Landowners secure €120m
windfall
- from controversial M3
By - Paul Melia.
Almost €120m has been spent on land to build the
controversial M3 motorway linking Dublin with the north
east.
The cost makes the motorway among the most expensive
road-building projects undertaken here, and represents a
windfall for landowners who received an average of almost
€69,000 per acre.
Yesterday Meath County Council, which is buying land on
behalf of the National Roads Authority, said it had spent
€117m buying the 1,700 acres needed to build the
47km carriageway which has been bitterly opposed by
campaigners and archaeologists.
A contentious section between Dunshaughlin and Navan runs
through the heart of the Tara/Skryne Valley and it is
claimed that it has already resulted in a national
monument being destroyed to make way for the road.
Campaigners claim irreparable damage will be caused to
archaeology in the area to facilitate construction
works.
A council spokesman said yesterday that although a "small
number" of landowners were in dispute with the council
over the amount paid, it did not expect the total spend
to rise.
If the M3 opens on schedule in July 2010, almost 23,000
vehicles a day are expected to use it. This will lead to
toll payments of at least €13m a year.
The cost of building the road is expected to be between
€800m and €1bn. It will bypass the towns of
Dunboyne, Dunshaughlin, Navan and Kells.
Campaigners yesterday conceded that, given the amount
spent, it would be a brave politician who decided to halt
construction.
But they said the land purchases represented an
opportunity for the State to build a heritage park along
the controversial section of the road, between
Dunshaughlin and Navan, which could provide employment in
the local area and be a major draw for tourists.
"I don't think Brian Cowen's the man to stop it
[construction]," Michael Canney from the Campaign to Save
Tara said.
"The money is spent but we would always have advocated a
heritage and tourism resource, and it's about time the
land was in public ownership".
"If people decide it's better to use it as a tourism
resource, it's almost an opportunity".
Laura Grealish from Tarawatch added there was "room for
manoeuvre" as other uses could be made of the land.
"I'm sure they could find another use for that land such
as turning the area into a tourism centre", she said.
© The Irish Independent, 7th. April 2008.