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Council split on Causeway lights 30.05.10

by Damian Dowds, Inishowen Independent

BUNCRANA Town Council members have clashed over whether to install traffic lights at the junction of the Causeway Road and Cockhill Road.
A proposal from Cllr Joe Doherty to install traffic lights at the junction was defeated after a lively debate at last week’s Town Council meeting. Cllr Doherty said that he was making the proposal on safety grounds and having surveyed 100 people, 95% were in favour of installing lights at the junction. He called on Donegal County Council to carry out the work as soon as possible.
The proposal was seconded by Cllr Pádraig Mac Lochlainn, who, having heard arguments against it later withdrew his support.
Cllrs Nicholas Crossan and Peter McLaughlin said that traffic lights would put The General’s Shop out of business.
“It’s a ludicrous idea and would put the shop out of business,” Cllr Crossan said. “I won’t be voting to put anyone out of business. A roundabout is a better solution.”
Cllr Crossan rejected Cllr Doherty’s suggestion that he was scaremongering.
Speaking to the Inishowen Independent on Tuesday,
The Causeway Road on approach to The General's Shop, Buncrana.
Patrick McLaughlin of the General’s Shop said that the installation of traffic lights would be the death knell for the business and he rejected the claim that the junction is dangerous.
“I’ve lived here for nearly 50 years and I don’t recall any major accidents,” Mr McLaughlin said. “Cllr Doherty spoke about safety aspects, but there haven’t been many tips or bumps here in recent years and the guards and other relevant authorities can verify that. If there were crashes here on a regular basis then it would be different, but this is an attempt to solve a problem that doesn’t exist. There are more dangerous junctions in Buncrana than this.”
Mr McLaughlin said he and other family members met with councillors last year and explained their case. However, he added that Cllr Doherty has never met with them to discuss the issue and that was disappointing.
“Initially, the lights were proposed to help ease traffic congestion but we met with Council engineers and suggested a second lane for traffic turning left onto Cockhill Road and that has really improved things,” McLaughlin said. “Other than at the peak times in the morning and evening, traffic flows perfectly well through the junction. But now they’re talking about safety as the reason for putting in the lights. If some councillors had their way, there would be lights at the West End, SuperValu, the Cassie Road, Westbrook Bridge, Kearney’s Pass and Cockhill Bridge. That’s six sets of traffic lights in less than a mile. You wouldn’t see it in Dublin.”
Mr McLaughlin said that the installation of traffic lights would require an exclusion zone that would prevent customers from parking within 20 metres on either side of the shop and cause problems for deliveries, and indeed access and egress from the family home.
“We might as well hand in the keys to the business if that happened,” he said. “Who would park 20 or 30 yards away to use the shop? Who would carry a bag of coal or a bottle of gas that distance?”
Meanwhile, Donegal County Council’s road design team is to examine the possibility of moving the traffic lights at the West End. The lights, which don’t turn green because they leads onto a roundabout, cause confusion to locals and visitors alike and town engineer Donal Walker said that road design would analyse whether it could be moved.
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