And the entire Glenties Division is to be shut down and powers transferred to other divisions in the county.
The stations which will close include Annagry, Glencolmcille, Malin, Brockagh and Churchill.
Gardai are to be transferred to their nearest station in the announcement slammed as “sneaky” because it was announced on budget day.
Gardai in Annagry will transfer to Bunbeg, Glencolmcille to Carrick, Malin to Carndonagh, Churchill to Letterkenny and Brockagh to Ballybofey, Shatter said.
The Glenties District is to be divided up and shared by the Ballyshannon, Letterkenny and Milford districts.
More than 90 other Garda stations – mostly in the west of Ireland – will also close.
Speaking at the publication of the Annual Policing Plan for 2013 this evening, Mr Shatter: “As Minister I am committed to ensuring that the Garda Síochána use all of its resources in the fight against crime in the most efficient and effective way possible.
“Until I assumed office the number and location of Garda stations in the State had barely changed since 1922 and the need for change and consolidation of Garda stations, based on a modern operational assessment as to how the Gardaí can best serve the community, was clearly required.
“The approach to policing in the first quarter of the 21st Century could not continue to be based on the location of police stations as inherited from the British in the first quarter of the 20th Century. Whilst an appropriate spread of Garda stations will always be a key element of our policing service, account must be taken of the revolutionary developments since the foundation of the State in transport, communications and technology.
“This is the objective of the reforms that are taking place. In addition I must ensure that we use decreasing financial resources to the optimum benefit of the wider community in a manner that facilitates the presence in communities of operational Gardaí on patrol, preventing and detecting crime rather than Gardaí substantially engaged in administrative duties behind desks.
The Minister continued: “Nobody should be under the illusion that a single Garda sitting at a desk in a small Garda Station for three hours in the morning, no matter how committed or competent, is the best approach to tackling crime.
“We must free up Gardaí so that they are available for frontline operational purposes. In this context it is important to note that none of the Garda stations being consolidated outside Dublin are currently open or manned at night and most of them are only open in the morning.
“I am pleased that, despite the financial difficulties we were able to acquire 213 Garda vehicles in 2012 with €4m. In 2013, a further €5m will be made available for the purchase and fit-out of vehicles to ensure Garda mobility and the continuing modernisation of the Garda fleet.
The Minister also said: “I would like to thank the Garda Commissioner for the initiatives he is taking in implementing crucial reform in the public interest in respect of the Garda Síochána. He is right in stating that the steps now being taken represent “the most fundamental restructuring of An Garda Síochána” since its foundation. The reforms being implemented will deliver significant benefits for the country as a whole and for the Garda Force”.
The move was roundly condemned by the Garda Representative Association who say the move will wreck rural community policing which relies so much on local intelligence.
The union which represents rank and file Gardai accused Mr Shatter of “disguising closure as consolidation” and “the withdrawal of gardaí from rural communities as rationalisation”.
The GRA said the changes are being imposed without proper public consultation and will have a negative effect on the quality of the police service.
It described the move as a political decision made without proper risk assessment to underpin it and said it fears the closures will mean the end of community policing for many of the garda districts affected.
Sinn Fein and Fianna Fail condemned the moves.
Tags: