'I'm a busman and I'll always be a busman': Paudie Kenneally, Newcastle West
HUNDREDS of children and teenagers in west Limerick have been left without school transport after Paudie Kenneally made the "heartbreaking" decision to pull his service over the cost of fuel.
The owner of Paudie Kenneally Coach Hire, based in Newcastle West, said he decided to stop running it on Sunday night after reviewing the Government’s new support package.
He has a fleet of 24 vehicles between buses and cars and 17 full-time staff. Paudie says he has 12 or 13 buses bringing some 800 children and teenagers to primary and secondary schools in Newcastle West, Rathkeale, Abbeyfeale, Broadford, Athea and others.
Paudie took to Facebook to say after hearing the Government’s response on Sunday night, to fuel going up 35 cent a litre in the last month, that he will not be operating school transport services on Monday or for the foreseeable future.
“I’m not going to go bankrupt to cover school runs for Bus Eireann or anyone. My late father (Dave (Joe) Kenneally) and myself are covering school runs for 42 years. I feel sorry for our kids using our services but this is now a race to the bottom. I'm a busman and I'll always be a busman.
"They'll probably get someone to cover some of the services, but more than likely there will be children that will not get a service to school,” said Paudie.
READ NEXT: Fuelling discontent: Protesters' blockades end as schools reopen in Limerick
He told Limerick Live he paid €1.69 a litre for diesel in January and €2.02 in April which equates to a rise of €2,000 extra per week.
Paudie contacted families and Bus Eireann to inform them.
“I couldn't make my decision until last night. I'll be honest and straight with you - if I didn't do something, I was going to go down, because there's no way you can carry a 35 cent increase on school transport. There's no business that could do it. The figures don’t add up.”
He said he was “heartbroken” making the decision to stop bringing children to school.
“I'm driving SEN (Special Educational Needs) children from even before we had escorts and we have a duty of care. I mind those kids as if they were my own. They all have their little differences and their own little quirks and you'd be stone mad about them. It upsets me that I can't operate the school runs but I am going to go under and I can't allow that to happen.”
Paudie says he also has to take into account his husband, their relationship and his health.
“I was lying in bed last night looking up at the lightbulb just thinking - the old head doesn't switch off. There's a lot of stress involved”.
Paudie says he will continue on with the private hire side of the business and scale back from 22 vehicles to five.
The only way he said he would return to school transport is if the price of diesel came down to €1.75 per litre, get VAT back on the buses purchased, and on tyres and parts.
Paudie said he supported the fuel demonstrations by calling down and bringing food to the protest on the M20 and at the blockade in Foynes.
“I'm not political at all. I'm just trying to keep the show going. The middle classes are getting a fierce hammering. It's all tax upon tax upon tax. Our operating costs have gone through the roof and we are getting no break whatsoever,” he concluded.
Bus Eireann have been contacted for comment.
Subscribe or register today to discover more from DonegalLive.ie
Buy the e-paper of the Donegal Democrat, Donegal People's Press, Donegal Post and Inish Times here for instant access to Donegal's premier news titles.
Keep up with the latest news from Donegal with our daily newsletter featuring the most important stories of the day delivered to your inbox every evening at 5pm.