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Sites earmarked for casual trading 14.05.07

Buncrana Town Council is planning bye-laws that will designate Cockhill Road and Nailor's Row car park as the town's casual trading areas.
If adopted, the legislation will allow licensed chip vans and other food outlets to trade into the early hours at Cockhill Road while allowing day-time casual trading at the Nailor's Row site.
However, the proposal to designate the Nailor's Row public car park for casual trading is subject to the approval of the planners, councillors were told at the recent monthly meeting.
They were also given a recommendation that they increase the existing fees for casual trading which currently range from €32 a day to €253 a year. The fees were set eleven years ago and fall well below those charged in Letterkenny where they generally range from €200 annually for craftspeople to €1,000 for general merchandise and €3,000 for mobile catering.
A report by the town engineer indicates that the St. Mary's Road car park - once the preferred location for a casualt trading site - is not now suitable since the construction there of a broadband facility.
There are currently two licences in operation in Buncrana - one held by a menswear trader at the Market Square and the other held by a mobile fish and chip van who trades on weekend nights at Cockhill Road.
Town Mayor, Cllr. Joe Doherty, FF, said he had some reservations about anti-social behaviour with casual trading in the early hours of the morning.
Cllr. Daren Lalor, SF, said a €1,000 a year fee was the equivalent of just €2.74 a day which he said was grossly unfair to Buncrana traders who were burdened with ever-increasing rates. "We have to take into consideration the people on the Main Street who have to pay their rates. And we must also bear in mind that on-street traders have no overheads either." Cllr. Paul Bradley, FG, said he was not against casual trading but he said the Council would have to be firm on the issue to be fair to fixed traders. "We would have to decide when they trade, for how long and where. That's our brief," he said. Executive engineer, Donal Walker said he would have an engineer's report on the matter for the councillors' June meeting.

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