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Galway

Project Ireland 2040 is our plan for the future of Ireland. Highlights for Galway include:

  • Galway City Ring Road: This will provide relief from traffic congestion in order to implement smarter mobility and public transport measures. The project is currently at Design and Environmental Assessment Phase.
  • N59 Moycullen Bypass: This will reduce congestion in Moycullen, provide a safer route with better journey time certainty and will improve access to the West and in particular Connemara.
  • Atlantic Corridor: A particular priority is the delivery of the Atlantic Corridor, with a high quality road network linking Cork, Limerick, Galway and Sligo.
  • Galway BusConnects: A €200m rationalised network of five high-performing cross-city routes, by 2027, linking all major destinations across the city and including a network of park & ride sites.
  • Health: There will be a new elective hospital in Galway plus new dedicated ambulatory elective only hospital facilities and new patient accommodation for Portiuncula Hospital, Ballinasloe.
  • Technology University for the Connacht Ulster Alliance (CUA) consortium: Significant new buildings will be provided in Galway-Mayo Institute of Technology (GMIT), Institute of Technology Sligo, and Letterkenny Institute of Technology, in their bid for TU status.
  • Galway European City of Culture 2020: The Government committed in principle to provide €15m to the project.
  • Investment in National Heritage: This includes Coole Park and Connemara National Park in Co. Galway.
  • Gaeltacht Investment: including development of tourism facilities in Ceantar na nOileán in the Connemara Gaeltacht.
  • Investment in the Aran Islands: The development of improved pier infrastructure on Inis Oírr and the construction of new co-operative offices and community facilities on Inis Meáin.
  • Rossaveel Fisheries Harbour Centres (FHCs): An investment programme for ongoing safety and maintenance and necessary new developments.
  • Rural Regeneration and Development Fund: Towns and villages with populations of up to 10,000 people, along with rural areas, can benefit from a new Rural Regeneration and Development Fund, worth €1bn nationally over ten years.
  • Sport Capital Programme: Communities and clubs across Galway can bid for the over €100 million in capital funding under the Sport Capital Programme (SCP) over the next 4 years. Also, a new Large Scale Sport Infrastructure Fund of €100 million is being established for larger sports projects where the proposed Government contribution exceeds amounts available under the SCP.

Fine Gael is a party of aspiration, a party of enterprise, a party of opportunity, and a party of hope. These are our values and they guide our ambition for this country.

We want to give hope to individuals and families, reward work and enterprise, encourage aspiration, and remove barriers to progress. We want the Republic that we founded to provide opportunities for all our people.

We believe a greater work-life balance and work-place flexibility must be better supported, particularly in the early years.

That is why we have brought forward measures such as Paternity Benefit. Since its introduction 1,582 fathers in Galway have been awarded this payment.

We have also brought forward measures to make childcare more affordable such as full entitlement to a full two years of the free preschool programme and a universal childcare subsidy of up to €1,040 per year for children aged from 6 to 36 months.

Balanced regional development is at the heart of our planning. We will ensure that rural communities not only survive but thrive. We have appointed a Minister for Rural and Community Development and in early 2017 we launched the Action Plan for Rural Development.

€1,004,231 is being invested in Galway to rejuvenate the town and villages in the county in 2017 and €12,195,883 is being spent between 2014 and 2020 through the LEADER Programme.

In addition, €1,368,651 has been invested in Galway through the Local Improvement Scheme to support the improvement of non-public rural roads. €21,571,556 has been spent on Regional and Local Roads while a further €22,407,641 was spent on National Roads in Galway in 2017.

Life expectancy is increasing as is the average and median age. We believe that this is an opportunity for Ireland that should be embraced.

In March 2017 we increased the State Pension again, benefitting 28,824 pensioners in Galway. Budget 2018 increased the State Pension by €5 per week, making a total increase of €13 per week over the last 3 Fine Gael budgets, and proportional increases for qualified adults and those on reduced rates of payment.

We will bolster the success created by Irish workers and enterprises by ensuring that all get fair reward for their efforts and for the risks they take.

Significant progress has been made already; we cut the USC again, increased the entry point for the higher rate of tax, increased the Earned Income Tax Credit, extended entitlement to the Treatment Benefit Scheme and increased the national minimum wage for the fourth time.

Our culture, heritage, language and sport define us as a people. They bring us together, are central to good physical and mental health, and give us great pride.

The Sports Capital Programme has transformed Ireland’s sporting landscape with improvements in the quality and quantity of sporting facilities. Under the 2017 round of the Sports Capital Programme €3,262,953 in funding has been secured for 114 sporting organisations across Galway.

We are committed to ensuring that people feel safe in their homes, whether in our urban centres or the heart of rural Ireland.

Here in Galway there is a currently 579 Gardaí on the beat and a Garda fleet consisting of 92 vehicles. We have a plan in place in place to achieve an overall Garda workforce of 21,000 personnel by 2021.

We are also working to ensure that vulnerable older people feel safe in their communities. Under the Senior Alerts Scheme 1,092 people have received a personal monitored alarm in Galway since late 2015.

Since the launch of the Action Plan for Jobs in 2012 the number of persons on the Live Register in Galway has declined by 46%.

Youth unemployment also continues to fall with a reduction of 66% of U-25s on the Live Register over the same period. As we approach full employment our focus is on high quality, secure job creation.