logo
I have nothing against cycling, but spare me from speeding cyclists on country paths

I have nothing against cycling, but spare me from speeding cyclists on country paths

Irish Times28-05-2025
It's five years now since the great Covid influx of non-locals to our local canal walk, and you might still happen upon the occasional conversation about visitor resistance to a friendly nod. But conversations these days are more likely to be about the cyclists who regularly mistake the narrow towpath for a speedway.
Let's just agree at the outset that cycling can be challenging and deadly. Recently a woman cycling across the narrow old canal bridge found herself competing with an oncoming driver who reckoned he could squeeze the van past her on the crest, which left her clinging to the stone wall with bike and bloodied knees. When he finally relented and reversed she accepted his apology with remarkable grace.
She cycles that same canal stretch every weekend at a leisurely pace, gathering the head space to face another week – and hers is probably the kind of gentle image that pops into mind when people think of bikes and picturesque towpaths. The problem is that she's a rare one. More often it's groups of three or more with all the competitive thrusting of lads chasing Sam Bennett. On a towpath. The problem, to be clear, is not the cycling but the aggressive speed and silence of the cyclists. Walkers don't hear them coming until they're bearing down on them. From there on, rather than communing with the swans and the herons, the walkers are on red alert for the next incursion. That fear is entirely rational on a towpath, an urban footpath or a country road.
Serious collisions between cyclists and pedestrians are not as rare as some like to think.
A 10-year RSA study of seriously injured pedestrians
showed that while 2,022 were hit by a car or light-goods vehicle, 125 had landed in hospital as a result of a collision with a cyclist. That's one serious collision a month. Among those with the most severe – possibly life-changing – injuries, 46 had been hit by a pedal bike. That compared with 24 seriously injured by a motorbike or 56 by a HGV or bus.
READ MORE
There are regulations around cycling. In 2023, 43 cyclists were issued with a fixed-penalty notice for breaking a red light. Eighteen were prosecuted for riding a bike without due care and attention. Other offences include cycling into a pedestrianised street or area, or on a footpath or cycling without reasonable consideration. The 1963 Road Traffic Regulations also stipulate that all bicycles used in a public place must be fitted with a bell (and regularly dinged presumably).
[
Eamon Ryan: Moaning about cycle lanes is a symptom of our inertia on road safety and climate
Opens in new window
]
It is standard practice at this stage to say 'But not all cyclists ...' But there is a culture problem, according to none other than the patron saint of cyclists,
Eamon Ryan
. Asked at a Dodder greenway meeting last year how he was going to make cyclists using such facilities obey the law, the then minister for transport talked about widening cycling and walking paths (which is not always possible) but also pointed the finger at 'cycling culture'. A local who complained that walking was being made dangerous by cyclists who 'really don't care about ­pedestrians' was right, said the Minister. 'I think it's also very much incumbent on the cycling community to create a culture and an attitude.' He also wanted it properly enforced.
An interesting fact to emerge from all this is how stubbornly male and sadly small cycling remains. An
Injuries Resolution Board's report
on 329 crash claims affecting cyclists in 2023 showed that 77 per cent of the cyclists were male, with an average age of 42. This suggests that middle-aged male cyclists are particularly vulnerable to injury or that fewer women are cycling and are less inclined to take risks.
But more than eight in 10 respondents said they never or rarely cycled, according to a recent Ireland Thinks poll for Red Click insurers, which is both surprising and sad. Here again the gender disparity kicks in: two-thirds of women blamed the danger of the roads but only half the men. Other deterrents were traffic volume, dangerous driving, lack of confidence, lack of segregated cycle lanes, weather, poor street lighting and near-misses. No one seemed to mention other cyclists.
[
Dublin city cycle lane funding slashed by €16m
Opens in new window
]
It may also be that Irish people generally have yet to settle into the common courtesies and manners around the use of public space. And that the authorities have yet to meet them in many cases with adequate seating, public toilets, bins and decent lighting. But some cyclists project the righteous sense that only they can fully appreciate – and suffer for – a society that encourages outdoor activity, active commuting, clean air and green transport.
The Cork Cycling Campaign's nuanced tone on etiquette could be a starting point on the path to reconciliation. It believes that cyclists should behave as 'guests' when 'using the footpath for short stretches is inevitable', but that children, for example, should be permitted to cycle on footpaths 'after instruction on how to do so safely'. Cyclists should pass pedestrians slowly and with great care, they say, and should ring the bell '(politely) to warn pedestrians of your approach – no one likes to be startled'. If some of that sounds radical, brace for this one: 'Be prepared to stop and yield the right of way to pedestrians if necessary.'
A final one might be a reminder that just as country roads are not built for high motoring speeds, towpaths and most greenways are not built for high cycling speeds. People might routinely break the rules or guidance on all of them but that's hardly the safe, conciliatory or righteous answer for anyone.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

GAA pay tribute to mother and children killed in Fermanagh shooting
GAA pay tribute to mother and children killed in Fermanagh shooting

Extra.ie​

timean hour ago

  • Extra.ie​

GAA pay tribute to mother and children killed in Fermanagh shooting

A heart-wrenching tribute was paid at Croke Park for the mother and two children killed in Co Fermanagh last week. It took place ahead of the All Ireland Senior Football final in memory of Vanessa Whyte and her children, James and Sara who were fatally injured following a shooting at their home on Wednesday. The trio's names appeared on a screen alongside their picture while a minute's applause took place before Kerry faced off Donegal. It took place ahead of the All Ireland Senior Football final in memory of Vanessa Whyte and her children, James and Sara who were fatally injured following a shooting at their home on Wednesday. Pic: Facebook Veterinary surgeon Ms Whyte was in her 40s and originally from Co Clare. A man remains in hospital following gunshot wounds with the Police Service of Northern Ireland (PSNI) believing the horror incident was an attempted murder-suicide. The popular matriarch had played camogie for the local club, St Joseph's Doora Barefield, with locals telling of her love of hurling and Clare GAA. Vanessa, James & Sara remembered in @CrokePark today at the @officialgaa All Ireland. 💚🤍 — Fermanagh GAA (@FermanaghGAA) July 27, 2025 St Josephs' Doora Barefield GAA club said it was 'shocked and saddened to hear of the tragic passing yesterday of Barefield native Vanessa Whyte and her two beautiful children James and Sara in Fermanagh'. After relocating to the North, Vanessa joined St Patrick's Lisbellaw Hurling Club, where her children were also members. No funeral details have been released for the family as of yet, though it is expected it will take place in Vanessa's native of Clare. After relocating to the North, Vanessa joined St Patrick's Lisbellaw Hurling Club, where her children were also members. Pic: PSNI/PA Wire Fr Tom Fitzpatrick, parish priest in ­Barefield, Co. Clare, told Clare FM ­last week that though no details have been finalised, it's the family's wish that the funeral be held in Clare. Clare FM reported that Ms Whyte 'was a frequent visitor to friends and family in Barefield and was a keen Clare GAA supporter, even attending last year's All-Ireland hurling final with Sara and James'. A vigil took place over the weekend at Maguiresbridge Primary School, where James and Sara had both previously attended. School principal Honor Irvine described the two sporty kids as popular, noting she had taught them both for two years. 'James was full of fun, always laughing, loved to get a laugh, loved to be ­outdoors. Sara was the same. Sara loved outdoors, bit of a tomboy, and the two of them got on very well, [had] lots of friends and were very popular in school' she said.

Inside crisis-hit special care: ‘They are not monsters. They are ordinary kids that have gone through difficult things'
Inside crisis-hit special care: ‘They are not monsters. They are ordinary kids that have gone through difficult things'

Irish Times

time2 hours ago

  • Irish Times

Inside crisis-hit special care: ‘They are not monsters. They are ordinary kids that have gone through difficult things'

It was an 'affront to the rule of law', said Mr Justice John Jordan in the High Court recently, that beds were not available for three vulnerable children in need of immediate placements in the special care system. One of the three without a place in the most secure form of care was a teenager who was 'free falling' and whose father believed would die without a place. Another was a self-harming child who attempted suicide after being 'drawn into a life of criminality' and had been 'subjected to sexual exploitation'. Children and young people deemed to be at such a risk to themselves, or others, as to need therapeutic residential care may be detained in this system by order of the court. READ MORE Mr Justice Jordan, who hears the weekly special care list, was told only 14 of Tusla 's 26 special care beds were open – down from 15 weeks earlier. Today, 15 are operating. He described the system as being 'in crisis', adding: 'This dysfunctional system is getting worse. It is an indictment of the State that those special care beds are not available.' Mr Justice John Jordan oversees the special care list in the High Court. Photograph: Áras an Uachtaráin As recently as June 19th, Mr Justice Jordan said it was like 'winning the All-Ireland' to hear, for the first time in more than six months, every child with a special care order had a placement. Last Thursday, however, the 'no beds' list section was back. The parents of a vulnerable teenager said they were 'at their wits end' due to no placement being available for their child despite an order being granted the previous week. There were 'significant concerns' for the child who was described as being suicidal and had 'overdose tendencies', said Sarah McKechnie, barrister for Tusla. 'It is my understanding a bed won't be available until in or around August 25th.' In an online post, the child's mother said the teenager was in hospital following a suicide attempt – the latest of many. She said she would refuse to allow the discharging of her child from hospital in an attempt to keep them safe. Special care remains in the spotlight as a system in crisis. There are 26 beds across three centres, but they have never all been in operation. One of the centres, Coovagh House, is in Limerick. The other two are in Dublin – Ballydowd in Lucan and Crannóg Nua in Portrane. The Crannóg Nua special care unit for minors in Portrane, Co Dublin. Photograph: Bryan O'Brien The numbers involved are small; just 0.2 per cent of the 5,761 children in care need special care. However, the service attracts trenchant criticism for its limitations given the risks faced by those who need it. Tusla, arguing in 2023 for higher pay rates to recruit more special care workers, told the Department of Children 'the current crisis in ... capacity has the potential to lead to a fatal outcome for a child who cannot access special care'. In recent weeks, The Irish Times was granted unprecedented media access to the largest special care unit, Crannóg Nua. Adjacent to the St Ita's Hospital campus, and behind 20-foot high fences, the facility is bright and modern, located on a landscaped campus. However, just five of the 12 beds are open. During the visit, social care workers, kitchen staff, the on-campus school principal and management talk about how the facility works. There were glimpses of three children, all of whom were calm, during and between activities with their support workers. A notice board in the dining area of Crannóg Nua special care unit for minors in Portrane, Co Dublin. Photograph: Bryan O'Brien Once an order is made, gardaí get involved to 'ensure [the child is] brought safely to the service', says Tusla. Each child has an en suite single-bedroom – which they may personalise with posters or photos – though there is little to no privacy. They are locked into bedrooms at 10.30pm and can be checked on through a hatch, explains Aisling Byrne, social care leader. She shows the common area, laundry room and kitchenette. Dotted around are safety pods – industrial-strength beanbags on to which children are brought when being restrained. An innovation of Crannóg Nua, the pods have reduced injuries to children and staff given restraint used to mean two staff bringing a child by force to the ground. The school at the heart of the campus is led by Jacqui McCarron. She shows small classrooms where the Junior Certificate curriculum is followed, including art, woodwork, home economics, PE and core academic subjects. Jacqui McCarron, principal of the school at Crannóg Nua special care unit, stands next to a 'cubbie' unit, a multi-sensory calming booth. Photograph: Bryan O'Brien 'We have the opportunity to work intensively with them, see what's working,' she says. 'They make progress and that is powerful for their self-esteem. You wouldn't believe how much completing the Junior Cert means to them. It is probably the only academic success they will ever have.' The profile of the children is undeniably difficult, says William O'Rourke, assistant national director of alternative care. Typical histories include 'self harm and suicidality, substance misuse, sexual exploitation, violence or aggression towards and from others, property damage, mental health presentation and antisocial or criminal behaviour'. 'We are seeing more and more sexual exploitation, emerging mental health issues, emerging personality disorders,' he says. Special care offers intensive therapeutic interventions during a total break from the child's environment. William O'Rourke, Tusla's assistant national director for alternative care. Photograph: Bryan O'Brien 'Their lives may be so chaotic in the community and they don't actually see this until they come in and stabilise,' says O'Rourke. 'We can see what's happening to them truly when they come to a service like this. 'Take the risks away and you are then dealing with the person. It may be the first time they are being seen for who they are, and not just as them in their circumstances.' He adds that 'the kids generally settle within days' and engage with staff and education and develop positive relationships. 'It is a really positive intervention when you remove the risk and hopefully identify what they need.' From 2013 to the end of last year there were 269 admissions to special care, some of which were repeat. The annual high was 33 children in 2014. Last year there were 14 – seven boys and seven girls. There has been no longitudinal study on long-term outcomes of the system, O'Rourke says, though one is 'being commissioned' by the Department of Children. Crannóg Nua staff have an optimistic yet realistic approach. 'There is no quick fix,' says Oisin Mulchrone, deputy social care manager. 'They are coming from very challenging circumstances, some with family dynamics that are probably quite entrenched in challenges. It is hard to move away from that.' Mulchrone says he 'couldn't imagine working anywhere else'. Oisin Mulchrone, deputy social care manager, at the sticker-festooned door of a service user's bedroom at Crannóg Nua. Photograph: Bryan O'Brien 'You see young people moving on and you want to see them doing well. People do this because they want to make a difference for the young people. It's not for the faint-hearted sometimes, but the good greatly outweighs the bad.' For James (18) special care was 'probably the calmest time' in his life, says his mother Martha (not their real names). By the time an order was made, James, who was 15 at the time, had more than 35 care placements in the preceding four months. Explaining his background, Martha says James was a 'clingy' and anxious toddler. He was diagnosed with ADHD at six. 'He had no friends . . . He had an SNA (special needs assistant) from junior infants to fifth class.' While in fifth class, James was expelled. His parents tried home schooling but his behaviour deteriorated. He was violent towards his siblings and parents. An incident at home resulted in gardaí being called and his parents reluctantly agreed to voluntary care. 'We thought he would finally get the help he needed,' says Martha. Unable to find a foster placement due to his behaviour, Tusla contracted private providers to accommodate James in what are known as unregulated special emergency arrangements (SEAs). 'He was shipped around B&Bs, hotels, holiday homes. He spent nights in Garda stations, hospitals, care-staff's cars,' says Martha. 'He could be in Drogheda one night and the next night in Cork. He could be three nights there and then to Monaghan.' She added: 'There was no stability, no care plan. He was being transported in taxis, his belongings in black plastic bags, living on takeaways.' In his final weeks in SEAs, James was 'out of control', she says. 'He ransacked his placements; broke into staff cars; there were altercations with the guards. He accumulated criminal charges at this time too, something he never had before going into care.' Before entering special care, James was assessed by a social worker with the Child and Adolescent Mental Health Service (CAHMS). She noted: 'Difficulty in engaging [him] at a time of extreme distress . . . significant recent trauma in number of recent placement moves and removal from family home likely to explain significant dysregulation at this time'. The gymnasium at Crannóg Nua special care unit for minors in Portrane. Photograph: Bryan O'Brien Special care was the last option for James, says Martha, and agreeing to it was 'very distressing'. 'It took [James] about 12 to 16 weeks to settle. He was full of frustration, stripped of all liberties, feeling punished. He was there more than two years. Staff didn't just see a case file or a troubled teen, they saw him – his fears, his humour, intelligence and his pain. 'They set boundaries but also built trust day by day. They listened when he spoke, even when his words came out in anger. He slowly began to trust them back.' Leaving special care was tumultuous, with aftercare planning ad hoc. James was initially offered only homeless services, but the morning he was to leave his family was told a city centre apartment with security-guards was available. He remains without access to HSE adult psychiatric care. His health has deteriorated, he lost the apartment and has slept rough. Martha is hoping he will be provided with an after-care placement. Tusla said it could not comment on an individual case but that SEAs were used when 'a regulated emergency placement is unavailable, and an immediate place of safety is required for a young person'. Their use has declined – from 170 children last December to 57 at present. Where a child spends 'an extended period' in a SEA, 'there is increased oversight of the arrangement with additional supports'. James's case epitomises problems in the wider care system that lead to 'additional pressure' on special care, says Terry Dignam, co-founder of Children's Residential and Aftercare Voluntary Association. He points to an 'ongoing crisis in CAMHS', the decreasing availability of foster carers, a lack of residential placements, an 'over-reliance' on private providers and that almost 100 high-support beds were 'stripped out of the system' in 2014. 'We need far more early supports for families. If we had a properly functioning care system, with high-support beds to take in some of the kids falling into crisis, we wouldn't have such a reliance on special care,' he says. 'We would have fewer children escalating to that level because we would have the interventions earlier.' The key obstacle to opening all 26 beds, says Mark Smith, Tusla's director of special care services, is recruiting and retaining staff in what is seen as the toughest job in social care. To have 20 beds open, five more than the current 15, would require 35 additional staff, he says. Opening all 26 would require an additional 77. There are currently 110 whole-time equivalent (WTE) social care staff in the three units. A classroom in the Crannóg Nua school. Photograph: Bryan O'Brien The sanctioning of a new grade of special care worker last year was 'a significant victory for Tusla', Smith says. The top pay rate on this grade is €68,169, on a 23-point scale closer aligned with that at the Oberstown child detention campus. Two new staff are employed on this grade, with five at 'varying stages of recruitment', underlining continuing difficulties. Staff retention is improving, however. In the year to May, it stood at 84 per cent, up from 76 per cent a year earlier. Solving the special care crisis, says Dignam, is not only up to Tusla, which 'gets a lot of flack'. It will require 'substantial investment' by the several agencies, including the HSE, across the system, the reopening of high-support beds, and 'vastly' improving CAMHS and adult mental health services. Special care work is 'a great job if you commit to it', says O'Rourke. 'It's a job that's very, very rewarding. You see the young people here. They are not demons. They are not monsters. They are ordinary kids that have gone through some really difficult things.'

Halt in decline of Garda resignations sparks concern
Halt in decline of Garda resignations sparks concern

Irish Times

time2 hours ago

  • Irish Times

Halt in decline of Garda resignations sparks concern

A decline in the number of resignations from An Garda Síochána recorded last year has halted, dashing hopes that the high level of early departures from the force was part of a short-term trend during the Covid pandemic years. For decades, the number of gardaí leaving the force before being eligible to retire on full pensions was low. However, it jumped from 69 in 2020 to 171 in 2023, a near-250 per cent increase. Last year, resignations declined by about 20 per cent, to 138, though that decline has not continued in the first six months of this year, when there were 68 resignations. If that pace continued for the remainder of the year, the total would be the same as last year's. Shortages of personnel continue to hamper police work across the State, from responding to emergencies to investigating crimes. READ MORE However, the Garda has insisted the level of resignations is much lower than in other sectors and far below that in other police forces. 'Despite the extensive commentary and public narrative on a crisis on resignations in An Garda Síochána, the resignation rate remains at approximately 1 per cent,' Garda Headquarters said in reply to queries. It said this is far below the rate in other police services, citing a figure of up to 10 per cent in the UK, and the private sector, where it said the rate was 10 to 20 per cent. The force said some of those who had left were subject to internal discipline and opted to resign from the organisation rather than be dismissed. Twelve gardaí who had previously resigned were reattested in recent months and applications from others seeking to rejoin are under consideration. [ Garda resignations surge to record high in 2023 Opens in new window ] The Association of Garda Sergeants and Inspectors (AGSI) said the Government is already set to miss its recruitment targets less than a year into office. The Garda Representative Association (GRA) said the next Garda commissioner, due to be appointed on Tuesday, must address 'high levels' of resignations. Recruitment has begun to increase the strength of the Garda over the past 12 months, to 14,300 at present. However, that remains below the target of 15,000 minimum, with the long-term aim of growing to 18,000. The number of resignations is a concern because recruitment to the force has been sluggish since the Garda College in Templemore, Co Tipperary, reopened after being forced to close during the pandemic. Though there is capacity at the college to take in four 200-strong classes of recruits per year, classes have been smaller, with 630 recruits starting training last year. [ Garda numbers set for significant decline, sergeants and inspectors warn Opens in new window ] Some of those offered places have moved on to take other jobs, or have emigrated, by the time their applications to join the Garda have been approved and their start date for Templemore is set. Garda Headquarters has vowed to streamline that process; other ideas to bolster recruitment include satellite garda training centres, home study, and directly hiring specialists with the required skills. The trainee allowance is now €354 per week, almost double the rate in 2023. The maximum age for new recruits has increased from 35 to 50.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store