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Chapter Forty-eight

Mo Brady loved a bit of a fight, not a physical punch-up but a good verbal argument to get the council members going. The cut and thrust of political life stirred her in a most unexpected way. When she was a child she’d loved the story of Joan of Arc, the young woman who had fought and died for the people of France. Banners flying, guns blazing, that was the way Mo always liked to do business. She wasn’t one for whispering and scurrying around corridors doing deals and reaching secret agreements behind people’s backs. No, she was upfront. She said what she meant and was often accused of wearing her heart on her sleeve. Tonight was going to be one of those nights, she could feel it in her bones.

The City Council Chamber was packed and it looked like it was going to be a long session. On the agenda were new traffic plans for the city, the upgrading of the public buildings on Parnell Street and Bachelor’s Walk and the redevelopment of South Anne Street.

She listened as they went through the first items, voting for the preservation of the four-storey Georgian houses on Parnell Street. Two or three of the members were vociferous in their belief that the buildings were not worth saving and should be bulldozed.

‘Keep the façades and knock the rest,’ suggested Councillor Billy O’Shea. ‘Brand new offices or brand new apartments – that’s what the people want.’

‘I totally disagree with you, Councillor.’

Mo’s heart sank. Kathleen Taylor O’Malley had the floor, which meant they could be here for the night.

‘Architectural heritage must be preserved at all costs,’ she insisted, as she began to read from a long list of the period details of the properties. Coving, cornices, plasterwork, door frames, fan hall-lights, beams, ironwork balustrades, fireplaces. The list went on. Three of the men got up and left. Mo could guess they were heading for Dwyer’s pub round the corner. Mo was half tempted to join them as Kathleen got into her stride.

‘The tenement days in Dublin are long gone, Kathleen,’ interrupted Billy, ‘and I’ll not ask any young couple to live or work in archaic surroundings. By God, I won’t!’

A huge row erupted in the council chamber as neither of them would budge from their stance.

The time ticked by till they came to the order of business that interested Mo most, the plans for South Anne Street. She sat forward on her leather chair, blinking as she looked around.

Mo had studied the plans carefully, got the environmental impact reports and examined the developers’ plans with a fine-tooth comb. As far as she could see, they were buying up every available property on the small street and hoped to acquire even more. The galleria shopping mall, with its escalators to the five floors and underground parking, which hoped to attract a major fashion store to its modern commercial development, was well advanced. However, Casey Coleman now seemed to want to develop another large retail unit on the other side of the street. She thought of the toy shop, the cheese shop, the beautiful hat shop, their painted shopfronts and style all adding to the charm of the street.

All the information was back and she knew the city manager had enjoyed a rather heated meeting with the head of Casey Coleman Holdings and his legal representatives as he sought to discover the true extent of their property holdings on South Anne Street and their plans for these properties. She looked round, waiting to see which of her colleagues would start the ball rolling. There must be objections. Dolores Coffey was half asleep; it was long past the seventy-five-year-old councillor’s bedtime. Finbarr Flood from the Green Party was not lifting his skinny neck above the parapet. Mo straightened herself in her seat, scanning the carefully prepared papers in front of her as she stood up to speak.

‘I have a mandate from the small traders and business holders in this street,’ began the Lady Mayor, waving the sheets with the thousands of signatures that had been collected on Save Our Street Saturday. ‘They call themselves SOS – Save Our Street – and having talked to them and met with them and learned of their problems and the pressures they are under I have to say that this council must listen to them. They are the voice of the people, the citizens of Dublin. A street like this will disappear unless we here in the council are prepared to safeguard its survival.’

She adjusted her glasses, realizing that she had their full attention and so far without objections.

‘As councillors we are not against the redevelopment of Dublin and it becoming a modern European city, but we must ensure we keep our own separate shopping identity and support these smaller indigenous businesses. These are the ones that give colour and life and a sense of place to this city of ours. We must protect and upgrade them while there is still time, before they disappear for good.’

Richard Doyle was nodding and she knew she had his support.

‘We must try to retain our small individual retailers and ancillary businesses. These are what make up the heart of Dublin, the city we all love so much!’ She stopped for a minute to get her breath, have a look around.

Gerry Simmonds and a few others were taking detailed notes.

‘Millions of visitors came to our city last year to enjoy this ancient Viking town that has become a modern city but with a heart. I walk these streets almost every day and this little street is in my neighbourhood. These businesses are the lifeblood of the city and we cannot afford to kill them off, close them down and replace them.

‘The developers have got a massive permit already and I would be most reluctant to see even one more centimetre of planning granted to them in this vicinity. This should be made clear to them. Any shops they have taken over should be expected to reopen in keeping with their original type of street frontage. Perhaps in time we should consider a grant to small traders to encourage them to upgrade and maintain shopfronts and signage, etc.’

‘My Lady Mayor, I must remind you of the late hour,’ interjected Des King, turning in appeal to his party members seated around him.

‘I agree it is late, late in the day for us to preserve our city streets, but I call for an immediate vote on this proposal,’ Mo said with a sweep of her hands. ‘It’s the least we can do to Save Our Streets.’

There was a round of applause with a few objections. Gerry Simmonds stood up to say what high-quality developers Casey Coleman Holdings were and how their proposal would enhance the city.

‘That is accepted,’ she interrupted, ‘but it’s their ability to retain small local businesses that is our concern today.’

Twenty minutes later it went to a vote. Mo was nervous as she looked round at the faces of her party rivals. She could feel her stomach churn as she tried to read their minds, hoping that her fellow councillors would support her.

Over the past few years in politics she had learned that you can’t win every battle, can’t carry every issue, but this was one she firmly believed in.

She held her breath, whooping with excitement when the motion was passed with a large majority. The council also decided to set up a separate group to determine the cost of introducing a grant and to study best practice in maintaining small shops and businesses. Victory was theirs. The little man had won!

‘Good on you, Mo!’ shouted the other councillors afterwards as the Lady Mayor, exhausted from talking to two or three of the journalists present, made her way to the mayoral car. She couldn’t wait to get back home and have a cup of tea with Joe and the kids and tell them all about it.