Cookstown 100 bike race will go ahead despite funding cuts

Despite government budget cuts that have dealt a deathblow to Tourist Board funding for the Cookstown 100, organisers have said “the show will go on”.
Cookstown 100Cookstown 100
Cookstown 100

Speaking to the Mail about Northern Ireland Tourist Board’s [NITB] decision to stop the Tourism Events Fund in 2015/16, Kenny Loughrin said: “We got £12,000 last year... [but] we survived up to last year without funding from the Tourist Board, and we will survive again.

“It helped us last year to make the paddock a bit bigger and increase the prize fund, but still there’s a hole there and I have to fill it someway with extra

sponsorship.”

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When asked if that was possible, he simply added: “It has to be doable”.

“It doesn’t look too bright at the moment, but things can change - We might get nothing this year at all, but the show will go on.”

Cookstown UUP Councillor, Trevor Wilson has called on local people to visit the race, and to buy a programme when they’re there, as this is one of the race’s main sources

of funding.

“It’s disappointing that there has been a cut in this funding as the Cookstown 100 attracts thousands of people into Cookstown every year,” Cllr Wilson told

the Mail.

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“But I am sure the races will go ahead thanks to the hard work of the committee.”

On their website, NITB have said: “Due to ongoing budgetary pressures across government, the Tourism Events Fund for 2015/16 will not go ahead.”

A DETI spokesperson confirmed that this means Cookstown 100 will not received funding this year, although they added that Events funding is

never guaranteed.