| Water charges
are to be phased in over a three-year period from April 2006 and are to
be based on the property value of each house.
A
new Valuation Tribunal Service will be set up to assess the capital value
of each house or apartment.
The government claim that the average water charge will be between £315
and £415 a year, with the maximum being initially set at £750
a year. This means working class families who are struggling to make ends
meet but who have seen the price of their house rise dramatically will
pay relatively far higher for water than a wealthy businessman living
in a mansion.
There can be no doubt that the mass opposition to water charges has influenced
the government to tread carefully in relation to how the charges are introduced.
In the first year households will be asked to pay one-third of the charge,
in the second year two-thirds and in the third year the full amount.
Minister of State John Spellar announced these details in September, adding
that there would be "protection for low-income households".
For households who are dependent on the Housing Benefit and the Rate Rebate,
there will be a temporary 25% "discount". This still means pensioners,
people reliant on benefits and low-paid households will have to pay an
average of £236 to £311 a year for water.
These charges cannot be justified. The government claims £3 billion
needs to be invested in the water and sewerage system over the next 20
years and that householders in Northern Ireland are not paying for water.
Households pay on average £188.33 a year towards water and sewerage
services alone. In total, £118.6million is raised every year. Over
20 years, this amounts to £2.3billion. Households are responsible
for using less than 50% of water. Over 50% of water is consumed by industry
and agriculture. If the money were raised from the non-domestic sector,
that would bring a figure of £4.745 billion over a 20-year period.
Households in Northern Ireland have been paying for water for decades
through the rates. It is not the fault of ordinary people in Northern
Ireland that successive governments refused to invest in the service.
The Government should cough up the extra money needed to run a quality
service.Join the "We Won't Pay" campaign
The "We Won't Pay' Campaign has been receiving an excellent response
in communities since the details of water charges were announced.
The Campaign has been recruiting people throughout Belfast and across
the North as well as signing households up to our non-payment pledge.
Spokespersons for the Campaign have been on Radio Ulster and BBC television.
Some groups within the broad Coalition Against Water Charges have suggested
however that non-payment should not be the tactic used to defeat charges.
They naively argue that we need to convince the government that they are
wrong, falsely arguing that the government would listen to them. The government
are determined to introduce water charges and privatise the service.
Some groups within the Coalition have also mistakenly called on the District
Councils to organise meetings to build an anti-water charges movement.
We cannot rely on the politicians of the main four parties which dominate
these Councils to effectively campaign against water charges since they
collectively agreed to introduce water charges when the Assembly was up
and running. The only way water charges and privatisation can be stopped
is by organising mass non-payment throughout the North.
Public Meetings are being organised by the We Won't Pay Campaign in the
coming weeks to organise local groups and spread the campaign.
Kathy Robinson is a resident and an organiser of the We Won't
Pay Campaign in Finaghy area of Belfast: "I've been paying
rates for years. Why should I have to pay twice for water? This is just
an attempt to impose a stealth tax on the people of Northern Ireland.
The real agenda is to get householders paying a separate water charge
so the service can be sold off to big business and fat cats. There's no
way I'll be paying water charges"
Barbara Hawkes lives in the Cregagh Road area of Belfast:"How
the Government can blame us for lack of investment in the water service
is beyond me. Where has all the money gone? They can easily find money
for a war on Iraq, but then say there is no money for the water service.
If water charges are introduced I don't know how I and my neighbours will
be able to pay. Everyone should join the We Won't Pay Campaign and stick
together on this."
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