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Gardai move in with Council  02.03.10

by Linda McGrory

DONEGAL County Council is giving a temporary home to Gardai who have been left without a station in Inishowen.
The Council yesterday opened its doors to the force in Carndonagh who have had to move out of their old station for refurbishment works.
The unique deal was reached on Friday after local councillors and community workers expressed concern that the town would be left without essential Garda cover.
It was initially agreed the displaced officers would work out of two sister stations several miles away in Malin and Clonmany. But after local objections, Garda chiefs requested permission from Donegal County Council for temporary use of one of their offices, located just yards from the existing station, in Carndonagh Public Services Centre. The new office opened to the public yesterday and is expected to be in use for the next three months from Monday to Friday, 10am to 3pm.
"This is a public office as distinct from a station but the public can still call in for all their usual enquiries to Gardai including passport applications, motor tax and lottery permits. And the telephone number remains the same," said a garda spokesperson.
Local Fianna Fáil councillor, Charlie McConalogue
The old Garda Station at Malin Road, Carndonagh, that will undergo renovations.
welcomed the deal reached by the authorities on behalf of the Carndonagh public.
"I would like to thank Garda Superintendant William Johnston and Donegal County Council area manager Eunan Kelly for their work in achieving this conclusion," said Cllr McConalogue. He also welcomed the appointment of a new Garda Sergeant, Bernard Gilroy, to Carndonagh, bringing the number of sergeants attached to the station to two. He said he hoped the appointment would reassure people locally that there would be no dilution of policing services in the town during the refurbishment.
However, Councillor Pádraig MacLochlainn slated recent developments and hit out at “four years of broken promises”.
“Four years ago, then Government TD., Cecilia Keaveney announced she had received confirmation of a 24-hour Garda cover for North Inishowen in a new station based in Carndonagh. This was welcomed by all and followed a number of spates of crime across the peninsula," said the Sinn Féin councillor.
“It is clear that Carndonagh is being badly failed by this Government. First the closure of Carndonagh Courthouse and now a portable cabin in place of a new 24-hour Garda station. The time for guff is long over. The people of Carndonagh and North Inishowen want straight answers," he said.
Meanwhile, Senator Cecilia Keaveney said she was furious that €175,000 was being spent on interim measures for Carndonagh Garda accommodation when just a little more would pay for a permanent solution.
"I am informed that there is little prospect of anything substantive happening on the new (Carndonagh) Garda station in the immediate term, as it has not been prioritised by Garda Housing," she said.
"I am simply furious at this as I have been approached by a number of people offering other permanent solutions. I have passed those solutions to Minister Martin Manseragh and Minister Dermot Ahern and Gardai at local and national level. The solutions that I had offered were both inexpensive and had a capacity to service the needs of North Inishowen into the future," she added. Carn Gardai can be contacted on the existing number, 93 74109.
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