*Blake’s Corner. Photograph: Conor Begley. 

ELECTED members of Clare County Council are encountering their own gridlock in attempts to get clarity on the status of plans to alleviate traffic congestion at Blake’s Corner.

Three weeks on from the High Court dismissing an application to bring a judicial review challenge against the proposed compulsory purchase order for the Ennistymon inner relief road, elected members got stuck in their efforts to source further information from the top table of Clare County Council.

In a statement released last month following the High Court ruling, the Council said they “in partnership with Transport Infrastructure Ireland (TII)” would proceed to the next stages of the N67/N85 Ennistymon Inner Relief Road project. These stages include detailed design development, conclusion of land acquisition and planning for the construction phase.

At Monday’s meeting of Clare County Council, Cllr Shane Talty (FF) referred to the project’s mention in the monthly management report. “The outcome of the High Court case in relation to the inner relief road at Blake’s Corner, it said it dismissed a judicial review project allowing the project to proceed. Is that the definitive position,” he asked.

Director of Services of Transportation, Carmel Kirby offered little detail when replying, “I will come back to you in the coming days on it with correspondence”.

More surprisingly was the lack of reaction from elected members. Cllr Bill Slattery (FG) stated, “I have a motion down on the exact question as Cllr Talty has asked for our Municipal District, can you have a reply for next week”. Director Kirby confirmed a reply would be furnished for the meeting.

Ennistymon’s inner relief road is intended to address notorious traffic congestion at Blake’s Corner. The scheme includes the construction of a new bridge upstream of the Michael Conway Bridge, pedestrianisation of the existing bridge, and public realm improvements. A CPO was approved by An Bord Pleanála in June 2022, however the process was paused as the result of a judicial review until the High Court decision.

Related News

albert dolan 1-2
CCIF a chance to modernise community centres
ryanair shannon airport 1
Storm David causes nine flight diversions to Shannon Airport
easter egg hunt paul murphy 1-2
Inaugural Ennis easter festival begins
465da972d92221838f3fbddbf411822b7c6a1e4f
Bunratty Castle Hotel to reopen following extensive renovation
Latest News
albert dolan 1-2
CCIF a chance to modernise community centres
ryanair shannon airport 1
Storm David causes nine flight diversions to Shannon Airport
waterford vs clare minor 30-03-26 joe hayes 2
Hayes & Clare minors have 'a good bit of sorting to do' for must-win Limerick tie
shannon town utd vs fair green celtic 07-12-25 cody waller bruce piggot 1
CDSL cancel 11 Sunday fixtures due to wind warning
pat smyth gort 50
Thirty year celebrations for Pat Smyth in Gort
Premium
Master craftsman Seán McKenna shaped success from Scariff workshop
Clare U20s round out phase one with third win on the trot
Newmarket Celtic to make defensive reshuffle for Munster semi-final with Aisling Annacotty
'We were hoping to get promoted but games went against us' - Shine relieved to survive relegation scare
'Time to rediscover Ennis' - Cllrs call for free parking to boost footfall in town

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.