FEAR is building that a “serious accident” will occur at Spancilhill with residents appealing for a reduction in the speed limit in the locality with people afraid to cross the road.

Two separate motions were tabled by Cllr Clare Colleran Molloy (FF) regarding Spancilhill at the most recent sitting of the Ennis Municipal District. She asked that it be zoned as a ‘settlement’ in the new County Development Plan and also for a drop in the speed limit from 80km/h “to a lower and safer speed”.

Acting senior planner with Clare County Council, Helen Quinn outlined that Spancilhill was defined as a cluster within the county settlement hierarchy in the 2017-2023 Development Plan. She explained, “Clusters are described as the smallest type of settlement in the County Settlement Hierarchy and each cluster has a defined boundary. The draft new Clare County Development Plan is currently in preparation and the continued inclusion of Spancilhill as a defined cluster within the over settlement hierarchy for the County will be considered as part of the plan-making process”.

National speed limit reviews are initiated every five years by Transport Infrastructure Ireland (TII) with the most recent one in Clare completed in 2018, senior executive engineer Eamon O’Dea advised. “The Low Cost Safety Works at Spancilhill will be installed this month and further speed surveys will be undertaken following the installation of additional speed limit signs,” he added.

Worry and concern is rife among residents of Spancilhill, Cllr Colleran Molloy highlighted, “the bottom line is that these people have fear in their lives that there is going to be a serious accident on this road”.

A road improvement scheme completed in recent years “was welcomed” but has led to further problems, Cllr Johnny Flynn (FG) felt. “It was a dangerous road but it has led to higher speeding and it has cut the community in half, the road is so busy that people are not crossing the road to families and neighbours”.

Drivers must obey the speed of the road, O’Dea said in response. “It is also a requirement on person driving a car on a public road to obey the rules of the road. At some stage, we will have to come to a sense of thought on road safety. There is a responsibility on drivers to consider what they are doing. God forbid if a child is knocked down, how will they live with that”.

“Personal responsibility has to come into it,” Cllr Mary Howard (FG) agreed. “Drivers are breaking the limit when they see the good surface. Often times it takes a fatal accident before something can be done. It is an accident waiting to happen”.

Related News

hogweed westbury 2
Hogweed making Westbury the perfect setting for tropical film quips South Clare Cllr
cannabis shannon 27-05-26 1
Cannabis worth €4.2m seized
ennis patricks day parade 17-03-26 joe cooney 1
CPO processing times delaying housing delivery
birdhill water treatment plant 1-2
Controversial plans to pipe water from Clare to Dublin moves to next stage
Latest News
éanna barry cian barron killian mcnamara dara walsh 1
Clare contingent bid for Nicky Rackard glory with New York
cork vs clare u20 29-04-26 conor shannon 1
Shannon's fingerprints all over Clare's canny ability to finish strong
clare vs waterford u20 25-03-26 tomás kelly paul rodgers 1
'Clare fans will back a team willing to fight' - Kelly geared for shot at All-Ireland glory
hogweed westbury 2
Hogweed making Westbury the perfect setting for tropical film quips South Clare Cllr
cork vs clare u20 29-04-26 terence fahy 1
Terence & Clare U20s look to raise the banner once again
Premium
Terence & Clare U20s look to raise the banner once again
Andrew Fahey's sideline mileage brings him to tipping point of All-Ireland success
Minors must be consistent to prevail in All-Ireland quarter-final says O'Connell
Casey battling hamstring injury to make All-Ireland decider
Madden to have 'serious review' on Clare future

Annual Subscription!

The Clare Echo annual subscription for just €69.99 a year. 

Prefer to pay monthly? Click the monthly option 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.