| Irish:An Roinn Bonneagair; Ulster-Scots:Depairment fur Infrastructure | |
| Department overview | |
|---|---|
| Formed | May 2016 |
| Preceding Department |
|
| Jurisdiction | Northern Ireland |
| Headquarters | James House, 2-4 Cromac Avenue, Belfast, BT7 2JA |
| Employees | 2,279 (March 2019)[1] |
| Annual budget | £291.4 million (current) & £268.2 million (capital) for 2018–19[2] |
| Minister responsible | |
| Department executive |
|
| Website | www.infrastructure-ni.gov.uk |
| This article is part ofa series within the Politics of the United Kingdom on the |
Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland |
TheDepartment for Infrastructure (DfI,Irish:An Roinn Bonneagair;[5]Ulster Scots:Depairment fur Infrastructure) is adevolvedNorthern Ireland government department in theNorthern Ireland Executive.
Up until May 2016, the department was called theDepartment for Regional Development.
DfI's overall aim is to "improve quality of life by securing transport and water infrastructure and shaping the region's long-term strategic development".[6]
The department's main responsibilities include[7]
Two transport matters arereserved to Westminster and are therefore not devolved:[8]
DfI's main counterparts in theUnited Kingdom Government are:
In theIrish Government, its main counterparts are:
TheMinistry of Home Affairs was established on the formation of Northern Ireland in June 1921 and was responsible for a range of non-economic domestic matters, including local government. A separateMinistry of Health and Local Government was formed in 1944 and was subsequently split in 1965, to create theMinistry of Development. An environment ministry existed in the 1974Northern Ireland Executive and the ministry was known as theDepartment of the Environment under direct rule.
The DoE is still a phrase used in everyday language in Northern Ireland to describe DFI Roads, which was once run by the department but is currently an agency of the Department for Infrastructure.
Following areferendum on theBelfast Agreement on 23 May 1998 and the granting ofroyal assent to theNorthern Ireland Act 1998 on 19 November 1998, aNorthern Ireland Assembly andNorthern Ireland Executive were established by theUnited Kingdom Government under Prime MinisterTony Blair. The process was known asdevolution and was set up to return devolved legislative powers to Northern Ireland. DRD was one of five new devolved Northern Ireland departments created in December 1999 by theNorthern Ireland Act 1998 andThe Departments (Northern Ireland) Order 1999.
A devolved minister first took office on 2 December 1999. Devolution was suspended for six periods, during which the department came under the responsibility ofdirect rule ministers from theNorthern Ireland Office:
| Minister | Image | Party | Took office | Left office | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Peter Robinson | DUP | 29 November 1999 | 11 February 2000 | ||
| Office suspended | |||||
| Peter Robinson | DUP | 30 May 2000 | 26 July 2000 | ||
| Gregory Campbell | DUP | 27 July 2000 | 18 October 2001[22] | ||
| Peter Robinson | DUP | 25 October 2001 | 11 October 2002 | ||
| Office suspended | |||||
| Conor Murphy | Sinn Féin | 14 May 2007 | 4 May 2011 | ||
| Danny Kennedy | UUP | 16 May 2011 | 2 September 2015 | ||
| Michelle McIlveen | DUP | 21 September 2015 | 30 March 2016[note 1] | ||
| Office renamedMinister for Infrastructure | |||||
| Chris Hazzard | Sinn Féin | 25 May 2016 | 26 January 2017 | ||
| Office suspended | |||||
| Nichola Mallon | SDLP | 11 January 2020 | 5 May 2022 | ||
| John O'Dowd | Sinn Féin | 16 May 2022 | 27 October 2022 | ||
| Office suspended | |||||
| John O'Dowd | Sinn Féin | 3 February 2024 | 3 February 2025 | ||
| Liz Kimmins | Sinn Féin | 3 February 2025 | Incumbent | ||
During the periods of suspension, the following ministers of theNorthern Ireland Office were responsible for the department: