“The motion is excellent, but we have to hold the British Government’s feet to the fire as much as possible.”
A heated row over letting the British government “off the hook” on increasing household oil payments has flared in a Co Down chamber amid an Irish unity call.
Newry, Mourne and Down District Counci this week agreed a Sinn Fein motion on a majority vote to urge the release of £17m UK funding from the Department for Communities ahead of a heating oil paper to the Executive on Thursday.
However, unionist support for the motion was “lost” over a constitutional matter.
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Bringing forward the motion, Deputy chairperson Geraldine Kearns said: “This council recognises the immense pressure being placed on workers, families and businesses as a result of huge price hikes on energy costs, especially home heating oil as a result of the US-Israeli war on Iran.
“Newry, Mourne and Down,calls on the Communities Minister who has the responsibility for tackling fuel poverty to set up a scheme to get this money (£17m) into the pockets of those who are struggling with heating costs.”
She added:”This council further calls on the British government to end its inadequate and delayed response to the fuel crisis, and to act with the urgency that it demands to protect households, sustain local businesses, and safeguard our rural economy.
“And to write to the British Secretary of State for the North and the Minister of State for Energy to clearly convey this council’s deep frustration at their failure to act, and to demand the immediate delivery of real, effective support for those struggling with rising energy crisis.”
Slieve Gullion Sinn Fein councillor Aine Quinn who seconded the motion added:”This exposes something that we already know, partition does not work…this is why the case for Irish unity has never been more relevant not as an abstract idea, but as a common sense solution.”
The huge hike in heating costs from the Middle East conflict is now said to be impacting the budgets of 500,000 homes in NI.
The UK Government has stepped in with an offer of £17 million in support to NI, which economists calculated as £35 per household. The money is due to be delivered by the DfC.
Mournes DUP councillor Glyn Hanna said:”Gordon Lyons (DfC Minister) has demonstrated previously that he will step in and deliver support when it falls within his remit including administrating a winter fuel payment, he stands ready to do so again.
“The DUP position is clear funding must be increased by a meaningful level, delivery mechanisms must be urgently put in place and both the Executive and the UK Government must act in a coordinated way to provide real relief.”
A further amendment by Downpatrick SDLP councillor Conor Galbraith saying:”Last month we witnessed an 80% rise in heating oil in just one week.
“The SDLP supports the motion, but also recognise a huge gap in it as it stands.
“The motion focuses primarily on the Communities Minister, but an energy crisis of this scale cannot be addressed by one department alone.
“We propose to write to the First and Deputy First Minister, the Executive and the UK Government to urgently establish a joint energy task force…to roll out practical steps that reflect the reality that people are facing.”
The amendment was not accepted by Sinn Fein with a majority voting against the proposal (11 for, 20 against and 6 abstaining).
SDLP Slieve Gullion councillor Pete Byrne said:”We want more money from the British Government.
“So, if we’re not taking the amendment, don’t try and blame it on the British Government getting off the hook, this sticks them on a hook.
“The motion is excellent, but we have to hold the British Government’s feet to the fire as much as possible.”
Slieve Gullion UUP councillor David Taylor added:”It has been reported that the Communities Minister is due to bring a paper to the Executive this Thursday, which will hopefully bring some welcome news.
“This issue effects everyone in the community irrespective of political background.
“I want to express my disappointment that in seconding the motion, Councillor Quinn really took that cross community support aspect away by making a political point on constitutional position of Northern Ireland, there was no need for that.
“And what you have done is actually lost support from the unionist side.”
The Sinn Fein motion was then approved with unionists voting against (31 for and 6 against).
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