News
Mission Road to temporarily close for works

By Sean Moriarty
Mission Road will be closed to traffic for two days this week.
The road will be closed between its junction with Lower New Street and the Plaza Hotel tomorrow (Thursday) and Friday to facilitate essential resurfacing works.
Mission Road has become rutted by horses on the popular jarvey route to and from the National Park.
There have been several calls to have the road re-surfaced.
Signposted diversions will be in place.
In January 2020, before COVID-19 restrictions, several councillors called for a jarvey plan to be adopted in the town.
At that time a Killarney Municipal District meeting was told that the surface of Mission Road, which was resurfaced in January 2017, was already showing signs of deterioration.
In March 2019, the Council said it was researching various resurfacing materials including looking at how horse traffic was managed in New York’s Central Park.
News
Massive Park Road housing development given green light
A private developer has been given planning permission to build 249 new residential units at Upper Park Road. The development, which will be built on a recently cleared site near […]

A private developer has been given planning permission to build 249 new residential units at Upper Park Road.
The development, which will be built on a recently cleared site near An Post’s sorting office, will include a variety of properties from five-bed houses to single apartments, along with a crèche and over 500 car spaces and over 300 bike spaces.
The development has been welcomed by local councillor Martin Grady.
“Killarney has a massive housing shortage so this is very positive. It will retain young families in the area, stimulating economic growth,” he said. “After 17 years of different planning applications it’s finally coming to fruition.”
News
Ballydribeen residents living in fear due to anti-social behaviour
Residents in the Ballydribeen are living in fear as a result of increased anti-social behaviour in the estate. Several serious incidents in the estate have resulted in several Garda visits […]

Residents in the Ballydribeen are living in fear as a result of increased anti-social behaviour in the estate.
Several serious incidents in the estate have resulted in several Garda visits in the last week.
Local councillor Martin Grady told the Killarney Advertiser that residents are “living in fear” as a result of very serious incidents in the last week alone.
One house in the estate was badly damaged when fire crackers were placed inside a letter box.
Another house had its windows smashed in over the weekend.
“It’s a major problem,” added Grady after meeting residents there earlier this week.
One of the most serious incidents occurred on Tuesday night.
A passing motorists had rocks thrown at his car while driving along the bypass whch is adjacent to the estate.
Taking to social media, local primary-school teacher Pádraig O’Sullivan posted:
“Travelling home tonight, at 11.05pm on the Killarney side of the bypass our car was hit by a rock – not a pebble – from the Ballydribben side , which hit the passenger door.
“It was centimetres away from hitting the window where my father, who is visually impaired, was sitting.
“This could have caused catastrophic permanent injury to him.
“The Killarney Garda were on the scene within three minutes.
“They can’t be patrolling the bypass all night.
“It comes down to parenting. You should know where your children are at this hour and be able to teach them what’s funny and what ruin a person’s life or cause a fatal crash.“
-
News1 week ago
N22 Killarney to Faranfore road further delayed
-
Sport2 weeks ago
Kerry’s old dogs ready for Tyrone challenge in All-Ireland final
-
News2 weeks ago
Over 80 women car enthusiasts attend classic car show
-
Sport2 weeks ago
Almost impossible to look beyond East Kerry but Dingle are best placed to challenge