Junior minister Michael Healy-Rae has called on the Office of Public Works (OPW) to re-examine the system governing landings on Skellig Rock.
As The Sunday Independent reports, he is supporting calls by Skellig Michael boatmen to change the current licensing system to allow for days lost due to bad weather.
“On days in which the weather makes it unsafe to travel, there is currently no allowance in the OPW’s strict permit policy to give that day back to the excellent boat operators, who not alone have a wonderful knowledge of the area, but provide excellent and comfortable craft to transport people to the island,” he said.
Under a plan introduced in the early 1990s, 15 boats are licensed to carry 12 passengers to the island once a day.
This amounts to about 180 people a day, or around 17,000 throughout the visiting season from mid-May to the end of September.
“On average, we would lose about 30pc of our days during the season,” Donal McCrohan, chairman of Skellig Boatmen’s Association, told the newspaper.
“The weather is certainly changing. It’s not as settled. We used to get more settled spells before,” he said.
“Before I came into the business, there could have been a run of 30 days straight when we could land on the island, even more. But if we get 16 or 18 days of good weather now, we think it’s a long spell.
Read The Sunday Independent here

















































