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28-01-2018, 15:32 | #1 |
Really Regular Poster
Join Date: Jan 2006
Posts: 767
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Ballycar Floods again (Jan 2018)
IE website reports bus substitutions probably for several weeks between Limerick and Ennis due to flooding at Ballycar. Same old performance while the Board of Works and other bodies play pass the buck. I wonder if the costs of bus subsitutions and foregone revenue over the past 10 years would have paid a sizeable proportion of the costs of fixing the problem.
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29-01-2018, 16:24 | #2 |
Chairman/Publicity
Join Date: Dec 2005
Location: The Home of Hurling
Posts: 2,708
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in a real word, yes.
but the repair and upkeep of the track is not paid from the same pocket as the costs of replacement bus services so it doesnt happen. the reality seems to be that this track will be flooded every winter for weeks if not months at a time and it should be resolved and future proofed. |
20-03-2018, 22:50 | #3 |
Really Regular Poster
Join Date: Jan 2006
Posts: 767
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Irish rail website reports that normal rail services between Limerick and Ennis are due to resume to-morrow, March 21st.
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21-03-2018, 10:12 | #4 |
Really Regular Poster
Join Date: Dec 2005
Location: Cork-Dublin, Cork Commuter and occasionally DART and Dublin-Wexford
Posts: 855
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What is the actual solution here? The height of the line was raised some time ago, but it seems to have had little impact. And while people regularly cast doubt on the Western Rail Corridor, I don't think anyone is seriously threatening the Limerick-Ennis portion.
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21-03-2018, 16:43 | #5 |
Really Really Regluar Poster
Join Date: Jun 2010
Posts: 2,146
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The solution is who pays the 10 million required to improve drainage Irish Rail or the OPW. Both have argued over the last 6 years about the issue.
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