The debate centers around the presumed rights of Irish people to live where and how they like versus the presumed obligation of the Irish state to curtail development patterns that it considers detrimental to society as a whole. There is a spectrum of opinion ranging from those who would oppose or allow all isolated rural development to those who would allow for isolated rural development in various circumstances.
Right to build on one's own land There are two versions of this argument: that people should have the right to either build on land they own or else that people should have the right to build a house near to where their families live.
Traditional land use patterns Dr Séamus Caulfield, retired professor of archaeology at
University College Dublin, has stated that Irish
Stone Age rural settlements were dispersed throughout the countryside but that in recent years planners were using British Anglo-Saxon planning models that emphasise "settlement in urban areas – nucleation settlements". Minister for the Environment,
Dick Roche, has supported the view that one-off housing is a continuation of the traditional land use patterns in Ireland for millennia. We have a dispersed pattern of settlement going back thousands of years. In contrast, An Tasice has argued that early settlements were nucleated and communal, often surrounded by
ringforts for protection. It also argues that the environmental effects of one-off housing in the Stone Age were different from those observed in a car-dependent modern lifestyle.
Tourism Tourism is one of the most important sectors in the Irish economy contributing up to €6 billion to the Irish economy annually. 80% of all holidaymakers visiting Ireland in 2006 listed the 'beautiful scenery' and 74% cited 'unspoilt environment' as key motivating factors in visiting Ireland. The continued policy mandating the proliferation of one-off rural housing will result in an erosion of the rural and natural environment and directly threatens the future viability of the Irish tourism sector.
Health Because the residents of one-off housing are more car-dependent than those living in towns and villages, organisations such as
An Taisce have stated that these groups are more likely to suffer from obesity. Senator
Mary Henry has pointed out that one-off houses are often built without any footpath connection to a local town, thus discouraging walking.
Energy Use Irish organisations such as
FEASTA (The foundation for the economics of sustainability) and
COMHAR (The national sustainable development partnership), have made the case that the increased demand for private car use that follows from one-off housing development will lead to a greater average
carbon footprint for residents of this type of dwelling. Increased CO2 pollution will, they claim, have negative environmental implications and lead to possible fines under the
Kyoto Protocol.
Lower quality and higher-priced services By their dispersed nature, one-off houses are built further away from commercial, utility, social and emergency services than urban dwellings. As a result, the cost of providing these services is increased. Even where services are sold at the same price as in urban areas, the quality is often poorer with, for example, frequent electricity power cuts, potholed roads, longer waits for emergency services, and poor quality of internet access.
Subsidies The increased cost of service provision to one-off houses must be paid either by the householder or absorbed by the service provider. In the latter case, The
Irish Planning Institute has referred to this cost transfer as a subsidy. The same report identified other subsidies to one-off housing as: school transport, rural road maintenance, increased costs when upgrading national roads, environmental costs from pollution due to septic tanks, and uneven application of social and affordable housing levies between urban and rural houses. By contrast, supporters of one-off housing speculate that subsidies may be paid by rural taxpayers whenever large infrastructure projects are constructed by the state in Dublin from central exchequer funds. However, other commentators see one-off housing as actually undermining efforts to deliver national infrastructure, and unambiguously transferring costs to urban and suburban dwellers. Economist David McWilliams writes Let us be very clear: if we have one-off housing, we cannot have a functioning public transport system, public health service, public education system or postal system, never mind universal access to broadband or cable. ... So who pays? The worker who has abided by the laws, who has bought a place in a town or a village and who is not lucky enough to inherit land. It has been argued by Éamon Ó Cuív, T.D., Minister for Community, Rural and Gaeltacht Affairs, that the marginal cost of supplying services to new one-off houses is low. The Minister's primary argument can be described as "the house at the end of the valley point". It posits the following: where utility lines, pipelines and post are already delivered to a house at the end of a valley, then there can be no argument against ribbon development on the road leading to that house. It must be said that this argument has an initial attractiveness to it. To some extent, however, it overlooks the fact that the "house at the end of the valley" is usually served at shoestring capacity. In other words a whole new infrastructure would be required to accommodate the addition of three or four houses on the road going into the valley. Even where the services leading to the house at the end of the valley have untapped capacity, the previously expressed criticisms of urban-focused one-off housing are not displaced. The postal company still has to serve an additional three or four houses using a van or car. Household wastes are more expensive to collect or treat, and so on. Finally, the house at the end of the road into the valley is likely to be connected with a farming or forestry concern. It generates comparatively few traffic movements as compared with commuter-focused housing.
Rural depopulation It is argued by Dick Roche that The most important ingredient in rural development is population. or else that population growth is not desirable in 'ultra-rural' areas that ought rather to become natural recreational areas with land-owners employed in land-maintenance, forestry and tourism-related services.
Appeal to motive arguments Opponents of one-off housing sometimes claim the motivation for this type of development is financial. Their argument is that due to the presumed
Irish property bubble, it has become far cheaper to build rather than buy a house in Ireland and that one-off housing regulations allow for the conversion of inexpensive agricultural land into plots often worth more than €150,000 per site. They argue that farmers have become reliant on housing as a
cash crop, while one-off builders are motivated by the capital gains they expect to make on their property. By contrast, advocates of one-off housing may characterise those who would limit this type of development as
Dublin 4 urbanites motivated by a desire to maintain the hegemony of cities and put country people in their place. Opponents of one-off housing are sometimes compared to colonial British landlords from the era before
Irish independence. ==Proponents and opponents==