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Threat to one-off family homes 17.06.11

by Caoimhinn Barr, Inishowen Independent

THE Donegal Development Plan could spell the end of one-off family homes in many parts of Inishowen, if it is implemented later this year.
The six-year plan, currently at a draft stage, is set to impose a series of stringent planning guidelines in line with national policy to curtail the building of houses across the county.
Under the new proposal urban areas such as Buncrana and Carndonagh will be able to sustain in the region of 34 houses per year while rural villages such as Clonmany or Burnfoot will be allowed less than one new house per year on average.
Bridgend is also included in the Strategic Support Towns section allowing the border village to accommodate a whopping 203 houses over a six-year period from 2012 to 2018 while Moville is only allowed 23 new builds in the same timeframe.
Sinn Fein County councillor Jack Murray said the plan is ‘pushing people towards larger towns’.
“Donegal is a rural county so I find it hugely concerning that only five per cent of all building will be permitted to take place in small villages such as Fahan or Culdaff. The draft plan seems to suit urban areas more, it doesn’t take into account the unique nature of our county,” he said.
“We can’t have a return to the loose planning laws which led to so many ghost estates across the county but now we are going too far the other way. It will become almost impossible for people in some rural areas to build a new family home,” Cllr. Murray added.
Under the proposed guidelines, settlements in Inishowen will fall into one of five tiers for planning, a move Murray thinks will have a devastating impact.
“The fact that the system is using zones means that we are in effect drawing lines, which will leave some fields worthless and others worth millions,” he said.
Culdaff County Councillor Bernard McGuinness said he would do everything in his power to ensure that anyone who wanted to build a house on their land in a rural area would be able to do so. He said the Development Plan would lead to ‘very little change’.
The Fine Gael representative did raise concerns about the fact that rural areas such as Glengad will not see new housing estates developed. He believes this could have a detrimental effect on smaller schools, which rely heavily on new pupil numbers every year.
Councillor Bernard McGuinness
Members of the public to voice their concerns with a public consulation planned for Carn Public Services Centre from 2-8pm on Wednesday, June 29 next.
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