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Clare livestock in demand

CLARE cattle are in demand on the continent and in Italy in particu- lar according to livestock exporter David Murphy. Speaking at the IFA Livestock meeting in Ennis last week, the Cork based exporter out- lined the growing demand for good quality weanling heifers and bulls vem Le Nave

Mr Murphy went on to compli- ment the quality of animal that is being produced by farmers in Clare and told of the importance of export- ing cattle and the need to insure that cattle are in test when they are sold. A large crowd was in attendance at the meeting which took place in the Auburn Lodge on Tuesday evening.

A panel of expert speakers out- lined how the weanling trade and beef trade post decoupling is shap- ing up. Martin McNamara of Clare Marts also spoke at the meeting and revealed that there are a large number of exporters attending marts in Clare. He went on to confirm the point made by Mr Murphy and said

that good quality weanlings are making good money in the export market.

Mr McNamara also advised Clare farmers to sell their cattle in a mart as this is the only place where they are sure of payment. He warned that a number of farmers who sold their cattle off the land did not receive payment.

The IFA’s National Chairman of the Livestock Committee John Bryan, spoke about the problem of imports of Brazilian beef which are putting a lot of pressure on Irish beef price. He outlined a four point plan that the IFA is putting forward to deal with the problem.

The plan includes correct labelling of beef imports, the role of Feile Bia, placing a tariff on imported product and introducing a ceiling on beef tonnage entering the EU.

Mr Bryan also revealed that while on a recent visit to the continent he was able to assess the current qual- ity of foreign beef. He reported that beef from Ireland is among the best quality on the European market and

that French beef would be our main oyenereeicoe The meeting was followed by a

lively questions and answers session between members of the panel and the farmers who attended.

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New Dusiness promoting weliness in Killaloe

AN English company made moves this week to secure the go-ahead for a ‘Wellness’ destination Spa hotel near Killaloe.

Last month, Clare County Council refused planning permission to Unfinity Ltd of Worces- tershire, England, to develop a destination spa 28-bedroom hotel on 37 acres of land near Kil- laloe.

The local authority refused the application on three grounds, ruling that the proposal would seriously injure the amenities of the area; that the additional traffic movements would inter- fere with the safety and freeflow of traffic on local roads and that the development’s scale, siting and design would fail to integrate into the rural landscape.

However, the company has now lodged a comprehensive appeal to An Bord Pleanala in a fresh bid to kick-start the project.

In the appeal, the company explains the con- cept behind its development. It states: “The proposal is aimed at a niche market known as ‘Wellness’ destination spas.

‘The destination spa’s sole purpose is to pro- vide guests with lifestyle improvement and health enhancement through professionally administered spa services, physical fitness, edu- cational programming and on-site accommoda- Beer

‘The location 1s a critical part of the guests’ experience, where peace and quietness is the primary consideration and provides a distinct contrast to the busy urban environments most of the visitors will be used to.

“Wellbeing holidays account for 15% of the European holiday market but facilities of this nature are very uncommon in Ireland. The con- cept behind this tourist product is a purpose built spa designed by internationally renowned consultants.”

In their appeal, the company state: “The de- cline of agriculture has deprived the rural com- munity of valuable public, social and economic Services.

“In order to address this concern, the Develop- ment Plan observes that the long-term sustain- able development of rural community can only be achieved through the provision of alternative employment opportunities.

“The proposed development represents an opportunity for the creation of employment op- portunities and inward investment to address rural decline in the surrounding area.

“Whilst agriculture is declining as a source of employment for rural people, the need to retain rural communities is still a major concern for the Council. It is our view that the proposal can be justified on planning grounds in reference to these objectives.”

A decision is due on the appeal in December.

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School extension unveiled

THE newly appointed Bishop of Galway, Dr Martin Drennan, and Minister for State at the Department of Education and Science, Sile de Valera were in Lahinch on Friday to officially open a major new €350,000 develop- ment in the Scoil Muire primary school.

The school, which is currently attended by 118 pupils, received funding from the Department of Education to construct three new state of the art classrooms as-well-as revamp much of the existing facilities.

The space left vacant through the new construction has been transformed into a library, computer room and two resource rooms for special education teachers.

Speaking at he launch Minister de Valera paid tribute to all those involved in the project and the important role that schools play within the community.

“T want to congratulate the board of management and all those associated with the school because they have re- ally worked tremendously well with the Department of Education.

‘The department was able to supply €350,000 for the refurbishment and the new classroom here but really it was because of the dynamism among the community and the board of management that helped to put all of this together,” she said.

“The importance of a school isn’t just for the children and indeed the parents and the teachers, but really a school is the hub of a community and it’s wonderful to see SO many young people here celebrating what is a very important day for the whole of the community.”

The campaign to expand the school began in 1999 but it was not until January of 2004 that good news was forth- coming. School Principal Kevin Glynn and the chairper- son of the board of management Fr Tom Culloty met with officials from the Department of Education in Tullamore and negotiated the sizeable grant.

In addition to this €24,000 was donated by local man Tom Kavanagh towards developing computer facilities for the school. The school now boasts five full-time teachers as well as two special education teachers, a visiting rural co-ordinator and a resource teacher for children from the traveller community.

Earlier this year the students of the school raised some €3,000 for the victims of the devastating tsunami that hit south east Asia. A boat was purchased and christened ‘Lahinch National School, The Banner, Ireland’ and do-

nated to help in the relief effort.

In the past the school has also raised money for a varie- ty of charities including Bothar and the Special Olympics. The school also has a strong sporting tradition and music and art are also a central part of both curricular and extra curricular activities.

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EIS funds dispute

CONCERNS have © been raised over the use of money raised from the sale of Ennis Information PC’s.

At a meeting of Ennis Town Council last Tuesday, mem- bers requested a review of the documentation of the agree- ment with Ennis Information Age Services.

According to Ennis Town Mayor Cllr Frankie Neylon the Council had been given assurances that as a share- holder in Ennis Information Services, no decision on the use of funding would be taken without consultation between EIS and the Council.

“When I was on the board of EIS I was told that €1.1m of the money raised from the sale of computers would be ringfenced for the commu- nity. There is now €750,000 left and I would like to know why decisions on spending were taken without the con- sent of the Council,” stated Seyler

He went on to add that he would be seeking legal clari- fication for his position on the

board after receiving a phone call from some one saying that he “could be destroyed” if he spoke to the press about matters pertaining to the work of the board.

“I don’t know whether it 1s going to be done by scud mis- Sile, or the biro, but I will be seeking legal advice on what exactly my position is,” said Mr Neylon when contacted ONY TAU Ke rh YA

Ennis Information Age Services ceased trading in August with the loss of six jobs after it emerged that fur- ther funding would be needed for it to continue.

While Cllr Neylon praised the work the company had done in making Ennis an attractive location for new businesses to set up, discus- sions about the closure of EIS should have been more inclusive. At the meeting on Tuesday Cllr Tommy Bren- nan (Ind) requested a copy of the agreement that was signed before any money is spent stating that the coun- cil had been the only body to invest money in the scheme and therefore had a duty to

the public. The issue of ob- taining an injunction against any planned expenditure was also raised. Cllr Johnny Flynn(FG) stated that he sup- ported the idea of seeking le- gal advice to halt any spend- PITSMMSBUMOMeesecvecLbNOBLATapesl@yelentA

As part of the Information Age project homes in En- nis were offered the chance to purchase computers at a reduced price when Ennis was named Irelands Infor- mation Age Town in 1997. Over 4,000 computers were installed in homes at a cost of 260 pounds each.

“There is a tremendous desire among community members for this money to be directed towards commu- nity projects and in particular towards young people” said Cllr Peter Considine (FF) on Tuesday.

A meeting of Ennis Age Information Age Task Force was expected to take place on Wednesday, but Ennis Town Manager Tom Coughlan has requested on behalf of the council that it be postponed in order for members to re- view documentation.

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US Ee eT Cia Ct) mes ac

THE local tourism industry has been told to cut its prices after being accused of not doing enough to promote new routes into Shannon Airport.

Making the charge, Chief Executive of Ryanair, Michael O’Leary said, “If there is anything we would complain about at Shannon, it is a per- ceived lack of support for Shannon Airport from the local tourism interests.”

In Shannon to announce Ryanair’s 17th route from the airport to Malaga, Mr O’Leary said, “It is time for all tourism interests, who have done lots of bleeding, whinging and complaining over the last 10 or 20 years, to get off their arses and start supporting Shannon Airport.”

Mr O’Leary’s call to the tourism industry was echoed by Director of Shannon Airport, Martin Moroney who said, “The tourist sector should wake up and get out there and organise them- selves right across the West of Ireland and capi- talise on Ryanair and other carriers using Shan-

non as a gateway.”

Mr O’Leary added, “Shannon will almost dou- ble in the space of two years. No Irish airport has ever done that before, no airport will ever do it again. We need, through this first difficult winter, the support of all the tourism industry, not to have the tourism industry here looking for handouts.

“It 1s time that the tourism industry down here stopped f**king sitting there with the cap out say- ing ‘we need the Government to fund this or we want a subsidy for that’. In the next three months, we are spending €1 million advertising Shannon in 15 different countries and giving away 200,000 seats. We know that we can deliver the numbers. Now we’ve got to give people a reason to come here in the Winter.”

Mr O’Leary added, “Shannon and Ryanair are delivering passengers. We need the hoteliers, res- taurants, pubs and everybody else to do their bit, drop the prices for the Winter and send the visi- tors home all happy.

“The West of Ireland is fine in the summer. The sun is shining and all the rest of it. The West

in the middle of winter, when it 1s cold, wet and dark, you really have got to persuade people to come here.

“This winter, we have all recognised, 1s going to be the hardest time for us. We are trying to op- erate 17 routes into an airport with a surrounding population base of less than 500,000 people.”

Mr O’Leary expressed confidence that Rya- nair will reach its two million passengers out of Shannon in three years instead of the five origi- nally agreed with the Shannon Airport Authority (SAA).

The Ryanair Chief Executive revealed that the establishment of the new route to Malaga stemmed from a phone call from SAA chairman, Pat Shanahan, after the collapse of EUjet who op- erated the route.

‘The new route, which wasn’t planned by us, is a by-product of how good the partnership is between Shannon Airport and Ryanair. Shannon will call us up and say ‘can you try to do some- thing’ and we’ll try to do something for Shannon if we can at all.”

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A fifty-year habit

FIFTY years is a long time to spend at any one activity, but few have passed the half-cen- tury milestone with more commitment than twin sisters Philomena and Annette O’Dea, otherwise known as Sister Celine and Sister Ann-Marie. The twins recently returned to their home in Ballygannor, near Kilfenora, for a holiday and a very special surprise Mass

to mark the golden jubilee of their vocation.

In 1955, aged 19, the sisters joined the nuns in Mallow following the sudden death of their mother, Lilly. Left behind in Ballygannor was their father John and 11 brothers and sisters, including Kitty, who later gained fame with the Kilfenora Ceili Band and Jack, who cur- rently resides in the old homestead with his wife Margaret.

After spending six months in Cork, the twins were moved to London where they were officially welcomed into the nuns in separate ceremonies. In all their years as Nazareth House nuns, they have never been stationed in the same convent and only see each oth- er on holidays. Sister Celine first returned to Ireland in the 1960s and gained national prominence when a story of the kindness she showed towards teenage mother Wanda Machnicha and her son made front page news Kom aets

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Harney warns of nospital nygiene

THE Tanaiste and Minister for Health Mary Harney admitted this week in Clare that she is concerned about hygiene in our hospitals, as basic precautions such as washing hands are not being carried out.

‘Hand washing is one of the most effec- tive ways of ensuring that we don’t pass on infection. That is hand washing by profes- sionals, all the staff but also by those visit- ing patients. I think we need to heighten the awareness of the importance of hand wash- ing,’ she said.

Ms Harney said she was also confident that the HSE would get to the bottom of what was happening about MRSA in hospi- tals in the region.

While the Mid Western Regional Hospital Ennis reported that just over 1.25 per cent of its patients were discovered with the an- tibiotic resistant bacteria, the Mid Western Regional Hospital in Limerick has so far been unable to provide any figures relating to the bacteria.

“The results of the MRSA audit or the hygiene audit, which we will have later this month, I think will tell us a lot of informa- tion like what is happening at the moment in the hospitals. We are paying huge money for hospital cleaning contracts and we have to make sure we get the best for that.

The Minister also outlined plans in the fu- ture to ensure there were more single rooms in hospital and more isolation facilities.

These plans will not be implemented in

the short term, due to the cost, Ms Harney admitted. New buildings and refurbished facilities will have a larger number of sin- gle rooms and greater isolation facilities for OTM NLA

“We have a large number of hospitals in the country. It will be extremely expensive and take some time before we will move to that situation in Ireland. But, certainly in the context of building new facilities, and in refurbishing existing facilities, we will be looking at a larger number of single rooms and greater isolation facilities for patients that are affected with an infection. ”

Yesterday the Tanaiste launched a new campaign encouraging hand washing in health care buildings through out the coun- try.

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woman Is Tined

A man who attacked and kicked a 52-year-old woman outside his Miltown Malbay home was fined, ordered to pay medical costs and was bound over to keep the peace for one year after he appeared in the lo- cal court last Wednesday.

Father and son Matt Keating Snr and Matt Keating Jnr, both faced one charge each of as- saulting Patricia Clancy outside their home at 16 Ballard Road, Miltown Malbay on September 26, 2004. Patricia Clancy, who lives at 35 Ballard Road, also faced one charge of assaulting Matt Keating Snr on the same CF Ken

Miltown Malbay District Court was told that the assault occurred after Mrs Clancy, a first cousin of Mr Keating Snr, drove him to his home after an evening’s socialising. Mrs Clancy said Mr Keating Snr “ran at me and kicked me and kicked me.”

She said that Matt Keating Jnr came to the door in his boxer shorts and pulled the two of

them apart, but assaulted her.

Matt Keating Snr claimed he had been offered a lift by Mrs Clancy but that he made his own way home that night. He claimed that when he arrived at his home, Mrs Clancy was al- USrKO MANN Slo) KOR

He said, as he accompanied Mrs Clancy to the gate of the house, “she struck me with her fist.”

Solicitor for Mrs Clancy, Gearoid Williams, showed pho- tographs of injuries sustained by his client to the accused. “I don’t know how it happened, I didn’t do it,’ he said.

The court also heard a tran- script of a heated telephone call to Mr Keating’s home after the incident.

Matt Keating Snr was convict- ed of assaulting Mrs Clancy and was fined €1,500 and ordered to pay €300 medical costs. The case against Matt Keating Jnr was dismissed.

Judge Mangan further or- dered that professional reports relating to alcohol be prepared in the cases of Mr Keating Snr and Mrs Clancy.

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in custody to ot Patrick’s

A 16-YEAR-OLD boy, who pleaded guilty to eight charges including burglary, larceny, criminal damage and unauthorised taking of a vehicle, was remanded in custody to St Patrick’s Institution in Dublin for one week and will appear in court in Lisdoonvarna again tomorrow (Wednesday).

The teenager, who cannot be identified for legal reasons, faced four new charges when he appeared at Miltown District Court last Wednesday. The accused opted to be tried in the District Court, waiving his right to have his case heard in the Circuit Court before a judge and jury.

The teenager faces charges relating to a se- ries of incidents in the Miltown Malbay and Spanish Point areas between October 2004 and February this year. The youth is alleged to have broken into houses and a school and to have stolen property, including a video player, a camcorder and a van. He 1s also accused of stealing €380 worth of wine and beer.

A professional report provided to the court claimed that there is a history of alcohol abuse in the teenager’s family, that he was poorly supervised and that his father smelled of alcohol at the interview. Judge Mangan ordered a probation report in respect of the teenager to be prepared ahead of tomorrow’s hearing.

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Anger in Clonlara over WMH rT

RESIDENTS in East Clare have expressed their anger over the dangerous condi- tion of the Athlunkard Road, through Clonlara.

Around 50 local residents carrying placards attended a protest at Clancy’s Cross in

Clonlara, on Monday morn- ing, to highlight what they said was the road’s treacher- ous condition.

The road is to be re-sur- faced following six months of construction work. Last Autumn, Clare Civil Engi- neering commenced work on the laying of pipes for water

mains. Work was expected to be completed by May. But the road has yet to be completely resurfaced.

Locals claim that the road has been made extremely hazardous for pedestrians. According to one resident, cars are forced to drive in the middle of the road in order to avoid potholes.

The poor driving condi- tions have also resulted in a number of accidents and damage to cars, they said. In one instance over €800 worth of damage was done to a car.

Locals also complained that traffic lights were placed at inconvenient positions dur- ing the construction process, and that they were treated in a discourteous manner. The job of resurfacing the road was left out when the original contract for the project was drawn up, and has only come up for tender this summer.

“We wanted to show our solidarity with the residents of East Clare on this issue,” said Cllr Cathal Crowe who attended the protest along with fellow councillors John McInerney, Pascal Fitzgerald and Pat Breen TD and John O’Sullivan TD Limerick East