Cooley Distillery and Oxigen Environmental amongst the most complained about sites last year

Cooley_distillery_logoCooley Distillery was one of the most complained about sites in the country for noise pollution last year.

That’s according to the latest report from the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), which found that of 149 noise complaints last year, some 80 per cent of them related to five individual sites.

Cooley Distillery was one of the five along with only Panda Waste in Co Meath receiving more noise complaints.

Despite this the number of complaints about the Riverstown-based distillery fell from 38 in 2013 to 27 last year.

The EPA said nearly all firms complained about were in breach of their licence conditions.

Three firms were prosecuted under environmental legislation in 2014, according to the report with Dundalk-based Oxigen Environmental ordered to pay €9,000.

The Coes Road company was also the fourth most complained about site in the country last year in relation to odours.

There were 64 complaints about the Dundalk site last year, down from 77 the year before.

Oxigen’s Dundalk waste plant the second most complained about in the country

oxigen-bannerOxigen’s waste plant on the Coes Road in Dundalk was the second most complained about dump in the country in 2013, according to the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).

In total there were 547 complaints throughout the year, with 81 of them concerning the Dundalk plant.

Only Ballynagran in Wicklow had a higher number of complaints with 140.

The vast majority of complaints related to bad odours, which were likened to rotten eggs as gases escaped from dumps.

Last April Oxigen were prosecuted and fined €1,000 at Dundalk District Court following an EPA investigation following complaints about offensive odours in the vicinity of their Coes Road facility. The company also paid the EPA’s legal and inspection costs of €9,000.

Residents from the likes of Bay Estate, Hyde Park, Belfry Gardens and Meadow Grove had all complained about the issue with former councillor Martin Bellew, who lives in the area, telling a meeting of Dundalk Town Council last year that people attending the previous October’s St Gerard’s Novena in St Joseph’s Redemptorist Church had to run to their cars after one of the Masses because of how strong the smell was.

The company and its director Aidan Doyle pleaded guilty to a summons under the Waste Management Act, which related to October 24th 2012.

The court was told the smell coming from the plant was caused by the stockpiling of brown-bin waste in a building at the plant, with the odours breaching the terms of Oxigen’s licence from the EPA.

An inspector visited the site on numerous occasions recently and found that the problem had now been resolved.

In December 2013 the company were also fined €2,500 for breaching their waste collection permit in a case that was taken against them by Louth County Council and the EPA following a number of complaints to the local authority about a strong smell from their facility.

As well as the €2,500 fine, the waste recycling company will also have to pay costs of €1,100 on top of that after being found guilty of breaching the condition of their waste licence by mixing dry recyclable waste and domestic waste.

Their failure to separate these waste types led to a breach of their permit, the court heard at the time.

Commenting on the report, Gerard O’Leary, Director of EPA’s Office of Environmental Enforcement said: “There is a need for waste operators to improve environmental compliance by tackling priority areas such as odour management and waste handling. Residents living near waste facilities should not be subject to odour nuisance. The EPA will continue to take strong enforcement action to tackle these priority areas.”

Three of Ireland’s richest people are from Dundalk

Martin Naughton is Ireland's fifth richest man according to The Sunday Times

Martin Naughton is Ireland’s fifth richest man according to The Sunday Times

Three men from Dundalk are amongst the 10 richest people in Ireland, according to the latest Sunday Times Rich List which was published last weekend.

The publication found that Glen Dimplex founder Martin Naughton was the fifth richest man in the country, with an estimated fortune of €1.724 billion.

The former De La Salle student also has a luxury apartment on board The World, an exclusive residential cruise ship.

Next in the list in sixth place is Lord Ballyedmond and family, who have an estimated fortune of €1.687 billion. Lord Ballyedmond, also known as Edward Haughey, died in a helicopter crash having built up a fortune from his Newry-based pharmaceutical business, Norbrook.

He was buried in his native Kilcurry following his death with his wealth being left to his wife Mary and children.

Naughton and Haughey made the second biggest rises in terms of wealth in the year, just behind Hilary Weston and family.

Not far behind in eighth place is Pearse Lyons, owner of the Kentucky-based Alltech. The former Harp Lager brewer has an estimated fortune of €1,145 billion.

Not far behind them in 15th place is Larry and Kitty Goodman and family, owners of AIBP Meats in Ardee. They have an estimated fortune of €612m.

The McCann brothers, David and Carl, of Fyffes and Total Produce, were joint 98th on the list with a fortune of €108m.

Boylesports owner John Boyle was also 201st on the list with a €57 million fortune.

Meanwhile, John Doyle of Oxigen Environmental and Mark Goodman, son of Larry and Kitty Goodman, who owns MGI Marketing both have estimated fortunes of €2m each which was enough to secure them 17th place in the Ireland’s young rich list for those 30 and under.

Oxigen fined €1,000 over odours emanating from Coes Road facility

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Oxigen Environmental Ltd were last week prosecuted and fined €1,000 at Dundalk District Court.

The penalty for the waste company came about following an EPA investigation launched last year following complaints about offensive odours in the vicinity of Oxigen’s Coes Road facility.

Residents from the likes of Bay Estate, Hyde Park, Belfry Gardens and Meadow Grove had all complained about the issue with Cllr Martin Bellew, who lives in the area, telling a meeting of Dundalk Town Council last year that people attending last October’s St Gerard’s Novena in St Joseph’s Redemptorist Church had to run to their cars after one of the Masses because of how strong the smell was.

The company and its director Aidan Doyle pleaded guilty to a summons under the Waste Management Act, which related to October 24th 2012.

The court was told the smell coming from the plant was caused by the stockpiling of brown-bin waste in a building at the plant, with the odours breaching the terms of Oxigen’s licence from the EPA.

An inspector visited the site on numerous occasions recently and found that the problem had now been resolved.

According to LMFM, Oxigen’s barrister told the court that the Coes Road facility was now a transfer unit, where roadside collectors unload and the waste is moved offsite. He added there are plans to block up some of the doors permanently.

The court was also told that Oxigen is a big employer in the area with around 100 of its 400-strong workforce in Dundalk.

After hearing the company had paid the EPA’s legal and inspection costs of €9,000, Judge Flann Brennan gave Aidan Doyle the benefit of the Probation Act and fined Oxigen €1,000.

Oxigen fined €2,500 for failure to segregate waste

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Oxigen Environmental have been fined €2,500 for flagrantly breaching their waste collection permit, in a case that was taken against them by Louth County Council and the EPA following a number of complaints to the local authority about a strong smell near to their Coes Road facility.

As well as the €2,500 fine, the waste recycling company will also have to pay costs of €1,100 on top of that after being found guilty of breaching the condition of their waste licence by mixing dry recyclable waste and domestic waste.

Their failure to separate these waste types led to a breach of their permit, the court heard.

Frank Pentony, Director of Services for Louth County Council, told LMFM: “We are pleased with the conviction.

“We are trying to convince householders to segregate their waste so we would expect the waste companies to adhere to that too.

“The requirement is on the operator to ensure the waste is not mixed,” he said.

A large number of residents in the Coe’s Road, Bay Estate, Belfry Gardens and St Alphonsus Road areas had complained about the stench from the Oxigen facility in recent months.

The matter was then raised at council level by a number of councillors including Oliver Morgan and Martin Bellew.