Kinsale locals’ appeal of controversial permission for a mussel farm in the West Cork town’s harbour will now not be decided until October next year, as Echo Live reports.
It follows the granting of a licence to Woodstown Bay Shellfish Limited to cultivate mussels in Kinsale Harbour by the Minister for Agriculture, Food and the Marine this past May.
The decision has faced significant local opposition, with fears that existing recreational areas for sailing and swimming would be “permanently damaged” by the project.
Some 147 submissions were lodged with the Aquaculture Licences Appeals Board (ALAB) by the end of June, and a decision had been set to be made by next Wednesday 29 October.
But in a letter received by appellants last week, the ALAB said it “has formed the view that it will not be in a position to determine this appeal by that date, due to having to consider the logistics of managing the appeals, given the number of appellants, and assessing all the issues raised in each appeal”.
Local resident Donal Hayes said the move “beggars belief”, though Taoiseach Micheál Martin — responding to Dáil question on the matter, said: “I think the very fact that it’s been put off may suggest a fairly significant examination of this [application] in all of its aspects.”
Echo Live has more on the story HERE.

















































