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Mary Lou McDonald: 'Time to give Gardaí the tools to rid communities of the scourge of scramblers and e-scooters'

Sinn Fein leader Mary Lou McDonald says the country needs tougher enforcement to protect communities being plagued by scramblers and e-scooters speeding down their streets, along their footpaths and through their parks

A scrambler bike that Gardai in Co Cork seized last year(Image: Cork Gardaí)

High-powered scramblers and e-scooters are a scourge on communities and pose a real danger for our young people.

Last January, the tragic death of sixteen-year-old Grace Lynch provoked huge anger.

Grace was killed when she was struck by a speeding scrambler while crossing the road to meet her boyfriend.

The heartbreak of Grace's family and the outpouring of grief from the local community in Finglas was felt right across the country. Yet in the days following her funeral, I witnessed scramblers being driven dangerously through my own neck of the woods in Cabra.

We thought we had reached a turning point in April when the government moved to ban scramblers in public spaces.

Grace Lynch, 16,died after being struck down by a scrambler while crossing the Ratoath Road in Finglas

However, three months after “Grace’s Law” came into effect, communities are still plagued by scramblers and e-scooters speeding down their streets, along their footpaths and through their parks.

Neighbourhoods are still tormented by gangs using scramblers and e-scooters to deliver drugs, to harass and intimidate people, and to create a constant atmosphere of menace.

Grace Lynch’s father, Martin has said that it makes his blood boil to see scramblers still be being used on public roads.