This article is from page 4 of the 2012-05-22 edition of The Clare People. OCR mistakes are to be expected so download the original SWF or the rendered page 4 JPG
SURF school operators in Lahinch will be confined to a single area on the northernmost end of the Lahinch promenade, when new beach byelaws come into effect on July 1. The new bye-laws, which were passed into law by the Clare County Council last week, will provide ten car-park spaces, two for each surf school, where trading can now take place. The surfers will now also be encouraged to enter the water using the northern steps, in an effort to segregate surfers from walkers and other beach users. Over the last ten year surfing has become a key part of the summertime trade in Lahinch – with hundreds of people surfing or learning to surf on the beach each day. The Lahinch prom now supports five official surf schools who help attract a large number of tourists to the county each year. “We have received a massive number of complaints from people who walk and swim at the beach. People can’t park, they can’t walk the prom because there are wet-suits everywhere and the surfers are there waxing their boards,” said Lahinch Cllr Bill Slattery (FG). “I think the surfers are getting a good deal out of this. They have been breaking the bye-laws by trading there up until now and this will give them a legal right to trade on the prom.” Just one submission was made when the draft bye-laws went on display last month. Local man, Liam Grant, suggested that the close proximity of the surf school would create tension between the businesses, that one of the surf schools would be given a “prime” location on the prom, that the need of surfers were not being listened to and that tighter regulations for the surf schools, in the same regulations, would be preferable to moving the school. The council took one of these suggestions on board and the slot allocated the surf schools will be rotated year-on-year, to ensure that no school is given the prime location.