AGM 2026
April 21, 2026

Grafton Architects presented the Village Ideas to the SAMRA AGM on 13th May 2026. (Left to Right) Philippe O'Sullivan (Director Grafton), David Turner (Chair of SAMRA), Yvonne Farrell (Director and Co-founder of Grafton), Niall McElroy (SAMRA's lead on the Village Ideas Project) and Shane Twohig (Project Architect Grafton).
ButtonSAMRA AGM - John Loughran, owner of The Sandymount Hotel and strong supporter of SAMRA’s work, addressed the gathering.
ButtonSAMRA AGM - Chair of SAMRA David Turner presents to the gathering.
ButtonSAMRA AGM - Community Garda Sgt John Healy presented to the meeting and advised people to keep their cars locked and be careful of random callers seeking to do work.
ButtonSAMRA AGM – Full House.
ButtonSAMRA AGM - SAMRA launched its new exciting logo which aims to capture what’s unique in the village. The Village Green is depicted at the centre surrounded by representation of the 5-road junction which meet at the Green with the colours reflecting the sky, beach and strand. Pictured at the launch are SAMRA Committee members Karl Anderson, David Turner (Chair) and Niall McElroy.
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April 13, 2026
Fast facts Raw Sewage outflow occurs across from St Albans/Strand Road 10-12x per year Discharge pumps respond to high water level to avoid flooding at St Albans residential area Raw Sewage released is unfiltered with condoms and sanitary products left deposited on the beach amongst faeces Creates an immediate Public Health Hazard to Dublin Bay Sandymount & Merrion Beach Sandymount & Merrion Beach is used by 100s of walkers, pedestrians per day There is no/inadequate public signage of the hazard There is no clean-up operation triggered by DCC or Irish Water It can take + 2 weeks to clean up after each event Correspondence has been formally exchanged with DCC CEO on incidents dating back to 03/06/2022 c/w photographic evidence of the extent of beach erosion and evidence of health hazard and lack of clean-up A complaint to EPA was formally filed 03/11 2022 with all back-up and Irish Water formally closed out the complaint 16/11/2022 The event of 11/05/2023 carries video evidence of the flow and the aftermath on the beach, widely reported on the media Irish Water are responsible for this system BUT carry no responsibility for Clean Up DCC do not accept responsibility for clean-up below the High Water line and will only clean-up on a limited discretionary requested basis on the Strand There is clear acceptance by our agencies of Dublin City Council and Irish Water of the creation of a Public Health Hazard with no effort made to provide signage or clean-up services It is asserted that Ireland’s agencies including the EPA have become normalised to the acceptance of this status on Ireland’s capital city beach – and are prepared to leave the public at risk to this hazard Notes from meeting with Uisce Eireann, Deputy James Geoghegan TD and SAMRA , 4 TH February 2026 Attendees Deputy James Geoghegan TD SAMRA: David Turner - Chair Karl Anderson - Strategic Communications and Media UISCE EIREANN Steve Seymour – Head of Asset Management Ted O’Reilly – Asset Planning Senior Manager Michael Goss – Wastewater Network Manager AGENDA 1. Extent of Current BioHazard · Number of people, children and pets exposure on the city beach · Raw sewage to beach, media : video, pictures (as per SAMRA website) · Dublin Bay (UNESCO Biosphere and the only associated with a capital city) a previous Blue Flag beach - now the 2nd worst performing in the state 2. What is the Plan to STOP the pollution at St Albans outfall ? Opportunity : Inclusion into the promenade flood alleviation scope 3. Immediately Available Actions to Uisce Éireann Signage Clean-up 4. As the Accountable Agency - WHAT IS Uisce Éireann's Commitment Project Timeline 3 decades on MEETING KEY POINTS James Geoghegan invited SAMRA to overview the context of why we’re here after his challenge to Uisce Eireaann (UE) Sean Laffey in the Dail PAC on 6th November SAMRA overviewed key context points commenting on UE opening slide of a St Albans flooding. The correct priority is in place to pump to the beach rather than flood residential home HOWEVER, the city UNESCO beach has become a toxic place and people, children, dogs are routinely getting sick AND this has been going on for 3 decades - what is UE plan ? UE spent 45 minutes explaining from an engineering perspective, why this a legacy issue and a very complex problem to resolve: development of the hydraulic model drainage area plan (DAP) needed to inform feasibility assessments and decisions: 2 years; due to be complete in 2026 for St Albans area For a 1:5 year storm, containment of St Albans upstream drainage area 45,000 people = 17,000m3 tank (9 Olympic swimming pools) and no identifiable storage site However, to set expectations there are 40-50 DAPs in progress across Ireland Also, to get through to a Capital Funded Plan - minimum 7-10 years (and probably more given the reference of the Blanchardstown plan which took 5 years on a greenfield site outside the complexity of Dublin) UE overviewed what they have/are doing with respect to St Albans: weir to reduce backflow improved pump system at Aylesbury improved telemetry for pump activation annunciation pump performance monitoring to avoid breakdowns DCC beach clean-up service to UE at present and staff will transfer to UE by the end of 2026 - increasing transparency UE response Priorities : response < 4hours for internal flooding to certain premises response < 12 hours for flooding to gardens & streets, etc UE confirmed that the above are all incremental and in reality we have minimum 7-10 years to wait with current status quo, to get to a solution - where residents meanwhile have to cope with toxic conditions We asked questions and discussed : possibility of running an extension pipe across the beach to eliminate the risk whilst engineering is underway in parallel - UE - planning permissions/delays incorporation of a local break tank: volume needed too high and space restrictions incorporation of a line into the upcoming flood defence works - will be explored with OPW and Jacobs exertion of external fines from EU - as with Cork impending, not clear this will make a difference exertion of political pressure - unclear In view of the above, we asked UE to consider how to minimise risk to people whilst the engineering is developed: Communication - there is currently NONE Signage - what is in place is INADEQUATE Clean-up - there is currently LITTLE OR NONE SUMMARY UE presented the complexity of the problem that they have inherited and are working through from an engineering perspective UE did not present any options of what they can do to mitigate risk to people UE did not make any commitments or present any mitigation plan at this meeting BUT they undertook to now consider mitigation options David Turner Chair SAMRA

April 13, 2026
SAMSEC is currently in the process of commissioning an Energy Management Plan for Sandymount. The Steering Committee has engaged Michael Hanratty of IHER as consultant to draw up this plan in co-operation with the committee, which will be funded by our SEAI Sustainable Energy Communities grant of 25,000 Euro. The Energy Management Plan will consist of an audit of energy use in Sandymount, together with a “Register of Opportunities”, or list of ways that residents, community groups and businesses can save energy and improve our area's carbon footprint. The focus will be on retrofitting houses. The Steering Committee has selected 15 homes as 'Domestic Participants, representative of Sandymount house types, to undergo various types of SEAI energy assessments. The reports will be published, anonymously, in the Energy Management Plan, so as to share all the useful practical information about retrofitting, with householders in similar properties. We also must finish selecting 12 non-domestic buildings, in community or commercial use, for energy assessments, and would welcome suggestions. Sandymount's Energy Management Plan should be published, and launched, in October or November. We also hope to join the 'Sustainable Energy Communities Buying Club' organised by CODEMA, City of Dublin Energy Management Agency, which is launching this autumn. This should greatly help to simplify the process for householders trying to organise grants and contractors for retrofitting their projects, large and small. We are very grateful to Gerard Doherty, our SEAI Sustainable Energy Communities mentor, for all his help and support.











