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CITY TRIBUNE

Storm Elsa takes city by surprise

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The flooded area beside the Galway Atlantaquaria and car park close to the Salthill promenade early Thursday morning following Storm Elsa. Photo: Joe O'Shaughnessy.

MET Éireann has borne the brunt of the ire in the aftermath of the damage caused by Storm Elsa on Wednesday that flooded a number of premises and left an estimated 50 vehicles stranded in three car-parks.

The City Council and a number of city councillors have said that the status orange warning issued by Met Éireann only came at 8pm on Wednesday night for a wind event that was already in full swing.

Former Mayor of Galway, Cllr Niall McNelis, said ‘there just had to be a better warning system in place’ than the one that applied on Wednesday night, leading to so many people being caught unawares.

“The Met Éireann orange weather warning was only issued at 8pm and only applied from 9pm – by the time the warning had come into place, the storm had hit us,” said Cllr McNelis.

He stressed that he wasn’t blaming the City Council for the lack of ‘notice’ as they essentially relied on Met Éireann’s early-warning system to prepare for major weather events.

“In fact, I want to commend the efforts of all of the emergency services – the City Council crews, the Fire Brigade, Gardaí, Civil Defence and indeed the private contractors – for their prompt response to what was happening.

“But really, there was no proper advance notice of the severity of this weather event. We just all had to rally around and thankfully we got through it but there was one very hectic hour from around 9pm to 10pm,” said Cllr McNelis.

He added that he and other business people in the vulnerable Spanish Arch/Flood Street area had rallied around to keep their premises intact.

“I do want to get the message out there loud and clear, that as and from Thursday (yesterday) morning, it was business as usual in all the city’s retail areas. This was a short-lived storm and everything is back to normal,” said Cllr McNelis.

However, he said that one section of the storm dam in the Spanish Arch area had not been fully functional.

For more, read this week’s Galway City Tribune.

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CITY TRIBUNE

New bridge in Galway ‘pointless for people on bicycles’

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From the Galway City Tribune – An advocate for cycling infrastructure in Galway has labelled the city’s newest cycle and pedestrian bridge as ‘pointless’ for people on bikes travelling from the Cathedral to Newtownsmyth.

Galway City Council and National Transport Authority (NTA) said the bridge would remove conflicts between pedestrians, cyclists and traffic on the existing bridge.

And it would also facilitate the BusConnects Cross-City Link scheme over the 200-year-old bridge, which is currently with An Bord Pleanála.

But Shane Foran, a cycling campaigner and community member of the Council’s Transport Strategic Policy Committee (SPC), claimed there is confusion whether people on bikes can access Newtownsmyth by turning right off the new bridge.

He said that a review of the BusConnects proposal, “shows them to be inconsistent with the claimed purpose of the new bridge”.

“According to the drawings, there is to be a new one-way street arrangement at Newtownsmyth going north. There is no apparent provision for cyclists to move ‘contra-flow’ to the south.

“Therefore how are cyclists travelling east-west to lawfully access the new cycle bridge from the Newtownsmyth side? The new legal restrictions will arguably also make it pointless for most eastbound cyclists, coming from the university direction, to use the new bridge to travel west to east,” Mr Foran said.

In a submission to An Bord Pleanála on the BusConnects plan, he sought clarity on whether cyclists can travel both ways along Newtownsmyth, to and from the new bridge.

“From my reading of the plans, that would be forbidden. You would no longer lawfully be able to do that,” he said.


This article first appeared in the print edition of the Galway City Tribune. You can support our journalism by subscribing to the Galway City Tribune HERE. A one-year digital subscription costs just €89.00. The print edition is in shops every Friday.


A similar submission to ABP was made by the Galway City Community Network.

“It is not the intention of the proposed scheme to restrict access for cyclists to or from the new Salmon Weir pedestrian and cycle bridge,” the Council said in response.

“The proposed scheme intends that Newtownsmyth will be made a cul-de-sac utilising retractable bollards. The section of Newtownsmyth between the bollards and St Vincent’s Avenue is proposed to act as a shared space for pedestrians and cyclists.

“Both pedestrians and cyclists will be permitted to traverse Newtownsmyth in both directions when the bollards are up, permitting access and egress in both directions for cyclists.

“References in the design to one-way relate to vehicles exiting Newtownsmyth during the loading window when the bollards are retracted and are not intended to restrict cyclist permeability,” it told ABP.

But Mr Foran was not convinced. “What happens when the bollards are down and if that section is made one-way for vehicles what legal mechanism makes it two-way for bicycles?” he asked.

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CITY TRIBUNE

Galway City Council to make formal complaint over ads for short-term lets

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Galway City Council will write to the Advertising Standards Authority to complain that short-term rental properties in Rent Pressure Zones are in breach of their planning permission and should be removed from the likes of Airbnb.

Green Party Councillor Niall Murphy told a meeting of Galway City Council that there had been regulations in place to restrict such short-term lets in the RPZs since 2019, but enforcement has been weak due a lack of staff in the local authority.

Difficulties identifying owners and a lack of resources had meant that landlords have been able to ignore the rules and carry on business as normal.

While further legislation is on the way that will lead to Fáilte Ireland maintaining a register of properties, it has been repeatedly delayed.

“The Advertising Standards Authority can pressure Airbnb to see if a property has planning permission and is within the limit,” said Cllr Murphy.

Properties advertised within RPZs, which are let for more than 90 days, are breaking the law.

Councillor Niall McNelis (Lab) said the motion shouldn’t be specific to Airbnb as there were multiple letting platforms advertising properties in Galway.

While he agreed with the spirit of the motion, he said policing the amount of days landlords were letting properties out was “exceptionally difficult”.

Cllr Murphy said he understood that complaints had to mention specifically the platform where adverts were placed.

The only voice of disagreement came from Cllr Noel Larkin (Ind) who said he did not agree with dictating to property owners what they could and could not do with their properties.

Cllr Eddie Hoare (FG) tabled an amendment to remove reference to Airbnb and instead ask them to complain about short-term letting platforms.

It passed by 15 votes to 1.

After the meeting, Cllr Murphy said letting platforms should be pressurised into refusing to carry those adverts in breach of the regulations.

“While there is a place in the market for short term-letting platforms such as Airbnb, they have to operate within the current regulations. Many of the customers on such well-known platforms would not be aware that the advert they are answering is actually in breach of the law,” he said.

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CITY TRIBUNE

‘No significant numbers’ in Galway hospitals linked to vaping

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Photo of Tony Canavan

From the Galway City Tribune – Vaping and e-cigarette usage has not been linked to the admission of “significant numbers” at Galway hospitals.

A meeting of Regional Health Forum West was told that despite anecdotal reports of the damage caused by vaping, very few patients had presented to hospitals with health issues as a result of e-cigarette usage.

Chief Executive Officer of the Saolta Health Care Group, Tony Canavan (pictured), made the comments in reply to a question from Leitrim-based councillor Felim Gurn who said he had been told “the damage done over 30 years of smoking” was less than that caused “three years vaping”.

Mr Canavan provided information from National Tobacco Free Ireland which states: “It is highly likely that chronic use of e-cigarettes will induce pathological changes in both the heart and lungs”.

He said a Department of Health report found that most of the observed clinical harms were due to acute events associated with the use of e-cigarettes.

“They included poisonings (mainly nicotine and some e-liquid constituents), injuries (mainly burns and some fractures), and respiratory diseases (mainly injuries to the lungs and exacerbation of asthma).

“There were fatalities among the poisonings and respiratory disease cases, and long-term disability among some burn cases. Both the poisoning cases and the respiratory disease cases highlighted a possible association between e-cigarettes, and the use of other drugs such as alcohol, synthetic cannabinoids and opiates,” states the report.

Mr Canavan said while the HSE does not recommend the use of e-cigarettes, hospitals locally had not seen patients presenting with illnesses as a direct result of their usage.

“The short answer is no – we haven’t seen a significant number.

“There are lots of comments, opinions and ideas but maybe not a whole lot of evidence at the moment,” said Mr Canavan.

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