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The city was divided into fifteen wards, each ward to have one alderman and three councillors. [1] The wards were revised by order under the Dublin Corporation Act 1849 ( 12 & 13 Vict. c. 85), and by further act, the Corporation of Dublin Act 1850 ( 13 & 14 Vict. c. 50), were designated to correspond to former wards for the purpose of ...
The functions of the City Council include: public housing, city library services, refuse services, drainage, driver and vehicle licensing, planning and roads.The Dublin City Council's Draft Budget for 2023 estimates a total revenue of €1.24 bn, which is an increase of €0.11bn from the previous year.
Prior to the Local Government (Ireland) Act 1919, the city of Dublin was divided into wards and County Dublin was divided into district electoral divisions (DEDs) to elect local councillors. After the introduction of multi-member districts elected by the single transferable vote , these units were combined to create local electoral areas .
Dublin didn't start using postal district numbers until 1927 [7]: 371 when the Department of Posts and Telegraphs initiated a scheme that requested senders to add a code to each address in Dublin City and suburbs.
Inside the original Infirmary, there were 13 wards (six allocated to surgical and seven allocated to medical patients) which were mainly located in the two rearward-orientated wings; initially, these wards could accommodate 187 beds. The central building span included offices, staff accommodation, chapel and other facilities. [20]
the Glasnevin, Inn's Quay, North City and Rotunda Wards, the portion of the Mountjoy Ward not included in the Dublin North-East and the portion of the Cabragh East Ward bounded by a line drawn as follows:—Commencing at the point where the Cabra Road meets the North Circular Road thence westerly along Cabra Road to St. Peter's Road, thence northerly along and to the end of St. Peter's Road ...
An election to all 45 seats on the council of Dublin Corporation took place on 7 June 1979 as part of the 1979 Irish local elections.The city of Dublin was divided into 11 borough electoral areas (BEAs) to elect councillors for a five-year term of office on the electoral system of proportional representation by means of the single transferable vote (PR-STV).
A Dublin Central constituency was created for the first time in 1969 and used at the 1969 and 1973 general elections. It originally spanned both sides of the River Liffey and took in inner city Dublin. It was abolished in 1977, and recreated with different boundaries in 1981.