Skip to main content

It’s a deadly business for contractors painting road markings

Animal welfare groups in the Republic of Ireland are angry over the apparent insensitive act by a road making contractor who painted a yellow line over a dead cat on the side of the highway. A report by Irish newspapers quoted one person saying it was “shameful” and “nobody cared enough to move this poor cat who had been killed by a car and the line was painted over it”.
August 4, 2015 Read time: 3 mins
Animal welfare groups in the Republic of Ireland are angry over the apparent insensitive act by a road making contractor who painted a yellow line over a dead cat on the side of the highway.

%$Linker: 2 External <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-16"?><dictionary /> 0 0 0 oLinkExternal A report by Irish newspapers Visit &quot;road marking crew paint over dead cat&quot; page false http://www.thejournal.ie/road-marking-crew-paint-over-dead-cat-2238188-Jul2015/ false false%> quoted one person saying it was “shameful” and “nobody cared enough to move this poor cat who had been killed by a car and the line was painted over it”.

A local councillor said the line painting in the rural community was performed by a company contracted by Kerry County Council.

“I’ve already been onto the council this morning and I’ve asked the council to ask the council to be a little bit more sensitive,” he said. “It’s a rural farming community so on any one road there’d be several cats who’d live and survive in the area but wouldn’t belong to someone.”

The event may be disturbing to some people, but, in fact, painting road markings over dead animals is more common than most road users – and local residents - would believe.

In September 2013, painters on the remote northern Scottish territory the Shetlands Islands did the same thing to a polecat, a ferret-like creature. %$Linker: 2 External <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-16"?><dictionary /> 0 0 0 oLinkExternal Media reports Visit www.dailymail.co.uk page false http://http//www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2415902/Bungling-highway-workers-paint-white-line-squashed-POLECAT-instead-clearing-road.html false false%> claimed that the polecat “has received further rough treatment after bungling road workers painted a fresh white line right over its corpse”.

One road user said he “thought it was pretty amusing and a little sad for the creature, surely they could have moved it instead on marking a white line over the body”.

He figured the workers were either “lazy” or they did it because of the “monotony of drawing hundreds of miles of white lines, so [they were] not really paying too much attention”.

But let’s give credit where credit is due. Some workers will avoid deceased animals in varying degrees of thickness prostrated in the path of a white or yellow line. %$Linker: 2 External <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-16"?><dictionary /> 0 0 0 oLinkExternal This happened Visit www.bbc.co.uk web page false http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-hampshire-10650160 false false%> in the southern English county of Hampshire in 2010, when workers painted white lines around dead badger, according to media reports at the time.

But rather avoid the poor beast out of any sense of dignity, they claimed it was not their responsibility to remove the body. Council contractor 2958 Amey reportedly said workers from sub-contractor Bellstan were not "licensed or trained" to remove road kill.

One local resident was distressed over the incident. "I couldn't quite believe my eyes when I saw this poor old badger who had been there over a week. I'd seen him every day as I went by and wondered if he was going to be picked up.

"Then on Friday I drove home to see his body between the lines. They had painted the road, but left a gap where he lay," he said.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • IRF calling for road safety presentations for Saudi Arabia and Washington DC events
    October 12, 2015
    The International Road Federation (IRF) is calling for presentations on road safety for events in Saudi Arabia and Washington DC. These presentations should be on Roadside Safety, Work Zone Safety and Vulnerable User Safety. They will be made at the IRF Middle East Regional Congress in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia from December 15th to December 17th, 2015.
  • Paul Verrico of Eversheds will be headline speaker at ERIC 2016
    August 9, 2016
    Despite Europe being a global leader in road safety, around 25,000 road users (working, walking, driving or riding a bicycle) did not make it home in 2015 and more than 200,000 others sustained life-changing or serious injuries. Leading Safety Lawyer Paul Verrico, a Partner of European law firm Eversheds will present the ERICLeeds16 ROAD SAFETY DEBATE. He will argue that organisations in the UK face ever increasing sanctions through new sentencing guidelines for health and safety and corporate manslaugh
  • Denmark to create Rodby port to service Fehmarn Belt construction
    January 6, 2015
    The Danish government said it will create a large port area east of the small town of Rødbyhavn to facilitate construction of the future Fehmarn Belt tunnel link. The US$7.5 billion project is an 18km tunnel including two railway tunnels, two motorway tunnels and an emergency tunnel. Construction start is scheduled for later this year and should take between six and seven years. The tunnel is part of the major infrastructure project called the Fehmarn Belt Fixed Link to connect the German island of Fe
  • London’s congestion charge is saving lives, a study suggests
    March 9, 2015
    Traffic accidents in the UK capital London have declined 40% since the introduction of a congestion charge in 2003, according to a new study. The number of accidents per million miles driven in the congestion zone fell to 2.6 accidents per million miles from an average of 12.4 before the introduction of the charge. Researchers at Lancaster University also found a similar fall in the number of people seriously injured or killed. As well, accident rates fell in adjacent areas as a result of fewer motorists dr