Irish Examiner view: Reliable bus service is key to sustainable travel progress
More than 2,700 complaints were made about Cork City’s bus service in 12 months. Picture: Larry Cummins
The high level of complaints about public transport in Cork City is bad news for a number of reasons. The most immediate concern is for the bus users who missed appointments, were late for work or school, or were otherwise inconvenienced by the late or non-arrival of buses. As our story at the weekend reported, more than 2,700 complaints were made about the city’s bus service in 12 months. The most complained-about route, which serves University College Cork, Munster Technological University, and Cork University Hospital, was the subject of some 317 complaints alone.
At a broader level, the dissatisfaction with the service does not bode well for government efforts to wrest us from behind the wheels of our car and onto public transport.
A month to the day before we reported on the dissatisfaction with the city’s bus service, the Government launched two ambitious plans aimed at transforming the country’s transport system over the next five years. The moving together strategy and the sustainable mobility policy action plan describe how we might radically transform the way we travel over the next few years. The ultimate goal is a fully decarbonised transport sector by 2050, and a less congested, more efficient system that greatly improves our quality of life through freeing up time otherwise spent travelling, and reducing the transport costs to our economy.
Just when we thought we could no longer be shocked by the language and sentiments of his utterances, the purported leader of the free world comes out with an expletive-laden threat to blow up every power plant in Iran along with its bridges if it did not open the Strait of Hormuz by today.
There is a lot to digest in Mr Trump’s post on Truth Social. The deliberate targeting of civilian infrastructure may constitute a war crime, and yet Trump has flagged this intent in advance. More broadly, the threat suggests that, far from ending the war, he seems intent on escalating it. Most troublingly, it lays bare the collapse of any meaningful system of checks and balances on this capricious and unpredictable individual. From the moment he took office, it became apparent that the 47th president of the US did not believe that the rules and conventions which constrained his predecessors applied to him.
A pilot project that would allow older residents of social housing to move to smaller homes located in a town centre has laudable objectives. The project, to be trialled by Cork County Council in Cobh, is aimed at freeing up suitable social housing for young families while, at the same time, providing older people with easier-to-manage homes close to the services and amenities they require.
It is an idea that is well worth exploring at a time of a severe housing shortage when many retired people struggle, financially and physically, to maintain homes that become too big when children have grown and gone.





