Newsletter 41
Spring/Summer 2010
COMMENT
One
small step in the right direction
THE news that
Minister for State for the Environment Ciaran Cuffe is to require local
councils to list public rights-of-way is to be welcomed.
It is, however,
but a very small step on a long journey towards the kind of modern
legislative framework protecting public access to the landscape which is
currently enjoyed by almost every other civilised nation.
Public
rights-of-way nationally have enjoyed virtually no protection since the
Planning Act 2000 let councils off the hook by no longer requiring them
to even list, let alone preserve, and protect traditional walking
routes. This law has resulted in virtually no actions being taken
against those who block and eradicate such routes. Only the actions of
courageous individuals, such as those involved in the disputes over
access in the Glencree Valley, has saved further erosion of walking
rights.
Mr Cuffe’s
modest proposed amendment has three glaring failings. Firstly, it will
still be up to local authorities to decide which putative public
rights-of-way should be listed following representations from the
public. This will give officials an enormous ‘out’ as they will, as
before, shy away from any route which is likely to provoke a legal
challenge.
Secondly, there is
a manifest reluctance on the part of most councillors to show any
willingness to protect public access because they themselves are
farmers, developers or are depending on such groups for support. This
means that they are singularly unsuited to do this job. A better plan
would have been to set up a robust national commission to list not only
rights-of-way with all their attendant complications, but also access
routes to lakes, rivers, seashores and national monuments. This would
have taken the responsibility away from county councils, ensuring a more
realistic level of protection.
Thirdly, it is
important to remember that simply listing rights-of-way will do nothing
for the right to roam over rough grazing landwhere there is no
established path.
More radical
reform is needed than that proposed by Ciaran Cuffe. We shall continue
to fight for it. Please continue to support us.
New planning Bill puts onus on
councils

THE law will be changed so
as to require local authorities to list and protect public
rights-of-way, Minister for State for the Environment Ciaran Cuffe has
promised.
The new rules requiring
local authorities to list rights-of-way has been proposed as a
ministerial amendment to the Planning Bill currently before the Dail.
The Bill is expected to become law before the Oireachtas takes its
three-month Summer break.
The promised amendment will
seek to plug a glaring gap in the 2000 Planning Act which merely
requires that local authorities "may" list public
rights-of-way but does not require them to do so.
This loophole had the
predictable result of enabling most local authorities to shirk any
responsibility for public access. Since no other body has responsibility
for protecting walking routes, the 2000 Act has proved a disaster.
Only one local council, Dun
Laoghaire-Rathdown, has even attempted to create and publicise a list of
protected public access routes. None of the others has bothered to
identify routes for protection.
However, Mr Cuffe concedes
that even after the law changes, it will be up to the councils to decide
what routes to list. This will inevitably mean that they will shy away
from registering those which might be disputed by landowners.
A number of councils,
including Wicklow County Council, abandoned plans for listings after the
farming Irish Farming Association launched a co-ordinated campaign to
object to virtually every single route.
The IFA made it plain at the
time that they would be seeking government funding for farmers with
walking routes over their land.
It is not yet known how the
farming organisations will respond to the planned amendment but there is
growing evidence that they have come to accept that there will be no
payment for access.
Another fine
mess . . .

Lissadell House: €6m proof
that our access laws need a total overhaul
IF you want irrefutable
evidence that Irish access law is a mess which needs a radical overhaul,
look no further than the marathon Lissadell House case. Judge Bryan
McMahon has reserved judgment after the 58-day action in the High Court.
No date has been given for his long-awaited ruling. Costs in the case,
where Sligo County Council has sought to establish four rights-of-way
across the historic estate, are now estimated to exceed €6 million.
That’s half as much again as the €4 million that the owners,
barristers Constance Cassidy SC and Ed Walsh SC, paid for the historic
mansion and 410 acres of land in 2003.The central problem in the dispute
arises out of the lack of clarity as to what constitutes a public right
of way, how it can be established and what rights it confers. There are
as many views as there are barristers in the Law Library and most of the
legal argument evolves around 17th, 18th and 19th
Century English law.
Why? Because no Irish
government has ever bothered to update the statutes. Who loses? That
depends on Judge McMahon’s decision. However, the government’s
failure to address the need for sensible clear laws over access could
land the already hard-pressed taxpayer, via the Sligo ratepayer, with
yet another huge and unnecessary bill.
Walking
pilgrim Olivia sees the light

VETERAN broadcaster
Olivia O’Leary pulled no punches when she
compared the lack of facilities and luke-warm welcome for walkers in
Ireland with that of Spain in a recent ‘Drive Time’ slot on RTE
Radio One.
Describing the delights of
walking through the Galician countryside on a walking holiday she had
just enjoyed on the Camino de Santiago, Olivia marvelled at how welcome
she had felt there and described her passage through ploughed fields and
along bridle paths, which gave "a real sense of touching the
country; of seeing and meeting people about their ordinary tasks –
milking the cows, weeding the maize fields, cutting the silage, watering
the vegetable patch.
"Almost everybody we
met was Galician and well used to people walking through their farmyard
or tiny hamlet. And I thought: ‘Why can’t we do this? Our country
was made for walking. We have the countryside, the deep green woods, the
soft hills, the bridle paths. We have vast areas owned by the State –
by Coillte, by Waterways Ireland, by the National Parks and Wildlife
Service, by the ESB, by the OPW, by Bord na Mona."
Referring to the scheme here
under which farmers are paid by the State to maintain stiles and paths,
she adds: "That they should have to be paid for something that
benefits the whole local economy is a scandal but it reflects something
that is evident right through the Irish tourist industry - what an
expert in Bord Failte wearily refers to as ‘a determination to remain
fragmented’.
"Because what was
evident in Galicia compared to here was a co-ordinated approach. Walkers
were catered for every step of the way. Superb but discreet signposting;
when following the highway, hedges shielding us from the traffic; little
unattended stalls in the woods with fruit and honesty boxes for payment;
cafes in every hamlet and albergos and hostels and hotels with special
rates for walkers. Every town had a shop with walking gear. Great.
"Here (in Ireland)
there is little co-ordination or evidence that the country takes
tourists seriously. State agencies who control wild and beautiful places
behave as though the public has no right to be there. Coillte in
particular seem to regard themselves as tree-farmers and the public as a
nuisance. Other agencies regard their role as preserving and conserving,
all of which is vital. But this is the taxpayers’ treasure too and it
has to be shared for all our good."
Olivia went on to bemoan the
fact that maps for walking are often hard to find in Irish towns. She
attacked the use of garish and inappropriate signage and the fact that
so many of our hotels and B&Bs are not equipped to cater for or even
advise walkers.
"At a time when
multinational manufacturing jobs and service jobs are disappearing
overseas, tourism is something that we can do for ourselves and it
creates jobs and foreign earnings and we are getting cheaper and we are
getting much too poor to be posh."
Amen to all of that, Olivia.
Desecration
at the Abbey
By
Fergal McLoughlin

Part of
Kylemore Lake in Connemara has been fenced off


KYLEMORE
Abbey in Connemara is one of the most
beautiful and renowned spots in Ireland. Set among the majesty of the
Twelve Bens and beside the shimmering waters of Kylemore Lake, it is
described in the Kylemore website as " the
No.1 tourist attraction in the West of Ireland", with
"woodland walks and scenic photographic opportunities".
My wife Judy and I were
staying in Connemara in April, and we decided to visit Kylemore Abbey
and enjoy a walk. We started from what is known as Kylemore village on
the Inagh side of Kylemore Lake. The Ordnance Survey map shows a path
which runs from the village along the lakeside, leading to the N59 and
on to to Kylemore Abbey - a distance of about 8 miles.
We parked the car near the
start of the Kylemore River and began the walk in bright sunshine in the
most stunning scenery. "Where on earth would you get a better place
to walk?" was our mutual sentiment as we set out along the path to
the lake. The rough path climbed upwards past a few farmhouses.
Our joy was short-lived. 300
metres into the walk, we were confronted by a fence topped with barbed
wire and a notice saying" PRIVATE - STRICTLY
NO ENTRY".
I was not unduly surprised
to see this, having been confronted by similar signs in Ireland. However
Judy was gob-smacked. She could not comprehend that this incredibly
beautiful route was blocked. "What’ll we do?" she asked. I
was all on for going ahead. In fact I quite relished the prospect of
meeting the person who had the audacity to put up the sign. However,
Judy was quite terrified at the thought of proceeding further. Earlier
we had passed a house with barking dogs locked in cages. "What if
they set the dogs on us?" asked Judy.
Discretion being the better
part of valour, we decided to seek the advice of a local man we had seen
earlier on the walk. A lovely gentle man, he said: "Sure I do tell
people to take no notice of that oul’ sign. Go on ahead." He
invited us in for a cup of tea and told us that the path was the old
road from the village to Kylemore Abbey. The person who put up the sign
owned only a part of the path, and he lived in Renvyle - 15 miles away.
He also said that in recent times the number of people walking the path
had dropped considerably. Little wonder!
So off we set again, Judy
happy in the knowledge that she would not be savaged by dogs. The
scenery by now was utterly spectacular. A mile further on we came across
a second more pronounced, more aggressive sign on a gate:"
PRIVATE PROPERTY – STRICTLY NO ENTRY – KEEP OUT".
We ignored the sign and kept
on, Judy’s blood now boiling. " I’d love to meet that b.....!
How dare he stop me walking on the ground of Ireland?"
We walked on along the
lakeshore, the prospect of coffee at the Kylemore cafe becoming more
attractive. We knew the little causeway between Kylemore Lake and
Pollacoppul Lough which led onto the N59, Kylemore Abbey and coffee. But
no way! This time it really was a case of thou shalt not pass. At the
other side of the causeway was a newly-erected, massive, black security
gate,electronically locked.
On either side of the
causeway were steel poles with mesh wire - in case anyone dared climb
the gate. Behind it was a two-storey white house which used to be a
guest house – the gates presumably erected by the present owner.
Further progress was
impossible. What was doubly annoying was the realisation that it is now
impossible for walkers to gain access to the lake walk from the N59 –
it is blocked by the impenetrable, ugly, black gates of the causeway.
This means that the only way to walk around the lake is on the N59 –
an extremely busy road, especially at peak tourist times.
And so we turned back,
feeling totally frustrated. "Ireland of the Welcomes" indeed!
Fergal
McLoughlin is a Keep Ireland Open committee member.
Ireland
back in the dock over failure to act on
fencing ruling
THE European Court of
Justice has opened hearings in a case against the Irish government which
could have huge implications for planning laws and particularly for the
continued existence of unsightly fencing which blocks public access
around the country.
The case has come about
thanks to KIO’s successful submission to the Commission to the effect
that local authorities are failing to protect the visual environment by
flouting EU regulations requiring proper environmental impact
assessments before planning decisions are made.
In November, 2008 the ECJ
ruled that Ireland was in breach of EU Directive 85/337 because local
authorities were granting widespread permissions for fencing and other
structures without the required assessments.
The ruling held that local
authorities are wrong to claim they have discretion over whether or not
to consider environmental impact statements before considering planning
applications.
Since the original ruling
nearly two years ago Ireland has failed to show how it intends to
implement the court’s ruling. A further ruling against the government
in the present case could lead to the Irish government – and that
means you, the taxpayer - being loaded with huge costs and further
litigation arising from their having sanctioned developments in a manner
contrary to EU law.
KIO’s involvement in the
case, which represents a significant victory for our Western Branch,
arose out of our growing anger at the way so much of the country has
been rendered inaccessible by unnecessary and unsightly fencing. Under
the 2000 Planning Act fences in areas traditionally open are subject to
planning permission but this law is observed more in breach than
observance. Even where planning permission was sought, proper
environmental assessment has been a rarity.
We will keep our eye on
events in the European Court. See future newsletters for details.
KIO helps
judge call a halt to land grab on historic commonage
A FARMER who tried to fence
off more than 50 acres of commonage land for his own use has been made
to take his fence down by a District Court Judge.
Judge Michael Connellan also
ordered farmer Richard Redden to pay €2,500 of Wicklow County
Council’s costs even though he had complied with the court’s order.
Redden had made his land
grab on Ballyremon Common on the East side of the Old Long Hill near
Enniskerry.
KIO played a substantial
part in the case. We helped the other seven commonage holders to make a
case to Wicklow County Council to the effect that Redden had erected the
fence without the necessary planning permission.
Initially the council had
opted not to take action but when they received the sworn affidavits we
had gathered from walkers, cyclists, paragliders and horseriders who
felt their use of the commons was adversely affected by the fence they
changed their minds and took Redden to court.
The case represents a rare
case where KIO has made common cause with the IFA as the problem was
brought to our attention by Wicklow IFA representative Michael Keegan.
Long old
road to justice
THE long-running High
Court case over a vital walking route in the Glencree Valley in Co
Wicklow has been delayed yet again.
Counsel for landowner
Joe Walker had held the proceedings up for six months while they argued
that a hearing could not go ahead unless the defendants, two members of
the Enniskerry Walking Association, enjoined the Attorney General to
their case.
In mid-June they
dropped this demand. However, the case, in which the wealthy landowner
and businessman is suing the walkers for insisting that a public
right-of-way runs over an old road across his land, is now unlikely to
get a full hearing before the Autumn.
The Irish Ramblers,
An Oige and several other walking groups are scheduled to give evidence
in the case, which could run for up to a week and has already incurred
substantial costs.
Access officers – the names you need to know
WHEN you run into an access problem, your first port
of call should be to your local Rural Recreation
Officer. He or she will be grateful for any updates regarding
access and will usually approach the landowner in question to see if
there is a problem which can be solved.
Here is a list of the current RROs:
Co Laois:
Ann Lannigan (tel: 057 8661900 or 086 8447338; email rrolaois@gmail.com);
Co Sligo:
Deirdre Kennedy (tel: 071 9141138, Fax 071 9141162;
Co Roscommon:
Martin Dunn (tel: 0906 488292; email martin@southrosleader.ie);
South Kerry:
Maria Munckhof (tel: 066 9472724 -064 41930; mobile:
087 2957780; email: mfarmer@skdp.net;
South Tipperary:
Con Ryan (tel: 062 33360; mobile 087 0556465; email: con@gleann.net;
West Cork:
James O’Mahoney (tel: 023 34035; mobiles 0870556465
and 0870556465); email: jamessheepshead@eircom.net;
Co Wicklow:
Pat Mellon (tel: 0404 46977; mobile 087 7888188)
email: pmellon@wicklowleader.ie;
Co Galway:
Thomás Mac Gearailt (tel: 091 593410/091 523945;
mobile: 087 0521339) email: slichonamara@hotmail.com;
Co Mayo:
Tom Carolan (tel: 094 9366692; mobile: 087 2196930)
email: tcarolan@southmayo.com;
Co Clare:
Eimear McCarthy (tel: 094 9366692; mobile: 086
0495041); email: emccarthy@cldc.ie
Published by Keep Ireland Open. KIO is an
environmental organisation dedicated to preserving public access to
our mountains, lakes, seashore and countryside.
Correspondence
If you have any comments on the newsletter or any
other aspect of our campaign or if you would like to describe your own
problems with access to the countryside send correspondence to
The Secretary, KIO, 56 Pine Valley Avenue,
Rathfarnham, Dublin 16
or e-mail : info@keepirelandopen.org
Links to Affiliated organisations
An Óige
Catholic
Girl Guides of Ireland
Countrywide
Hillwalkers Association
Friends of
the Murrough
Irish Ramblers
Club
Irish Rural
Link
Irish Wildlife Trust
Killarney
Mountaineering Club
Scouting Ireland
Sean-Nuachtlitreacha
Má theastaíonn uait muid a chur ar an eolas maidir le
fadhb ar bith i do cheantar cuir ríomhphost chugainn le do thoil ag
info@keepirelandopen.org
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