This article is from page 19 of the 2012-09-11 edition of The Clare People. OCR mistakes are to be expected so download the original SWF or the rendered page 19 JPG
THE Tidy Towns committee in Kilrush has expressed disappointment with its rate of improvement in this year’s competition, even though the west Clare capital had the distinction of winning a Gold Medal for the sixth successive year.
This disappointment was sounded out by Tidy Towns chairperson Paul Edson, who while expressing delight at the town’s latest Gold Medal achievement said that the failure to make the “big leap forward” they were looking for will concentrate minds over the next year.
“Our primary hope was that we would continue with the progress that we have made over the last number of years by winning gold,” said Mr Edson. “We did that and it is a huge achievement for us to win a Gold Medal for sixth year in a row. We are delighted and over the moon about retaining that medal, because it gets harder and harder every year. We are still there and we are hanging on to our gold medal and that’s great.
“We had an increase of one part from last year. We are slightly disappointed with that. We are happy to be moving forward, but we felt that the amount of work and effort that we put in actually deserved more than a one mark increase. We are going through the report to see what areas we need to improve on,” he added.
And, in making his comments about Kilrush’s overall mark of 304 points, Mr Edson said that the goal going forward remains becoming the third centre in the county – after Mountshannon and Ennis – to win the overall national title.
“Unfortunately we haven’t made a big leap forward,” he said. “We felt that with the amount of work and effort we put in during the year would deserve more than one extra mark. It wasn’t to be, so we have to look at the adjudicators report and redouble our efforts next year and come back fighting.
“Our next job is try to understand why we only collected one extra mark and why we didn’t do better for the amount of improvements that we did. Look at Moore Street for instance. Unfortunately we didn’t get any recognition from the judges for the work that was done on Moore Street. There’s no comment on those improvements.
“We feel we need to make a big song and dance about the work that we have done. We will review where the adjudicator has made his points and come back stronger next year. We want to win that overall award,” he added.