Paddy McKillen jnr company case over Covid construction pause adjourned

Blue Whisp claims restrictions are irrational, disproportionate and discriminatory

The judge said that was all very constructive and adjourned the matter to April 13th
The judge said that was all very constructive and adjourned the matter to April 13th

A challenge by a Paddy McKillen jnr company over the extension of Covid-19 regulations preventing some 60 per cent of the construction industry from operating has been adjourned to next month and is expected to get an early hearing date.

When the case returned before Mr Justice Charles Meenan at the High Court on Friday, he agreed, on consent of the sides, to adjourn it to April 13th, indicating he anticipated setting an early hearing date.

Blue Whisp, part of Mr McKillen’s Oakmount Group, has brought judicial review proceedings against the Minister for Heath over the extension of the regulations to at least April 5th.

The firm claims the Minister has unlawfully introduced “selective exemptions” for apparently “politically expedient” construction projects, primarily public sector and multinational backed projects.

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Matthew Ryan, a director of the company, said in an affidavit the regulations had resulted in delays to its development of 48 apartments on a site known as The Pinnacle in Mount Merrion, Dublin, which would deliver “badly needed housing” in an area of the city where demand was very high and supply very low, construction having been paused since January 8th.

The company, and Oakmout, “do not remotely underestimate” the threat posed by Covid-19 to the health and wellbeing of the Irish population, do not question the reliability of the scientific evidence relied on by the Government and recognise the Government faces incredibly difficult policy decisions, he said.

Very urgent

Notwithstanding all of that, the company had formed the conclusion the new regulations were “objectively unjustifiable” and “do not serve a genuine health objective”, Mr Ryan said.

Rossa Fanning SC, with Stephen Walsh , for the firm, sought leave to bring the judicial review challenge last week, stressing it was very urgent because the continuing closure of activity means very serious commercial consequences for his client.

Mr Justice Meenan directed the leave application be made on notice to the Minister and returned the matter to Friday.

Mr Fanning told the judge on Friday there had been constructive discussions with the Minister’s side, represented by Michael Cush SC and Caren Geoghegan, about how to deal with the matter in the most efficient way.

While the Minister opposed leave for judicial review, he had consented to a telescoped hearing, meaning the leave application and the full hearing would be heard together, counsel said.

The sides had also agreed on dates for the exchange of documents, which would see the case back before the court on April 13th, when he would be seeking a hearing date, Mr Fanning said.

Early hearing

The judge said that was all very constructive and adjourned the matter to April 13th. He indicated, if the case would not take much more than two days as Mr Fanning suggested, it would get an early hearing.

In its proceedings, Blue Whisp says it was not challenging the primary or secondary legislation introduced to slow the spread of the virus but rather was challenging one aspect of the regulations on grounds there was no basis in the primary legislation for the Minister to have distinguished between different types of construction works and by exempting some kinds of works from the restrictions.

It claims the restrictions, and the failure to allow the entire construction sector to reopen, is irrational, disproportionate and unlawfully discriminatory and breach the Minister’s duties of fairness and equal treatment.

The exemptions for certain construction activities are being decided by the purpose of the construction project when Covid-19 does not distinguish between a data centre and a private housing development, it is claimed. That is “unjustifiable discrimination” and did not take into account the changes in the public health landscape since January.

There is marginal evidence of Covid-19 infection associated with the 40 per cent of the construction industry that is operating, it is argued.

Mary Carolan

Mary Carolan

Mary Carolan is the Legal Affairs Correspondent of the Irish Times