Fine Gael and Labour Cllrs have noone left to blame..

Chairperson of Sallins Fianna Fáil, James Lawless has called for urgent action on roads at various locations across Kildare and says that the Fine Gael / Labour ruling bloc can no longer shift the blame onto national government or claim they have no control over spending.

“For years Fine Gael and Labour have it both ways by controlling the council yet playing the blame game that Fianna Fáil were in power and that they had no control. But that ignores the reality that Fianna Fáil have not held a majority on Kildare county council for over twenty years. And now that Fine Gael and Labour Ministers are undeniably holding the purse strings at both national and local level they can not hide behind the excuse of being powerless any longer” said James. “What’s more even as recently as last January 2011, when Fianna Fáil were in power nationally, one of the last acts of the outgoing Fianna Fáil Minister Pat Carey was to allocate a funding of 900 Million from the Department of Transport to be allocated for regional road works by local authorities. This money was made available and ring fenced even in a time of scarcity and that money should now be put to use by the Kildare County Council on the many urgent projects long outstanding throughout the constituency.” James explained.

“So the blanket response of no money is not accurate on a number of levels. In the current council budget an allocation of 25 million is contained for road and transportation improvements. Resource are scarce but there is funding available and these scarce resources need to be prioritised to those urgent projects most in need”.

“A critical example close to home is the Osberstown junction on the Sallins – Naas road. This junction sees huge volume of traffic traverse the main thoroughfare whilst traffic from the neighbouring estates and side-road struggle continuously to find a break in fast moving traffic. Traffic from Caragh also uses this junction and the volumes of throughput have only multiplied in recent years. Yet despite being an accident waiting to happen we have yet to see any action at this junction barring the farcical situation where traffic lights were erected and then taken down again almost as quickly, all in the space of a crazy three weeks at the midpoint in the crisis” according to James.

“Scarce resources need to be targeted to those areas most in need and this junction is surely one of them” James continued. “The excuse of no funds is a blanket one that is not entirely accurate and the council needs to prioritise this and many other outstanding works for the welfare and safety of people at all these locations“ concluded James.

Kilteel / Eadestown Notes

I was in Kilteel hall the other night for a candidate debate. Good event and pity there aren’t more of them around the constituency. Five of us attended (me, Willie, Tiernach, Paddy Mac and Tony Lawlor) and we all were given an opportunity to introduce ourselves at the outset. There followed a Q & A session and we discussed various local matters. Noone won or lost politically but it was a very worthwhile exercise to understand the local issues.

I’ve been canvassing the area for some time now so I had a reasonable grasp of the issues already. Roads, roads and broadband. Yep they’re the big ones. Roads such as the red big lane are in dire straits whilst the N7 improvements were a mixed blessing with the road from the turf bog lane down through Rathmore and Eadestown becoming an exceptionally busy rat run. Schools are an issue and I outlined my suggestion for a shared second level facility in “North Naas” i.e. between Sallins, Johnstown, Kill and of course Kilteel / Eadestown too.

I had already worked on getting broadband to the area with the exchange upgrade earlier this year. Well it turns out half the places aren’t covered and the school has to share with another line. A lot done, more to do me thinks. We’ll be back to this one, all going well next Friday.

Crime is also an issue as I knew from my canvass. A few unpleasant incidents recently.

Lot of things for me to get stuck into if I get that chance.

Broadband for Eadestown

Working in IT, (and admittedly a bit of an anorak at times), technology is never far from my mind. So it didn’t take much prompting for me to include broadband provision as a campaign pledge when I set out my stall a while back.

Having been around the ward a bit at this stage I now have the details on where exactly does and doesn’t have the service. It all depends on the local exchange, whether or not it is enabled, and then on your own connection and your distance to the exchange. Some houses require a localised upgrade while most will benefit immediately from an exchange upgrade, providing however that the distance from exchange does not exceed 5 KM.

It can be inconsistent at times. There are parts of Caragh where one side of the road has it (high speed broadband) and the other doesn’t. Two Mile House don’t have but are in line when the Athgarvan exchange comes on stream later this year – however it will still depend on distance along the wire.

When I met people in Eadestown a month or so back it came across as the number one issue. I used some of my contacts to track down senior management in Eircom and put it to them. A local techie had also raised it at a First Tuesday meeting recently and a local petition was gathering momentum. I always say credit where its due and I have to say Eircom were very responsive and reacted very positively to the concerns. Originally they told me June but they actually upgraded ahead of schedule last month with the result that the area now has a fully enabled exchange and hence high speed broadband. Result.

One down, two to go (Caragh, Two Mile House). I’ll keep on it.

Speech at Naas election launch

An Roimh Aire, Teachtaí Dála , Comhairleoirí agus Cairde

Minister, Deputies, fellow candidates and friends…

It is a great honour to address you here tonight as a Fianna Fáil candidate for Kildare County council.

The first step of my journey occurred last June when I was nominated by my home cumann of Sallins. I am very grateful for their constant support and I will work tirelessly to fulfil the trust placed in me.

I was delighted to then go on and be selected as a Fianna Fáil candidate for the Naas area – I look forward working with all of you over the campaign ahead.

I would also like to thank my three strongest supporters who are here with me tonight – my wife Ailish and our two daughters, Caoimhe and Niamh … It is their support that makes it all possible and I remain grateful and energised by their faith in me…

________

On a personal level, my own political apprenticeship began by the fireside in county Wexford..

My grandfather especially was a great raconteur and historian, and I was raised on tales of rebellion and 1798, of the ‘rising of the moon’

Of course I am well aware how that struggle was carried out across the fields of Kildare also… in places like Kill, and Johnstown, at the barracks in Naas town,

and indeed in Sallins as well we have our own place of homage, at Bodenstown where Wolfe Tone lies..

I consider myself a Republican in every sense of the word.

In the traditional, narrower Irish sense, as a proud nationalist and one who looks forward to a Fianna Fáil party organised on a 32 county basis, and also to eventual reunification..

But also a Republican in the classic sense, as a believer in this great modern democracy where all are equal, no one above any other..

Social justice is a theme close to my own heart as we must always cherish all the citizens of the nation equally and nurture those who have not..

I believe listening to be the strongest form of leadership .. both on the doors where we hear the human stories.

And in the party where I would plan, as a Fianna Fáil councillor, to draw upon the huge resource that is the pool of knowledge and expertise that lies within the local organisation to be guided by local units and realise the potential of this august organisation…

________

Cairde, tonight all of us are gathered here to launch our local election campaign…

But it is also important to look further down the road, at the five years after polling day which is when the real work will be done..

Over the next council term, local area plans will be introduced in many areas –

Johnstown, Kill, Kilteel and TwoMileHouse are just a few that are to come in the year ahead.. Naas town plan is due for renewal in the next two years also

I have been on the doors and I have heard the stories and needs of our communities…

In every area we must put in place amenities to serve the demands of the population we have seen grow in recent years..

For the families that seek playgrounds for their children …

For the youth clubs that need new centres and new homes

For the sports groups that are living on goodwill, living on borrowed time, or on a borrowed pitch.. Or victims of their own success, struggling with gridlock on a pitch they have outgrown..

We must strongly support facilities for all of these

Already in Sallins, I have been proud to support the initiative to develop a 30 acre site for amenity use, to be used by multiple codes, but spearheaded by Sallins GAA… I have supported it in local meetings, on the streets when a petition was required to reaffirm public support, and I will be proud to support it from the council chamber as the project advances.. The model could become a blueprint for amenity developments elsewhere..

Again at local level, we must keep our roads in good order – be that a laneway in Donore, a junction at Osberstown or completion of the ring road around Naas. . we must progress all these projects large and small..

Whilst we must also promote public transport options at every opportunity..

I was acutely aware of the responsibility and gravity of public service the night I received a phone call recently from a man who literally had no bed for the night – I found him temporary accommodation but reaffirmed the importance of housing strategy to ensure a roof exists over every head…

For employment and local economy we must support local enterprise with infrastructure and other supports .. to ensure success for projects like the Millenium park and the Naas Town Centre to breathe life back into the town..

…and also to include enablement of our rural communities where issues like broadband provision must be addressed (and I am already working on this in places like Eadestown, Two Mile House and Caragh)..

________

A chairde, in recent months I have been campaigning for the election but I have been campaigning for the area for a lot longer…

When, as a daily commuter I helped setup and run the Naas and Sallins rail users group and have campaigned to deliver year after year real improvements for local commuters..

When a bypass was due to cut across the green where my children played and I successfully argued for the route to be moved outside and away from the houses..

For my own estate and others on the bread and butter issues of local representation such as management companies and taking in charge and saving our green spaces..

Or when Sallins village had no recycling facilities and it took me a year of long slog and perseverance but I did not rest until we finally saw the banks installed last Christmas..

A chairde as I stand here tonight as your local election candidate be assured that I will campaign solidly for the entire area, and not just for the election ahead, but for the five years after that if I am given that opportunity…

And over the next two months I will be campaigning to maximise the Fianna Fáil representation on Kildare County Council….

I will work with my colleagues and running mates and with the local organisation..

As we launch that campaign here tonight, no one here doubts the challenges we must face over the coming weeks

But it is my firm belief that a fair-weather politician is no good to anyone…

This is not the time to bow our heads..

This is the time to stand up and be counted…

All of us here tonight are doing exactly that…

The road may be long, our climb may be steep, but I am confident we will reach the summit..

I have no doubt the Fianna Fáil organisation has the resilience, the strength and the courage of its convictions to meet the challenges ahead, both at local and national level.

We have a strong team here tonight..

All of us here are committed.. all of us here are capable.. all of us are Fianna Fáil…

Let us now go from here tonight in full confidence of victory and ready for the fight!

A chairde, buichios anois, oiche mhaith agaibh agus ar aghaigh le Fianna Fail!