Drop Down Menu
  Search...
 
  Business Directory Ad  

Trader considers leaving Buncrana 17.03.10

Parking regime "driving customers away"

A BUSINESSMAN is considering pulling out of Buncrana claiming the town's current parking regime is driving customers away.
Mobile phone trader Francis Callaghan claims the seaside town's retail trade is being "seriously damaged" as a result of a parking fee system that doesn't take into consideration the changed economic times.
He urged Buncrana Town Council to urgently introduce a 30 minute grace period for drivers before a ticket would be issued by parking attendants.
"Shoppers are not coming to Buncrana and are totally avoiding the town," he said. Shoppers can travel to Carndonagh, Derry or Lettekenny and park for a limited time free of charge.
"A 30 minute grace period for all shoppers needs to be applied for those shoppers who wish to park anywhere in the town before a parking ticket could be issued."
Mr Callaghan who runs the 02 franchise in the North West through the Digitalfone network said the message needed to go out that Buncrana "is open for business". He said the opposite perception was currently at play.

"I was a supporter of the parking system in the town when it was implemented two years ago but not the way it’s being implemented at present by Buncrana Town Council.
"I know there was a need for the restrictions two years ago when there was business in the town but that trade has all but collapsed in border counties." Mr Callaghan described a recent scenario in which customers fled his store as a parking attendant approached.
"Recently, the traffic warden issued five
Francis Callaghan
parking tickets in a row to cars parked in the car park at Park Lane, causing panic among customers in our 02 store at the time. We had three customers in the store but they made a run for it, the store emptied in minutes and the customers haven't been seen since."
Mr Callaghan has spoken to Buncrana town clerk Seamus Canning demanding a more lenient approach to the current parking regime.
"Buncrana is not Dublin city centre. It’s a small town in Donegal that needs every bit of assistance that's going.
"I'm not prepared to let this go otherwise we'll have to reassess our Buncrana 02 store operation which has recently been refitted at a cost of €100,000 and move all our 02 business including our head office to Carndonagh. This would mean a loss of rates to Buncrana Town Council."
Mr Callaghan said urgent action now needed to be taken by Council officials to "address the unease among shoppers".
"We all have to work together for the betterment of the town during these recessionary times to help sustain employment and make business happen.
"We need the Council to become more business-friendly and do everything in its power to attract customers to the town instead of discouraging them which is what’s happening at present," he added.
Return to > Top Stories    > News    > Home