OPW to meet council in effort to secure site for Doolin Coast Guard

The Office of Public Works (OPW) has sought an urgent meeting with Clare County Council in an effort to secure a facility for…

The Office of Public Works (OPW) has sought an urgent meeting with Clare County Council in an effort to secure a facility for one of the State's busiest Coast Guard units.

Doolin Coast Guard currently operates from a 150-year-old shed which is prone to flooding.

The meeting has been called following confirmation that negotiations between the OPW and a landowner have failed to reach agreement, almost 10 years after funding was sanctioned for a new headquarters for the unit.

The council has arranged another meeting for early next week, when a number of options, including placing a compulsory purchase order on lands at Doolin, will be discussed. It is also thought to be considering providing a site for the station as part of a proposed development of Doolin pier.

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The OPW has confirmed that it was "unable to agree satisfactory terms" with the landowner. A spokesman added that the site it had been in negotiations to purchase would have been the most suitable location for the facility.

"Casualties are often treated in a building that is totally unsuitable for the needs of a modern-day rescue unit," former coast guard Kevin Nunan said. "Much of their equipment is stored in a variety of locations throughout the community: the main rescue boat resides in a cowshed two miles inland."

North Clare Fine Gael councillor Martin Conway said: "It is indefensible that after a delay of nearly a decade a site has not even been purchased. A new site needs to be identified immediately."