyowned land for the dumping of old vehicles or parts of vehicles, it is expressly laid down in section 3 of the [1216] Local Government (Planning and Development) Act, 1963, that where land becomes used for such a purpose the use of the land is materially changed and planning permission for the new use is accordingly required. If planning permission is not sought or obtained, the planning authority could have recourse to their enforcement powers under the Act to secure that the use is discontinued. I appreciate that the powers contained in the 1963 Act may not be effective to deal with all cases of dumping of old vehicles on private land and particularly with the anti-social activity of people who dump old vehicles or parts of vehicles on private property without the consent of the owner or occupier of the land. This problem is difficult to deal with by legislative means but the position will be kept under review. Mr. Sweetman Mr. Sweetman Mr. Sweetman: Can the Minister say when he hopes to make the regulations? Mr. Boland Mr. Boland Mr. Boland: They are being prepared at present. I do not know how long it will take. It should not take very much longer. Mr. Sweetman Mr. Sweetman Mr. Sweetman: A month or two months? Mr. Boland Mr. Boland Mr. Boland: Probably a month or two. Mr. James Tully Mr. James Tully Mr. James Tully: Can the Minister say if the regulations he proposes to make will deal effectively with the socalled scrap dealer who leaves a line of broken-down vehicles in built-up areas over a considerable period and, if he is approached by the garda or anyone else, moves them up and down for the purpose of being able to say they are not permanently there? Would the Minister say if it will also prevent people from dismantling old cars in private building areas on their own property? Mr. Boland Mr. Boland Mr. Boland: Yes, planning permission is required for that latter activity and it is to be hoped that the regulations will cover the other problem. Mr. James Tully Mr. James Tully Mr. James Tully: Even if it is only one vehicle? Mr. Boland Mr. Boland 1217 [1217] Mr. Boland: If the property is being used for that purpose, planning permission is required. Mr. James Tully Mr. James Tully Mr. James Tully: When it is a council housing estate and cars are scattered all over the place, how can they be dealt with? Mr. Boland Mr. Boland Mr. Boland: On the public road? Mr. James Tully Mr. James Tully Mr. James Tully: On the public road. Mr. Boland Mr. Boland Mr. Boland: It is to be hoped that the regulations will be effective to deal with that. Mr. Harte Mr. Harte Mr. Harte: Would the Minister give sympathetic consideration to the possibility of entering into some kind of agreement with the car assemblers so that the people who assemble these cars can be held in some way as being responsible for removing derelicts at a later stage? Is the Minister aware that it has been suggested in some countries that the manufacturers of the vehicles can be held responsible for this type of vehicle when it reaches the end of its days? Would he consider this a reasonable proposal in this country? Mr. Boland Mr. Boland Mr. Boland: I will investigate it. I never heard it. Mr. Sweetman Mr. Sweetman Mr. Sweetman: Does the Minister in his regulations propose to deal with dumping in a public place on the lines of the Road Traffic Act, rather than on a public road? In other words, I mean that in certain circumstances the public have access to the side of a road but it is not the road. The Road Traffic Act deals with that when they are in a public place. Why does the Minister's regulation not follow the same line? Mr. Boland Mr. Boland Mr. Boland: That is the intention. Dr. O'Connell Dr. O'Connell Dr. O'Connell: Would the Minister make it obligatory on car owners to return the registration book? Mr. Boland Mr. Boland Mr. Boland: What do you do if they do not do it? Mr. James Tully Mr. James Tully Mr. James Tully: They should return the car along with the book and get them to heck out of the way. (Interruptions.) Mr. Dillon Mr. Dillon 1218 Mr. Dillon: There is on every chassis [1218] a number. Would the Minister not think it proper where a person discards a car on a street such as Merrion Road and removes all the plates and so forth, that an example of a case of that kind be made by getting the chassis number, following the history of the car and prosecuting the person who was last registered as owner? I admit it is a cumbersome procedure but, if an example were made of that kind, I feel it might mitigate this abuse. Mr. Boland Mr. Boland Mr. Boland: I agree it might. Mr. Coogan Mr. Coogan Mr. Coogan: The country is in a state of chassis. Dáil Éireann 238 Ceisteanna—Questions. Oral Answers. Abandonment of Derelict Cars. Questions 19690219
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