The Aontú leader Peadar Tóibín TD raised questions about water supply and quality issues effecting Meath, Enfield and Navan, with Taoiseach Micheál Martin in the Dáil this week.
Speaking on Wednesday, Deputy Tóibín told the Dáil:
“Keeping the lights and on and water in the taps is surely one of the basic responsibilities of any administration but we live in a country where that is simply not happening. For a country where it seldom stops raining, if it does we cannot last a week before there is a water or hosepipe ban in this country”.
Deputy Tóibín continued: “In my county of Meath, things are out of control currently. As we speak, a burst mains is causing major disruption in Navan. There are multiple outages every week in the system in Enfield. People in Trim can hardly turn the water taps on because of discoloured water or bans on water being used at certain times of the day, etc”.
“Councillor Dave Boyne and I have had to campaign to get water trucks to bring water to other towns in the county. The Taoiseach talks about massive investment, which is welcome, but it is not making a difference on the ground because there are major problems for Irish Water to deliver on infrastructure in terms of planning, permits and tendering etc. When will those be fixed so we can get the system fixed?”
In response to Mr Tóibín, Taoiseach Micheál Martin said:
“Deputy Tóibín raised the issue of Trim again in terms of keeping the taps on and water quality. Again, it relates to wider issues. They had the plan, we have now funded the plan, and the issue now is getting things done as quickly as we can”



