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Traffic light protest at Cockhill Bridge 03.03.09

By Damian Dowds, Inishowen Independent

THE long-running Cockhill Bridge saga took another twist yesterday morning when local residents and businesspeople gathered to protest against county council proposals to install a traffic light system to manage pedestrian and vehicular traffic using the bridge.
Protestors were scathing about the plans, which they described as a recipe for traffic chaos on one of the main arteries to north Inishowen and a cheap alternative to putting a pedestrian footbridge in place.
Mrs Catherine Cullen said that the lights will affect trade at her family run business. “We pay our rates to Donegal County Council and we can’t understand why we’ve been ignored,” she said. “We don’t want traffic lights here and I’ll be out with everyone else here to protest when the machines come to put them in.”.
Protestors against the imminent traffic lights at Cockhill Bridge. “I pay €48,000 in motor tax every year but the council didn’t consult with me or anyone else,” said haulier Danny Bradley, who operates 12 lorries out of his Umricam base. “These traffic lights will act as a cut off point and add substantial time to our trips.”
Under the proposals, Cockhill Bridge will adopt a one way system with traffic lights
on either side of the bridge at Cullen’s Shop and St Mary’s Church and on the R238 towards Clonbeg. A footpath for pedestrians will also be marked on the bridge.
Mr Bradley also expressed concern about the proposed footpath markings. “The bridge is narrow enough as it is, but if one of my lorries were to cross the painted markings the driver could be hit with six penalty points on his licence. Two incidents like that and he’d lose his licence. It’s just another way to put us out of business.”
Oliver O’Donnell last year organised a petition calling for a pedestrian footbridge to be constructed alongside the existing bridge. “It attracted 2,500 signatures, but I don’t think anyone would have wanted traffic lights. There’ll be uproar. Traffic won’t get over Cockhill Bridge and there will be tailbacks going in all directions.”
Cllr Peter McLaughlin expressed fears that the lights would become a “temporary-permanent” solution.
“If these are put in place, along with those proposed for the junction with the Cassie Road, we’ll have four sets of traffic lights in a one mile stretch,” he said. “It’s far too much.”
Cllr McLaughlin said an additional €1,000 development levy specifically for the construction of a footbridge had been applied to houses built in the Clonbeg area and asked what those funds were going to be used for now.
“Traffic lights are the cheap option,” he said.
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