Listen: ‘Sign over electric pole cash for cancer research’

Joe Strawbridge.Joe Strawbridge.
Joe Strawbridge.
Tamnaherin native Joe Strawbridge is urging landowners hosting NIE electricity poles to voluntarily sign over collective annual compensation payments of over £3m to cancer research.

Mr Strawbridge (aged 72) told the Sentinel he believes the proposal could generate up to £60,000 a week in Northern Ireland. Northern Ireland Electricity (NIE) has confirmed it issues around 110,000 ‘wayleave’ payments to local landowners annually. Mr Strawbridge reckons the cheque average to be around £28.

He says if landowners signed over small annual entitlements it would make a massive difference to a search for a cure and new treatments.

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“Once you have a pole on your land, the electricity board will pay you approximately £5 a pole,” he explains. “So, if you’ve ten poles they’ll pay you that and if you’ve 20 poles they’ll pay you that, if you’ve one pole they’ll pay you that.”

Joe Strawbridge.Joe Strawbridge.
Joe Strawbridge.

He says: “But what I mean is...to bring the thing to a head, the electricity people say they write 110,000 cheques a year. Well, the technique I have as well, is, block that, to a certain point. Make it one cheque written to the cancer fund.”

Mr Strawbridge - who’s lived in Limavady for the past two decades - says he’s had tentative conversations about the project already.

“I want it signed over for 25 years,” he says. “The board themselves have a wee charity thing running already. Whenever I phoned them up they said they had a wee charity thing there. I said ‘I want to go the full monty.’” He says a panel could be established to make the idea work.

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A NIE spokesperson said: “At NIE, we issue around 110,000 wayleave cheque payments annually. These are payments to landowners who have our equipment on their land.

“NIE already offers a service by, which individuals can nominate a charity to receive the wayleave cheque on their behalf.”