This article is from page 13 of the 2012-09-04 edition of The Clare People. OCR mistakes are to be expected so download the original SWF or the rendered page 13 JPG
CLARE County Council’s clampdown on one-off houses in the rural part of the county has been graphically illustrated with the latest publication of the findings from the 2011 National Census of Population.
According to the ‘Roof Over Our Heads’ report, the number of new roofs over the heads of people in rural Clare has plummeted sharply from previous censuses, with the 2011 population study showing that oneoff house builds have been halved between 2006 and 2011.
There were 2,784 houses built in Clare between 2006 and 2011, with the number of one-off houses being 861, which represented just 30.90 per cent. When compared against the last census, which gave a breakdown of house builds between 2001 and 2006, there was a drop of 860 in new oneoff houses constructed in the county.
This reduction is in keeping with the slide in one-off planning permissions and house constructions that was heralded in the 2006 census when the figure of 1,721 one-off houses meant that, for the first time since records began, there were less single houses built in the county than houses than were part of developments. Between 1991 and 2000, the number of one-off houses constructed represented 69.80 of all houses built in the period.
Kilbaha-based Jim Connolly, who is the founder of Rural Resettlement Ireland, has said that present planning policy that’s against wide-scale oneoff housing is “enforcing urbanisation on people with disastrous consequences for the country”.
Continuing, Mr Connolly, who contested the 2011 General Election as an independent and a founder member of the Irish Citizens Party, said “future generations will rightly curse the planning policies of the Celtic Tiger period” and that “social, economic and cultural life has suffered from people being refused planning permission to build family homes in the countryside”.