A LISSYCASEY COUNCILLOR has revealed he is considering writing to the Taoiseach to ascertain what contingency plans are in place should there be “an outbreak of common sense” in the country.

Speaking at the May meeting of the West Clare Municipal District, Cllr PJ Kelly (FF) admitted that he was debating contacting his party leader, Micheál Martin (FF) amid ongoing frustration with the actions of civil servants in the country.

Senior executive officer with corporate services in Clare County Council, Ann Reynolds confirmed a cross-directorate team has been established to examine a previous motion from Cllr Liam Grant (GP) and identify the scope of work involved in changing the spelling of road signs to their preferred spelling in areas such as Lahinch, Ennistymon, Corofin and Clonlara.

Reynolds explained that the cross-directorate input involves general design looking at the final mapping of electoral areas to define boundaries and settlement areas, roads department consulting with TII to review costings of signage replacement and corporate services who will compile the list of qualified electors and arrange the plebiscite which has to occur before the spellings can be amended. Only the general design team have commenced work at this stage, she said.

Cllr Grant sought an update at Tuesday’s meeting, “I would like to know what has been done to organise a plebiscite and what information has been gathered from TII,” he questioned. “It is not the first time and won’t be the last time I’ve brought this up. I know other councillors have brought it up in the past and haven’t gone anywhere, this is definitely something I won’t stop pursuing”.

His contribution stoked intrigue among the county’s longest serving councillor. He pointed out that Clarecastle and Newmarket-on-Fergus were two examples of parts of Clare where the English name is not a direct translation of its English equivalent.

“We have Lahinch, it should be Lahinch not Lehinch. I’m just wondering has common sense any role in this country, it has become an endangered faculty or are we trying to prove to ourselves we can be Irish by doing silly things. I felt like writing a note to the Taoiseach to ask him has he a contingency plan if we have an outbreak of common sense because it could be a crisis,” he quipped.

Related News

Lisdoonvarna Matchmaking Festival
Closing hours extended in Lisdoonvarna for match-making festival
Supermacs-Plaza
New legal challenge against €10m Supermac's Plaza makes 'mockery of planning system'
conor mckenna 1
'Secretaries have been papering over the cracks from Dept under-funding' - Inch principal issues support to workers on strike
mobile banking 1
Phishing scam under investigation in Ennis
Latest News
mobile banking 1
Phishing scam under investigation in Ennis
sixmilebridge v whitegate 28-08-22 16 conor whelan
Strong finish helps Whitegate edge Bodyke in thriller
éire óg v st josephs miltown 20-08-23 gavin murray darragh mcdonagh eoin o'brien 1
Collisions on course following senior, intermediate & junior football quarter-final draws
pamela mccarthy scoil chríost rí 1
'We don't want freebies, we want what we're entitled to' - school secretaries & caretakers seek pension parity
shannon airport giveaway 2
Shannon Airport giving away 80 flights during month of September
Premium
'We don't want freebies, we want what we're entitled to' - school secretaries & caretakers seek pension parity
'We won't be afraid of anyone' - excitement building in Ennistymon for Clare SFC quarter-finals
Coolmeen claim last Clare IFC quarter-final spot with dramatic finish
'Hard-fought wins' for Cratloe has paved way to quarter-finals
Clare PIHC: Tulla draw knocks out Killanena, Tubber thump Parteen/Meelick & Magpies fall to another shock defeat

Advertisement

Subscribe for just €3 per month

If you’re here, you care about County Clare. So do we. Did you rely on us for Covid-19 updates, follow our election coverage, or visit The Clare Echo every week for breaking news and sport? The Clare Echo invests in local journalism and we want to safeguard its future in our county. By becoming a subscriber you are supporting what we do, will receive access to all our premium articles and a better experience, while helping us improve our offering to you. Subscribe to clareecho.ie and get the first six months for just €3 a month (less than 75c per week), and thereafter €8 per month. Cancel anytime, limited time offer. T&Cs Apply. www.clareecho.ie.