Bishop Fintan Monahan of Killaloe has appealed to Government and others in positions of leadership to “maintain rural life”.
Speaking to The Irish Catholic this week as An Post
signalled that a major wave of post office closures is possible, Bishop
Monahan said the “impoverishment of rural Ireland” remains a big issue
of concern for communities and he urged leaders to “try and make a
preferential option for maintaining the quality of rural life even if it
doesn’t seem to make strict logical sense from the financial point of
view”.
Forced to deal with the issue of priest shortages, just as in other
Irish dioceses, Bishop Monahan said this had prompted conversations
within his own diocese of this “hot on the heels of Garda stations, post
offices, shops, pubs and various other services being shut down”.
He added: “Several GAA clubs and other sports are struggling to field
teams as so many of the young active people have moved to more urban
environments or have emigrated.”
The cumulative effect, Bishop Monahan said, is an increasing “sense
of isolation, loneliness and fear for the future of rural communities”.
Insisting that the Church in Killaloe is playing its part, Bishop
Monahan said that the clergy of the diocese remain committed “to the
rural and more remote areas as much as possible with the small numbers
available”.
Bishop Monahan’s words were prompted by those of An Post Retail
Operations Manager, John Daly this week, who said that sustainability
was a key concern in deciding the futures of at least 500 post offices.
Rural woes
He indicated that An Post needs only to retain 600 of its 1,131
outlets nationwide to meet Department of Social Protection obligations.
Adding to rural woes, it also emerged this week that serious delays
in Rural Development Programme payments meant that just 52% of this
year’s allocation had been paid out so far.
In a statement on the underspend, Fianna Fáil Spokesperson on
Agriculture Charlie McConalogue urged Government to “not leave farmers
in the lurch” on badly needed funds.
“Many farmers have had to take out loans to keep their businesses
going while they wait for their payments to come through, and these
delays will exacerbate an already difficult situation,” he said.