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Pledge Your Vote for Tara
national |
environment |
press release
Tuesday April 24, 2007 13:42 by Campaign to Save Tara
Happening now. Launch Of Campaign to Save Tara and Political Strategy campaign calls on
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Jump To Comment: 1 2 3 4 5The election strategy launch is ongoing now and the Campaign will upload
the images later this evening.
The number of people at our launch today reflects a deep concern among the general public about the route of the M3 through the Tara/Skryne Valley.
What we intend to achieve in this campaign is to translate this unease into a positive statement on election day. Our election campaign is about placing the Tara/M3 issue at the top of the political agenda in Meath and a high among voting priorities nationally.
We are very appreciative of the varying degrees of support we receive from a number of the parties; notably Labour, the Green Party, Sinn Fein and many independents; we are concerned to ensure that Tara remain a priority for these parties after the election. At least one of them is assured a place in any new Government.
Each party’s explicit position on the route of the road through the Tara/Skryne Valley must be clear to the electorate. This Campaign is asking for written commitments to a post-election review of the route. These party positions will be publicized through the local and national media along with our arguments for re-routing the proposed motorway. Our election literature contains a comprehensive summary of these arguments and also outlines viable alternatives to the transport problems of Meath. 100,000 of these pamphlets will be distributed locally by a very active and committed campaign group and nationally, by a network of groups and supporters.
The anti-Tara parties and their candidates - Fianna Fail, Fine Gael and the PDs – will be forced to deal with the Tara issue through constituent’s questions and our publicity effort. It is our experience on the ground in Meath that there is annoyance and discomfort over what is happening in the Valley among supporters of all parties and of none.
Tara and the M3 will be an election issue, with votes to be won, and votes to be lost.
There is a tangible feeling that we are faced with real and important decisions on polling day: economic and environmental dangers are mounting up and are universally recognised. This election, for the first time in twenty years, is about the political, economic and environmental direction of the country over the longer term.
We would hope, and are confident, that Tara being firmly on the political agenda will inspire the electorate to focus on questioning what is of true and lasting value. Of the kind of community we want to build and what kind country we want to live in.
Locally, there are many different sides to the issue. On the one hand, there is deep concern at the archaeological and heritage implications of the motorway given the cultural and historical significance of the area.
The increasing dormitory role of the county to Dublin and the haphazard nature of much recent development is a burning issue. We will set out to convince the local electorate that the motorway will exacerbate these problems and actually hamper the creation of local jobs in the county with perhaps the greatest potential for a thriving heritage sector in the whole country.
Although it is common knowledge in Meath it is less well known nationally that there are deep, longstanding…. personal, political and business connections between certain individuals involved in land speculation, members of the Government, and members of the board of the NRA. A considerable amount of land speculation took place prior to the public announcement of the route.
Such connections and strange coincidences are not peculiar to Meath and we believe this message will resonate nationally as well.
Another national issue is the need for alternatives to car transport. The re-opening of rail lines and investment in other forms of public transport is an issue that goes to the core of the M3 debate. We intent to push home the strong message that there are more efficient, less destructive and much more sustainable alternatives to building massive motorways.
There are many infrastructural problems throughout the country and we are feeding into an educated electorate who know what PPP stands for and understands the cost of buying out these short-sighted deals. The so-called ‘local issues’ – from hospitals to incinerators, pipelines to prisons, water-quality to unwanted commercial and motorway developments are really National concerns. Each of these campaigns will be feeding into the others.
Of course Tara is much more of a National issue in every sense. The campaign for its preservation can embody many more difficult-to-articulate concerns. Where will we be as a society in twenty years time? What will happen if we continue to abuse our environment? Continue to allow short-sighted profiteering masquerade as proper planning?
It is no coincidence that it was at Tara - the site of ancient political, religious and cultural power that a hugely symbolic meeting took place between the Norman settlers of the Pale and Gaelic kings of the provinces in the 16th century. It is considered by historians to be birth of modern Irish nationhood. In 1843 one of the largest monster meetings of the Land War took place on the Hill. Tara has played a pivotal role in the political history of our island. The very iconography of the Nation derives from the Hill – both the Harp and the Shamrock as symbols of Nationhood were first employed at Tara.
It is often said that an individual must love himself if it he to love another. Is it not the same with a people and our environment and heritage? Tara can be the place we again have a National dialogue – as at so many other times in our past.
The only properly commissioned poll, undertaken by Red C market research in 2005 found that a massive 75% of a national sample wanted the Valley to be left intact, and World Heritage Site status to be declared for the area.
We are asking people to consider each candidate’s and each party’s position on the route at the ballot box. We will encourage people to vote for the candidates and parties who provide written commitments that they will support a review of the route if they form part of the next Government.
The speakers from the launch of the Campaign to Save Tara and its electoral strategy today in the Cultivate Centre.
Also launched were the campaign flyers that will be distributed throughout the constituencies of Meath East and West in the next number of weeks. They will also be distributed in other key constituencies in Ireland.
The campaign has produced a 16 page newspaper, 8 in colour, for information and as a fund raising tool. Tara News will cost €2 and there will be an initial print off of 5,000 copies to be sold at key venues in the next number of months. There are two pages on archaeology with photographs of the various sites.
If you are interested in getting involved in the Campaign please contact us through the website address.
Michael Canney speaking at Launch
Dr Muireann Ní Bhrolcháin
Debbie Reilly
Diarmaid Ó Dálaigh bard
Kevin Hayes, Campaign to Save Tara
The Irish Times, Wednesday, 25th April 2007
Frank McDonald, Environment Editor
The Campaign to Save Tara is to distribute about 100,000 flyers in advance of the general election with the aim of making the M3 motorway a "make or break" issue for parties who would form the next government.
Outlining the campaign's election strategy in Dublin yesterday, its spokesman Michael Canney, said it was asking people to "consider each candidate's and party's position on the route to the ballot box".
"We will encourage people to vote for the candidates who provide written commitments that they will support a review of the route [ through the Gabhra Valley, east of the Hill of Tara] if they are elected to government".
It was not "just another road through a scenic place, but something that will alter an entire archaeological landscape".
An independent poll in 2005 found only 25 per cent of those surveyed wanted the M3 to go ahead as planned.
Mr Canney said the campaign aimed to "translate the deep unease people feel about this issue into a positive outcome in the election", adding that the "anti-Tara parties - Fianna Fáil, Fine Gael and the PDs - will be forced to deal with it on the doorsteps".
Although the group was pleased with support from the Labour Party, the Green Party and Sinn Féin, he said it was vital these parties maintained their position if they entered into talks to form a government.
Dr Muireann Ní Bhrolcháin, senior lecturer in Celtic studies at NUI Maynooth, said: "If the Gabhra Valley is not safe, nowhere in Ireland is safe from future development in the spurious name of progress."
Architect and broadcaster Duncan Stewart called the M3 "the worst example of unsustainable development" because it would encourage more sprawl.
Copied from Máirt Aib 24, 2007 19:00 above:
"The only properly commissioned poll, undertaken by Red C market research in 2005 found that a massive 75% of a national sample wanted the Valley to be left intact, and World Heritage Site status to be declared for the area."
I would not be in the least surprised if the above statement was highly accurate.
The well balanced and well rounded arguments put forward in the rest of the same posting appear - to me at least - to make much sense. I just hope that many of those who vote in the upcoming general election will feel the same (or nearly anyway!!).
All things considered, the overall approach of your group seems brilliant to me. Like many others, in locations all over the world I suspect, I wish all those involved with your campaign every success.