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Budget from hell could mean axe for 50 teachers

“we have returned to days we thought we would never see in education again”.

He said the only hope is that when the parents and teachers stood up to Minister for Finance Brian Leni- han’s aunt Mary O’Rourke in 1987 the proposed cuts in education were overturned.

The President of the INTO main- tains that if the current cuts proposed by the Government are not over turned, the Ennis primary school area, which includes the county town and Shannon, will loose a total of 35 Keres ace

In east Clare up to eight teaching posts are under threat, north Clare could lose two teachers, while west Clare is expected to lose up to seven teachers.

“Schools that had enough pupils on its enrolment for another teacher next September now cannot appoint the teacher,” said Mr Kelleher.

In Tulla next year rather than secur- ing an extra teacher to cope with an increase in pupils the school faces the loss of one of its current teaching

staff. The school is facing a 30 pupil to one teacher ratio.

In such cases junior infants are pro- tected with smaller class sizes, which could result in 35 and more pupils per class in senior classes.

Parents in Lahinch have begun a petition in an attempt to prevent the cutbacks negatively affecting the lo- cal school.

Teachers of English to non-national pupils are also facing huge cuts, re- sulting in knock on effects across the

education sector.

“There is a Minister for Integra- tion, and the key to integration is to be able to use the English language. It is a key learning service,’ said Mr Kelleher.

“Many of the parents of these pu- pils haven’t the language to articu- late their view points, so it 1s up to us. This budget is hitting the vulner- able,’ said Mr Kelleher.

“This is the budget from hell,” he added.

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Budget cuts a strain for teens with disabilities

TEENAGERS with disabilities are losing up to €7,200 a year in funding for subsidising support requirements and helping families with respite.

That’s according to Shannon coun- cillor Tony Mulcahy, whose 16-year- old daughter is one of the many Irish teenagers receiving the disability al- lowance.

The Fine Gael councillor was criti- cal of the Government’s decision to remove the disability allowance from teenagers until they are 18- years-old.

‘Those that have it will keep it, so my daughter will continue to get it. But this is not about one person, it is about all the other teenagers and their families who will now go with- out,” he said.

Until now, children with special needs or a disability received the domiciliary care allowance worth €299.50 a month until the age of 16, at which point they automatically re- ceived the disability allowance.

The Government has extended the first payment to those aged 18 and removed the disability allowance.

Under the 2009 budget, the disabil-

ity allowance will increase to €204 per week, leaving a difference be- tween the two payments of approxi- mately €500 per month.

Councillor Mulcahy said that the travel pass also came into place at 16, as did the medical card, but these will also be lost due to the new OA atetene

The availability of a medical card for 16 to 18 year olds with disabili- ties will now depend on their fami- ly’s income.

The issue was raised in the Dail on Wednesday by Deputy Kathleen Lynch who said there was over a two

year waiting list for occupational therapy, speech and language thera- py and social skills training.

“Families use the allowance to bypass the waiting list and seek the care and intervention necessary for their children. A cut in their allow- ance, €7,000 a year, will result in many children not getting the help they so urgently need.”

Minister for Social and Family Affairs Mary Hanafin said the pre- budget age limit was established in RSP

“It was linked to ability to work at a time when most young people

would have left school by the end of 16 years to enter the workforce,” she ene

“The social welfare system does not, in general, provide benefits which could be viewed as encour- aging early school leaving and, ac- cordingly, 18 is normally used as the minimum age for qualification for means-tested payments in a person’s own right.”

She said the National Federation of Voluntary Bodies said in its budget submission that the payment may al- low a child to fall into the depend- ency trap too early.

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Home Share an alternative to institutional care

INSTITUTIONAL — respite care could be a thing of the past for peo- ple with disabilities as Home Share Clare grows in popularity.

The Brothers of Charity Services initiative encourages friendships that see people with disabilities spend time with new friends and families, giving their own family a break from a full time caring role.

Developed in 2007 by the Broth- ers of Charity Services in Clare, the service offers people the opportunity

to live within a family home, experi- ence the local community and at the same time build new relationships and friendships.

To date nine people have availed of the Home Share service while six more individuals and families are being assessed.

‘The person we place can enjoy a break or a holiday in a homely at- mosphere and their parents and sib- lings will have a break from their full time caring role. In return, families and the person get the opportunity to learn more about disability while

caring and sharing in their own home,’ explained Nicola Garrehy, Children’s Co-ordinator.

The Brothers of Charity main- tain that the new service leads to a more lasting and unique relationship, which can be nurtured for many years to come.

“Tt is more natural for the individ- ual involved. This is evident in the strong bonds and attachments that have been developed over the year,” said Ms Garrehy.

“Tt instils confidence in the indi- vidual. They know it is a friend-

ship because it is not someone from school or someone that’s being paid that they are spending time with,” she said.

Ms Garrehy explained that experi- ence working with disabilities is not necessary to take on the role of home Stee

Personal qualities are more impor- tant than qualifications or experi- ence, she said.

Careful consideration goes into matching individuals, with personal- ities, interests and availability taken into consideration.

Training and support is provided before Home Sharing even starts and throughout the experience.

Those that sign up are asked to commit to five breaks a year. This can range for a day out to a week’s Tey eCer-Nie

Ms Garrehy said that in the experi- ence of the initiative people meet up far more often that the required five times as friendships form.

Those interested in getting involved with Home Share are asked to con- tact Patricia O’Meara by calling 087 6680081.

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March planned in protest at school cuts

PARENTS and teachers from across the county are planing to march on the Dail tomorrow as Clare’s primary schools face losing up to 50 teachers, and every post primary school likely to lose at least one teacher.

For many of the county’s secondary schools the loss 1s much higher, as primary schools in Ennis report that under the current budget cuts they will loose 12 teachers. The figure was provided by the Ennis Education Forum – a group that represents pri- mary schools in the Ennis parish.

Secondary schools in the county capital are also set to suffer. A pub-

lic meeting in Colaiste Muire, Ennis last Friday heard that the reduction in English language teachers would result in the loss of four teachers at the school.

That meeting also heard from Fi- anna Fail TD, Timmy Dooley. He said the government would attempt to minimize the effect of the cuts, but added, “Neither do I want to give you false hope and say that I can change or redress the budget provisions that are there. We have to work to the best of our ability to minimize the impact. I do not see that the provisions will not be overturned as announced”.

Angered parents from Tulla Pri- mary School, who face losing one

teacher next year despite an increase in pupil numbers, have organised a bus to travel to Dublin to join the pro- test. Buses organised by the INTO will also leave Ennis at 1.30pm to- morrow.

Margaret Cooney, principal of Holy Family senior school encouraged parents to voice their concerns on the streets of the Dail. However Ms Cooney said, “There is no evidence to suggest that they will go back on them but I hope that sanity will prevail. We had the second highest teachers pupil ratio in Europe and now we’re on our way to having the highest. That’s extremely serious”.

INTO President Declan Kelleher

has this morning welcomed the for- mation of the Alliance for Primary Education, made up of teachers, management bodies and the parent’s etree e

Protest marches against the educa- tion cuts have also been organised for every Saturday until Christmas, starting on November 8 in Galway. The second march will be held in Tullamore and is scheduled to end at the Taoiseach Brian Cowen’s office. This will be followed in by marches in Cork, Donegal and Dublin.

“We picked Saturday as we did not want to sacrifice school hours. What- ever has to be done will be done,” said Mr. Kelleher.

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Planning policy an ‘invasion of privacy’

THE level of personal information required from people applying for planning permission in Clare has been criticised as an “invasion of pri- vacy .

Residential policies contained in the Clare County Development Plan require applicants to prove that he/ she is local.

In that process, applicants are asked to submit bank statements, invoices or other forms of financial records in order, in part, to meet the qualifica- tions.

In one instance, according to one Quin councillor who has criticised the process, an applicant was asked

to provide 12 years of information.

“If policies require this type of detailed personal information then I do not consider them to be proper planning policies,’ said Cllr Sonny Scanlon (FG)

“You have planners looking for bank statements back 10 and 12 years. There is no one keeping bank statements that length of time today. I would like to know of there is any- one in Clare County Council that have bank statements kept this length of time,” he added.

Cllr Scanlon says there have been other instances where inconsistency has been applied to the planning ROS

“There are two planning appli-

cations 50 metres apart – one was granted by one planner and the other was refused by a different planner and both applications were facing forestry with the same surroundings. The planning applicant who was re- fused owned 15 acres of land for 20 years.”

He continued, “A son wanted to build a house on his father’s land which was over 100 acres. This in- cluded a particular piece of wooded land. The planner informed him to clear out of that particular area in the wood where the house would not be seen and he also carried out a per- colation test, which passed. He had spent €6,000 carrying out work and was refused planning permission by

the planner.”

Cllr Scanlon said he was concerned that sensitive financial information maybe contained in planning files. “Tt is an invasion of privacy to have bank statements in a planning appli- cation file. Anyone can come in and see them on file. Revenue keep files for six years only. The council keep files for seven years. Most people today use mobile phone on credit so they don’t have phone bills.”

He has called for the County Man- ager Alec Flemming to comment on this particular aspect of the County Development. Cllr Scanlon (FG) has also called for the requirement of “substantial personal information to be terminated”’.

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Clare students hit hard by Budget cutbacks

EVERY second level school in Clare will lose at least one teacher, with one school in Ennis losing five, due to Budget 2009 cutbacks.

According to the ASTI every sec- ondary school will be down one teacher come September, resulting in schools losing out in subject variety and choice, and special education needs.

Students’ extra curricular activities and field projects will also be greatly

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Ger O’Donoghue of the ASTI standing committee for Clare, Lim- erick and Nenagh said that the full extent of the loss of teachers is not yet known. All schools will lose and the cuts will “affect some schools more than others”.

Schools with an open _ policy will suffer most according to Mr O’Donoghue, as English language support teachers will be capped at two per school, irrespective of how many pupils in the school need as-

TED Gen

“We have these newcomer students coming to our schools and we pride ourselves in welcoming them to the school,” he said.

“These students are in _ classes where teachers are going to have problems integrating them with the other pupils.”

Initially an English language sup- port teacher was provided for every 14 students in a school. This allowed for a certain amount of withdrawal from class for extra tuition for stu-

dents whose first language is not English.

In the Budget the Government de- cided to cap the number of English language support teachers at two per school.

Mr O’Donoghue also maintains that the broad base of education will be affected by the cuts.

“There are some subjects that a smaller number of pupils opt for. Schools will now be forced to decide whether or not to keep these classes. It may not be possible to separate

pass and honours classes come Sep- tember,” he said.

“Tt will also have a huge affect of extra curricular activities. These form the basis of a rounded educa- WO )s Maen OLomncT-n LOR

Under the terms of the Budget sub- stitute teachers will no longer be available to cover teachers who are involved in school sports or field we 1Oe

‘How are schools going to manage in cases like that?” asked the ASTI rep.

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Ennis schools upset at cuts

PRIMARY schools in Ennis will lose 12 teachers if proposed Budget cuts go ahead as planned, according to provisional figures from Ennis Education Forum.

The forum, which represents pri- mary schools in the Ennis parish, met last week to discuss the cutbacks in education announced in the Budg- A

The most controversial proposal put forward by the Department of Education involves increasing class sizes from 27 pupils per class to 28 pupils per class.

Initial figures from the Education Forum say as many 12 teaching posts could be at risk, if the proposals are enforced.

Margaret Cooney, Principal of the Holy Family Senior School and Forum member, said the cutbacks would have very serious implications for schools.

“It is very serious, because I think maybe people don’t generally under- stand how much of an impact this is going to have. If you’re short a

teacher, then it’s going to be a case of having to divide three classes into two and it’s the children will suffer as a result.”

Ms Cooney said other issues such as the loss of substitution cover would have major knock on effects.

“If you don’t have a situation where substitute teachers are available to provide cover, what you’re going to find is that classes are being broken up and children are sent in groups of four or five to other classrooms. It’s a very, very Serious situation.”

She added, “I think this figure of 200 teaching posts being lost that the department has provided is a very conservative figure. It’s likely to be much higher. I was totally gob- smacked when I heard that they were going to introduce these cutbacks.”

“There is no evidence to suggest that they will go back on them but I hope that sanity will prevail.

“We had the second highest teach- ers pupil ratio in Europe and now we re on our way to having the high- est. That’s extremely serious and shoud be of great concern,” said Ms Cooney.

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Ennis trespassers fall asleep on the job

TWO homeless men who sought Shelter broke into a house in Ennis, drank a bottle of gin and then went to sleep in two of the bedrooms – in the mistaken belief that the house was vacant!

Both non-nationals Josef Pavelka (47), Lakeville, Gort Road, Ennis, and Aruydos Voronius (40), Riverd- ale, Tulla Road, Ennis, admitted en- tering a home in Highfield Park, En- nis, as a trespasser and committing theft, last Wednesday, October 22.

Inspector Tom Kennedy told Ennis District Court that a man returned to his home at 9pm and discovered an empty bottle of gin on the table.

“It had been taken and consumed in the house. The accused men were asleep in bedrooms,” he said.

Gardai were called to the house and the two men were awakened from their sleep and arrested.

Defending solicitor Daragh Has- sett said the case gave a “whole new meaning to falling asleep on the

job.”

He said both of his clients were

homeless and took refuge in the house.

Pavelka, a native of the Czech Re- public, had worked in construction, but lost his job and has been living rough. His co-accused, a native of Lithuania, has also lost his job.

Mr Hassett said it was a bad night and the accused thought the house was vacant.

“[‘m not trying to minimise it but on the level of breaking and entry, it’s on the lower scale. They did not ransack the house,” he said.

He said the two had been living

with other homeless people from Poland, Lithuania and the Czech Republic. ““Both men are homeless, without benefits, living from hand to mouth at the moment,’ he added.

Judge Joseph Mangan, asked, “They sought shelter?”

The solicitor said this was the case. The judge continued, “On a wet night? They didn’t do much to make Le ata

“Tf it was November, I’d be refer- ring to the Star of Bethlehem,” re- plied the solicitor. The judge add- ed, “If there was a third one in the

company, you might be referring to something else.”

He asked did the men have the money for the gin in court and was told they did not.

Both were remanded on continuing bail to re-appear in court next month and the judge said they must pay €15 compensation each.

“We won’t ask them to make the beds. If that is done (compensation paid) on that date, I’ll take a certain view in the matter. If it’s not, I’ll take quite a different view,’ said the judge.

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Unprovoked attack leads to conviction

AN UNPROVOKED attack which the left the victim with a scar re- sulted in a criminal conviction for a Shannon man.

The Circuit Court heard that Chris- topher McGorrian (18) Rossbarack- en, Shannon struck Martin O’Leary in the face on April 21 2007, splitting his lip before running off laughing.

O’Leary told Stephan Coughlan BL for the prosecution that he he was standing talking to friends at Cronin Lawn on the night.

McGorrian came out of a house across the road and was “walking in circles. He was very agitated.”, O’Leary said.7

McGorrian walked over to O’ Leary and struck him in the face.

“The cut went right through to the inside of my lip and I had to have seven stitches to the outside and sev- en to the inside’, he told Judge Ger- ard Griffin in evidence.

The injured man was referred to a

plastic surgeon in Cork University Hospital and the surgeons report was read into the court record. It said that O’Leary would be left with a 2cm permanent scar which would be vis- ible at conversational distance.

McGorrian had pleaded not guilty to a charge of causing serious harm and disfigurement but guilty to a lesser charge of causing harm.

Summing up for the jury, Mr Coughlan said the fact was that the scar is permanent and this constitut- ed disfigurement.

Mr Mark Nicholas for the defence told the jury it was “nonsense” to de- fine “a scar which I couldn’t see and you couldn’t see as serious disfigure- ment. My client’s behaviour was dis- graceful and he has apologised to Mr O’Leary. It’s a bad injury but it’s not serious disfigurement.”

The jury returned a verdict of non guilty on the more serious charge and guilty on the lesser charge.

The Judge adjourned sentencing until Wednesday October 29.

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Man cleared on family assault charges

A 51-YEAR-OLD man has been ac- quitted by a jury of assaulting his three sisters, on a drink-fuelled St Stephen’s night in Kilrush two years ago.

At the end of a two-day trial at Ennis Circuit Court on Friday, the jury found Martin Walsh not guilty of assaulting his sisters Josephine O’ Loughlin and Caroline and Helena Walsh, causing them harm, in Kil- rush, on December 27, 2006.

Mr Walsh, of Island View, Kilrush, denied assaulting the women, during two incidents in the early hours of the morning. He pleaded not guilty to assaulting Josephine O’Loughlin at Francis Street and denied assault- ing Caroline and Helena Walsh at his home, some time later that night.

Josephine O’Loughlin told the trial that she and her husband John went to Charlie Martin’s bar on the night in question. She said on their way home, they met her brother Martin and his partner Julie Counihan, at Francis Street. “He came out of no- where,” she said.

“He was screaming and shouting. He had a bottle in his hand. He said he was going to do us. He repeatedly punched me in the mouth,” she said. She said she hit the ground and broke her wrist. She said she was knocked unconscious.

Under cross-examination by Lor- can Connolly, BL, for the accused (instructed by Mairead Doyle, solici- tor), Ms O’Loughlin denied that she was heavily intoxicated on the night.

“You say you were punched repeat- edly in the mouth. That didn’t hap- pen at all. You had no injury to your mouth. You say you were knocked unconscious. We didn’t hear that un- til now,” said Mr Connolly.

‘The accused and his partner were going about their business and you attempted to attack Ms Counihan and you fell to the ground and broke your wrist and you were very drunk,’ added the barrister.

Ms O’Loughlin replied that while She had drink taken, she was not “out of my mind with drink.” She said the injuries she sustained “were inflicted on me.”

Her husband John O’Loughlin told the court that the accused was “shout- ing expletives towards my wife” on the street.

‘He was coming towards us with a broken bottle in one hand. He pushed my wife to the ground,” he said. He also denied that his wife was very in- toxicated on the night.

Mr Connolly said, “At no stage did the accused man have a bottle,’ but Mr O’Loughlin repeated that he did.

Caroline Walsh told the trial that she and her sister Helena got a taxi from Kilkee to their sister Jose-

phine’s house in Kilrush in the early hours of that morning. She said that Josephine was covered in blood.

She and Helena then went to their brother Martin’s house at Island View in Kilrush. She said they knocked on the door. “I confronted him. I wanted to know why he beat my sister. He pulled me in the door and started beating me. He punched me in the face,” she said.

She said that her sister Helena tried to stop Martin from beating her, but he then hit her with a baseball bat to the head. “He hit her again while she was on the ground,” she said.

Mr Connolly put it to her that they had no business going to the ac- cused’s house at that hour of the night. She said she accepted it had been a foolish thing to do. “If he had apologised, there would have been none of this,” she said. Mr Connolly asked her did she recall picking up pots and pelting them at the house and she said she didn’t. He also said the accused did not have an imple- ment. “He was fending off an attack from ye,” he said.

Helena Walsh told the court that Martin hit her at his house. “I fell to the ground and then he hit me with a bat, once on the head, once on the hip while I was on the ground. Caroline pushed him. That was the only rea- son he didn’t hit me again,” she said. She said she received nine stitches to

a wound on her head at Ennis Gen- eral Hospital some hours later.

Mr Connolly put it to her that she and her sister “were completely out of control.” She replied, “We were upset about the state Josephine was in.” He also accepted it was foolish to go to Martin’s house at that hour o) aa elo ou rca ole

Garda Eoin Daly told the court he came upon Josephine O’Loughlin on Francis Street at around lam on December 27, 2006. He said her face was covered in blood and there were several marks all over her face. At 2.30am, he received a call to go to a house in the town where he met Caroline and Helena Walsh. Caro- line had an injury to her right eye, while Helena had sustained a cut to her forehead.

Martin Walsh told the court that he saw his sister Josephine in the pub that night, but they did not exchange words as they do not speak. He said that he left the pub with his partner, Julie Counihan. He said while they were on their way home, Josephine Started to run after them, at Francis Street.

“She grabbed on to Julie’s hair and ripped two chains from her neck,” he said. He said they went home to bed and after 2am he heard voices. He went downstairs and said Caro- line and Helena were beating his son. “They were screaming and roaring,”

he said. He said they ripped his pyja- mas from him and then left.

He denied assaulting the three women. Under cross-examination from Stephen Coughlan, BL, prose- cuting, Mr Walsh denied that he had waited for his sister Josephine on the street. He said he did not have a bot- tle in his hand.

His partner Julie Counihan told the court she wanted to phone the gardai that night, but the accused told her not to, as the three women were his sisters. She said Martin Walsh did not assault Josephine O’Loughlin. “If anything, she ran after me and as- Saulted me,’ she said. She said that Ms O’Loughlin was “on a rage with alcohol” that night.

“T never thought it would go this far. I never thought that brothers and sisters would have themselves inside in court,” said Julie Counihan.

Judge Gerard Griffin told the jury the three charges were “separate and distinct.” “Each must stand on their own merits and must be dealt with individually,” he said.

After more than two hours deliber- ating in the case, the jury found Mr Walsh not guilty on all three counts.