Traveller family in legal bid to move from ‘rat infested’ site

State’s recognition of Traveller community as an ethnic group cited in support of case

The Traveller Accommodation Programme 2014 to 2018 purported to provide accommodation appropriate to the needs of the Traveller community in general and prospective tenants in particular, the court heard. Photograph: Alan Betson

Eight-month-old twins have to sleep in Moses baskets in a rat infested home with their parents and seven young siblings, the High Court was told Friday.

John and Caroline Sherlock and their nine children have been living in unhealthy, deplorable and dangerous temporary accommodation at Carrowgar, Lahinch, Co Clare, for the past three years, their counsel James O’Reilly SC told the court.

Mr Justice Henry Abbott granted the family leave to seek an order directing Clare County Council to provide them with suitable accommodation under the Traveller Accommodation Programme.

Mr Justice Abbott also directed the local authority to carry out an assessment of the family’s circumstances. He allowed the Sherlocks, who are members of the Traveller community, leave to seek an injunction requiring the county council to take such measures as are necessary to provide them with suitable and permanent accommodation.

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One of the grounds on which leave for a judicial review was sought and granted was based on a Statement of Recognition of the Traveller Community as an Ethnic Group made in Dáil Éireann by the then taoiseach Enda Kenny on March 1st last.

Mr O’Reilly told the court that the Traveller Accommodation Programme 2014 to 2018 purported to provide accommodation appropriate to the needs of the Traveller community in general and prospective tenants in particular. He said the council had failed to provide his clients with permanent accommodation.

John and Caroline, both born and reared in Co Clare, jointly in a sworn affidavit told the court about the “significant rat infestation” and other health hazards including the seepage upwards of sewage through the surrounding grounds of their home. There was a significant influx of insects into the property.

They said their family ranging from babies to teenagers were forced to sleep in inappropriate conditions which meant they had no privacy.

Judge Abbott, granting the family leave to legally challenge the local authority’s failure to provide appropriate housing, expressed surprise that an assessment of their circumstances had to date not been carried out by the council.