*Bunratty Castle & Folk Park.ย
GOVERNANCE standards of Clare County Council have come under scrutiny over the manner in which a deal to purchase land in Bunratty was carried out.
An external audit of Clare County Council has found difficulties with securing information regarding an almost โฌ1m deal in Bunratty both with land registry issues and the inability of the local authority to maintain a complete file.
As part of the transfer of Shannon Heritage sites to Clare County Council, Bunratty Castle & Folk Park now falls under the management of the local authority.
A Local Government Audit report from 2023 on Clare County Council which was released this week has raised concerns which have been amplified by elected members regarding the manner in which the local authority has conducted its business on some deals.
Regarding two land purchases in Bunratty, the external auditor highlighted, โit proved challenging and time consuming to obtain all the necessary information as a complete file was not maintainedโ.
In the report, the external auditor stated that the Council paid โฌ62,000 in stamp duty in 2023 to execute a call option to purchase land at Bunratty. โThe Council accrued โฌ947k in the capital account however, at the date of this report, land registry issues have been cited for the deal not closingโ.
According to the external auditor, the County Council will need to consider whether its property unit is capable of managing tourism acquisitions. โGiven the significant expenditure on these land purchases substantial improvements are necessary in this directorate and consideration should be given by management as to whether tourism acquisitions should come under the remit of the property unit of the Councilโ.
Former Chief Executive of Clare County Council, Pat Dowling in a written response to these comments detailed, โAs part of the transfer of the Shannon Heritage functions to Clare County Council from the Shannon Airport Group, the Council inserted a purchase op agreement for the additional lands surrounding Bunratty Castle and Folk Park.
โThe rationale was to protect the offering in Bunratty and prevent a speculative sale which could be detrimental to the tourist offering at Bunratty Castle and Folk Park. All matters in relation to the land purchase at Bunratty have now been resolved and the sale is now moving to closure.
โClare County Council Tourism Directorate is committed to ensuring that system and processes are in place for all of its activity. The function will be managed the Tourism Directorate lead with the support and guidance of the Property Unit of the Council as necessary,โ Dowling added.
That a complete file was not maintained in the eyes of the external auditor is โa fairly damning indictment of how the organisation is doing its business,โ remarked Cllr Shane Talty (FF).
He said it was โdifficultโ for elected members as they were reliant on the external auditor to look back with the challenge of drilling into the detail and budget lines. โThere is a theme running through the report which queries governance,โ the Lahinch representative commented. โThere are significant sums of expenditure that weโre only hearing about in a historic senseโ.
Speaking at Mondayโs meeting of Clare County Council, Cllr Pat Hayes noted there were โsubstantial issuesโ for the local authority regarding land purchases at Bunratty and the Cliffs of Moher. โYouโd have to read the report from the auditor to get their views on it,โ he said. โIt doesnโt add to good communications with items brought up this year and for 2023,โ the Cathaoirleach of the Killaloe Municipal District added.
Cathaoirleach of the Shannon Municipal District, Cllr Pat OโGorman (FF) felt the Councilโs top table had a duty to inform elected members when they were acquiring land. โI understand the Executive doesnโt have to let us know they are purchasing a piece of land but it might be nice to know if they let us know when a deal is done rather than hearing it at a hurling match, at mass or the pub so they we are letting the people know not the other way aroundโ.
Interim Chief Executive of the Council, Carmel Kirby reminded councillors that they were advised following the local elections that governance guidelines were to be formed on all of the Councilโs entities, โthat has started, weโll be putting a report before members when it is draftedโ. She added, โI can assure members and the public that there is good governance across Clare County Council and all its directorates, there is always room for improvementโ. She said every local authority has โan awful lot of work to be doneโ to โto accurately register every single property that we ownโ.
Head of Finance, Noeleen Fitzgerald told the meeting there was no time delays in providing the external audit from 2023, โit was finalised late last yearโ.