newirishman
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It's not trespass as the presence of someone on your property would objectively need to instil fear in the occupant. Workmen installing something on a one-off basis is not trespass. Me turning up in your front garden and staring in your windows every morning very much is trespass.There must be some trespassing laws they violated here.
Thanks. In light of me explicitly telling them they are not allowed to step on my property, I am curious though how it wouldn't be. Workmen installing something, assuming I am asking them to do so, is clearly not trespassing. If I don't want the postman to step on my front garden, I can put the letterbox where it can be reached from the public road. But just turning up on my house and fixing stuff on it? Without even bothering to give me some notice? I mean, imagine the additional uproar if Irish water would have started digging up your front garden without any notice.It's not trespass as the presence of someone on your property would objectively need to instil fear in the occupant. Workmen installing something on a one-off basis is not trespass.
Interestingly, I have an easement registered in the deeds for telephone, power, water, and gas. There is nothing in the deeds for cable tv, and I have never used cable tv services (used to have sky). Used cable broadband for a few years as I couldn't get the required bandwidth over the ancient twisted pair copper, and as soon as I was able to get fibre, I ditched the cable broadband.I'm working from very vague recollection here, but think that legislation was passed when the main cable TV provider was "Cablelink' (once owned by RTE), who I think have ultimately evolved into Virgin.
You mean think of the common good over the rights of the individual?Have a think if you would be ok with removing the option to some neighbours from having Fibre via Virgin Media Network.
So that the law isn’t weaponised by cranks.In light of me explicitly telling them they are not allowed to step on my property, I am curious though how it wouldn't be.
All my neighbours are being fed from the same fibre switch on a pole on the road (It is openeir fibre). With individual fibre cables running to each property. So we have already easily accessible fibre in the street. Why run another one?Have a think if you would be ok with removing the option to some neighbours from having Fibre via Virgin Media Network. Sky and Vodafone are also options with the new fibre line. They may be able to work around you and possibly feed your Neighbours from the other direction but just a consideration.
Well I've been known to occasionally be a grumpy old man (I have not been called a crank so far). I still object to some random installer team drilling holes into my soffit, dragging ladders across my roses, and in general messing around on my property when I am not around. Never mind fitting yet another ugly black box that I have no use for. Especially if I have asked them not to.So that the law isn’t weaponised by cranks.
Because VM use their own fibre infrastructure while most or all other providers operate on OpenEir or equivalent (e.g. SIRO, NBI, etc.).Why run another one?
The new VM cable supports up to 10Gb speeds, the existing cable is 1GB. Other suppliers can use it, increasing competition in your area and potentially lowering costs.So we have already easily accessible fibre in the street. Why run another one?
Source? Eircom are offering 5Gbps over their existing fibre now, which OP already has access to. Or did you mean the previous coax cable?existing cable is 1GB
Section 4(1)(g) of the Planning and Development Acts 2000-2012 grants exemptions for statutory undertakers (which includes authorised telecom operators) to inspect, repair, renew, alter or remove cables or other apparatus without planning permission provided that the works are necessary for maintenance or operational purposes.
The provider could also argue that they and their predecessors, have maintained and used the cable infrastructure on your property, openly, without objection and without explicit permission for over 20 years, and as such they may claim a prescriptive easement to continue maintaining the cables.
I can’t even remember the name of the company now but it was the pre runner of virgin media in the cork area.
Going off the topic but did Cork multichannel not take over from South Coast TV
My pragmatic in-laws have enjoyed free Virgin TV for many years thanks to having a junction box and associated cabling attached to the side of their house.
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