“I just cannot get over that they didn’t maintain the same level of funding at a minimum, because it’s a bloody great scheme,” says Fine Gael Councillor Tom O’Leary, of the homelessness-prevention scheme.
“Pitched as ‘avante hyperpop’, her music can sound like what Mariah Carey might cook up if she spent more hours hanging out in video arcades and reading radical literature.”
We are trying to understand better how the council manages rent arrears – and would appreciate the chance to talk to council tenants to help us do that.
Periodically, often around budget time, we see media reports about rent arrears for Dublin City Council tenants.
We get the official figures – how much the council says is owed, how that might differ from past years. We get the calls for councils to do more to collect.
What we don’t hear are the voices of council tenants. And we don’t get much analysis of what those figures mean, what’s counted, why tenants may fall into arrears, and how the council’s payments system works.
We know this is sensitive, but if you are a council tenant who has fallen into arrears at some point, we would love to talk to you about how that happened and how the council dealt with it.
Please fill out our short survey below. You can also send an email to our reporter Laoise Neylon at lneylon@dublininquirer.com or call or WhatsApp her on 0860897384.
We won’t use your name or story unless you have given us permission.
[UPDATE: On 19 April 2025 at 17.41 we removed this survey as a way to remove functions on the website that use cookies that we don't need anymore.]
“I just cannot get over that they didn’t maintain the same level of funding at a minimum, because it’s a bloody great scheme,” says Fine Gael Councillor Tom O’Leary, of the homelessness-prevention scheme.