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Stalemate threatens Foyle ferry 20.05.11

THE Lough Foyle ferry operators have warned they will be forced to cease operations and dispose of their vessel due to another stalemate on funding.
Inishowen county councillors were told this week that strategic development funding for the ferry from Donegal and Limavady local authorities was yet to be signed off.
Community and enterprise administrative officer, Aideen Doherty, told this week’s local area Council meeting that the local authority was awaiting yearly company accounts from the ferry operator. She said this was a requirement agreed between the Lough Foyle Ferry Company Ltd., Donegal County Council and Limavady Borough Council.
Cllr Bernard McGuinness said it was “a disgrace” that the future of the ferry was again hanging in the balance at the mouth of the summer season.
“Quite frankly, every year we end up at the start of the season looking for money again. It seems to be dragged out to the last minute and then panic stations, and it’s happening again this year,” said Cllr McGuinness. He said somebody at Council level had to be brought to task over the problem. This week’s area Council meeting was told that the ferry company had no problem supplying its accounts but that the accounting period requested straddled its normal accounting period and, as such, the accounts required additional work and expense to produce. A Catch-22 situation had arisen whereby the Councils were unable to tell the ferry company how much funding it could expect this year while the Councils couldn’t designate funding without first seeing the company accounts. Councillors agreed there was “fault on both sides”.
The Lough Foyle ferry which is awaiting Council funding for 2011.
Cllr Martin Farren said the ferry funding should come from central Government. He said local businesses paid their rates every year and should be able to expect that the ferry will be in place to bring tourists to them. Local area chairman, Cllr Mickey Doherty said a damaging message was going out year after year that left tourists wondering whether or not the ferry was operating.
Cllr John Ryan said he clearly remembered a Council budget decision made late last year that money was to be “ring-fenced” for the Lough Foyle ferry and Carrickfinn Airport. He said the matter had to be “clarified immediately” because the loss of a ferry service would have a “detrimental effect on an already decimated tourism industry”.
Buncrana Mayor, Michael Grant, called for the ferry to be funded two to three years in advance. He said the company needed the certainty to allow it to adequately market its product. “Tourism providers are in limbo until June and they deserve a better service and they deserve to know the ferry will be running,” said Cllr Grant. Cllr Rena Donaghey said there was “frustration on both sides”.
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