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Buncrana could lose RNLI Lifeboat 08.04.08

LOCAL lifeboat volunteers have expressed their frustration at the news that the new Lough Swilly lifeboat - officially named Minnie and Ernest George Barry at the weekend - could be taken away if progress is not made very soon to provide a breakwater in Buncrana.
Speaking at the official naming ceremony for the boat at the weekend, RNLI Inspector Colin Williams said that the boat may have to be withdrawn if proper facilities are not made available.

Lough Swilly RNLI's new B-Class Atlantic 85 boat in action on Saturday. And those comments were echoed at Saturday’s naming ceremony by the Deputy Chairman of the RNLI Terence Johnston, who described the current facilities as akin to having an ambulance but keeping it in a locked garage.
Speaking to the Inishowen Independent yesterday, local RNLI volunteer, Joe Joyce, said that at present the boat was being rendered useless for four hours a day because for two
hours before and after low tide it could not leave its berth.
And he insisted that the ongoing delay in sorting out the paperwork which would allow the commencement of work on the breakwater was extremely frustrating.
“It very much seems as if it is paperwork that is now holding up this process, but seriously how hard can it be to sign a piece of paper?”
Buncrana Town Councillors meanwhile were told on Thursday last that Donegal County Council did not send the necessary documentation to the Department of Agriculture, the department with responsibility for the foreshore, until February.
When asked if construction will commence this year, assistant county manager Liam Kelly replied: “Hopefully. It’s a matter of the government granting a foreshore lease to Donegal County Council at a reasonable price.”
However the delays in resolving the necessary paperwork are a cause of concern for the local volunteers who fear that a tragedy could occur on the Swilly if this is not sorted soon.
“At the minute we can’t get out for four hours every day, but it would be worse still if this is taken away from Buncrana because there is nowhere else on the Swilly we can go. If that happens we’d be relying on Arranmore and Portrush and that could mean a wait of hours before they get here,” the local spokesman concluded.
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