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Forty houses to be let despite fears 19.06.07

A new estate of 40 local authority houses will be allocated to tenants in Clonbeg in the coming days despite Buncrana councillors' concerns about safety.
The estate was officially named at the recent monthly meeting as Dun na nIarlai or Earl's Fort in recognition of the 400th anniversary of the Flight of the Earls.
However, the name is the least of the worries of town councillors who fear the Cockhill Bridge is not safe enough to accommodate the increased volume of traffic the new estate will create.
But local authority officials say a new footbridge will be built in the coming weeks to facilitate the new residents.
"Cockhill Bridge itself constitutes a footbridge at the minute," said Cllr. Peter McLaughlin. Town Mayor Joe Doherty agreed. He said: "It's a total disaster. I think the money that's going into the new footbridge should be going into the existing bridge."
Cllr. Dermot McLaughlin slated the "total failure" of Donegal County Council to put in place the "basic infrastructure" in Buncrana.
He accused Donegal County Council of not spending the charges earned from Buncrana development, in the town.
"I have been constantly asking where the Buncrana development charges are being spent. I think Donegal County Council has recouped them from Buncrana and spent them elsewhere. It (the Council) is making big brogues out of other people's leather," he said.
Cllr. Padraig MacLochlainn said it was councillors who were left to face the public when the Council got it wrong. "You don't grant planning permission for hundreds of houses unless you have the basic infrastructure in place," he said. Cllr. Nicholas Crossan challenged his colleagues to object in future, if they dared, to planning permission being granted if they felt the infrastructure was not available to cope.
Cllr. Daren Lalor said there was a need for the houses in Clonbeg to be allocated to the tenants in need of them.
Council officials including Buncrana town clerk, Paul Doyle and town manager, Liam Kelly confirmed the houses would be released within two weeks while a new footbridge would be built in the weeks following their allocation.
Meanwhile, referring to the name of the new estate, Cllr. Nicholas Crossan said that, in future, the Council should consider naming streets and estates after people who have made a significant contribution to the town. He said Buncrana Main Street was still without a name.
Cllr. Lalor welcomed the naming of the new estate in the Irish language. He said when he passed an existing estate in the town - Victoria Gardens - his "stomach turned". He asked how a town like Buncrana could be happy with an estate called after "the Famine Queen".
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