GROWTH OF invasive species is occurring at โhuge levelsโ in East Clare while funding for its removal and treatment is โvery limitedโ.
A revised action plan for the removal of invasive species in the Killaloe Municipal District has been requested by Cllr Pat Hayes (FF). โGreat work has been done in the past but now requires further attention. Working with landowners and other agencies are critical to the success of this programme,โ he said.
Senior executive engineer in the Killaloe MD, Declan Flanagan said they have been actively working on the treatment of invasive species on the roadsides of East Clare, particularly Japanese Knotweed โover the last several yearsโ. A contractor has been hired to treat Japanese Knotweed at 120 different locations in the Killaloe MD.
He flagged that their efforts have been hindered by a shortage of funding. โItโs important to note that funding has been very limited, we have recently procured a contractor to commence works in the next few working days to treat Japanese Knotweed at over 120 locations across the Municipal District. Treatment is through a mix of stem injection and spraying to all sites identified. Works on site is recorded through GIS Mapping mapped and signage erected. Further locations can be added as works progress if found in a nearby vicinity Itโs important to provide landowners with information and the due care and responsible for invasive species on their own lands and encourage landowners to highlight issues that may be present along the public road networkโ.
Members of the public that locate new invasive species can report them to the County Council on the website invasives.ie
Speaking at a sitting of the Killaloe MD, Cllr Hayes said the work of the Waters of LIFE in the Graney catchment has increased awareness. He noted Japanese Knotweed is prevalent on the backroads and byroads of the area, โwe deal with it to a degree, if you donโt continue to deal with it then it comes back, it is something which needs to be brought to a national positionโ.
An increasing amount of requests have been observed by the Maghera native by constituents seeking for the treatment of invasive species to be included in the Councilโs roads programme. โIt has grown at a huge level, there are now other species and there is a major amount of work to be done across the Municipal District and countyโ.
Seconding the request, Cllr Alan OโCallaghan (FF) outlined that a constituent was only contacted by the environment section of the Council twelve months after reporting the presence of Japanese Knotweed. โTo get a call twelve months after it was reported is too much of a gap,โ he commented. โThere is knotweed in an area in Kilkishen on private lands, the environment office canโt go onto private lands but it is leading onto an estate so as sure as night follows day it will lead onto that, a sign was put up saying โdo not touchโ but it doesnโt cure itโ.
Kilmurry based OโCallaghan remarked, โWhen I heard knotweed first in the Council I had to google it, I thought of PJ Kelly and that it was something you would smokeโ. He referred to one instance where a septic tank was โburst upโ by the presence of knotweed.
Roads leading to Broadford are impacted by invasive species, Cllr Conor Ryan (FG) flagged while Cathaoirleach of the Killaloe MD, Cllr Pat Burke (FG) recalled former senior engineer Hugh McGrath once appeared on the Six:One news discussing Japanese Knotweed.
โIt is an issue,โ Cllr Hayes told the meeting. โThere are fifty to sixty sites around the Lough Graney catchment on the public road alone that is impacted. I have enough of it on my lane,โ he added to which Cllr OโCallaghan quipped โwith all the hen harriersโ.
Cllr Hayes replied, At least weโre getting paid for the hen harriers. It is a crisis situation reallyโ. He said it was ten years since he met a consultant from France on the issue, โthe cost of hiring someone in to do this is substantial, maybe we need to go political and get a grant to support farmersโ.