Categories
Uncategorized

A turn in fortunes for region

INDUSTRY and_ business _repre- sentatives have been predicting a lift in the region’s fortunes as a result of the return of the Heathrow routes to SJetvepeleyee

IBEC Mid West Director Mr Chris O’Donovan said “The restoration of this connection is a huge boost to the Mid West. It restores an essential link to one of the world’s most important airport hubs giving the region truly international access.”

He said that in the past few months, there has been a dramatic downturn in the regional economy. “Some of our top employers have reduced the numbers employed and are facing huge uncertainty in markets in 2009. Today’s news is a welcome boost to confidence in the region and we wel- come the Aer Lingus commitment to Shannon as a base for both long and short haul flights in the future.”

“Shannon Development warmly welcomes the announcement by Aer Lingus to go back on the Shan- non-Heathrow route. This route is a critical part of the west of Ireland’s economic infrastructure, particularly for the tourism and industry sectors. Over the years the Heathrow service has been essential in enticing foreign direct investment, new indiginous in- dustries, and tourists to the West of Ireland.

John Brassil, Chairman Shannon Development and Chairman ACA

(Atlantic Connectivity Alliance said that Shannon Development actively works with Aer Lingus, City Jet and Ryanair on all of their UK and European air services into Shannon Airport.

“In this difficult economic climate we will be redoubling our efforts and would ask all business and tourism interests in the region to get behind the Heathrow route,” he said.

The Irish Hotels Federation Shan- non Branch chairman, Michael Vaughan, said hoteliers and _ busi- nesses in the west have always been convinced about the viability of the route, which clearly makes sound business sense. We are glad that Aer Lingus staff and management recently negotiated new operational terms that have precipitated the re- turn of the service. We look forward

to working closely with the company to promote the service to the benefit of the region and local economy.”

Categories
Uncategorized

Chambers all hail the Shannon boost

THE chambers of commerce in the mid-west have come out in force to welcome the news that the Heathrow slots are to return to Shannon.

The American Chamber of Com- merce mid west region has welcomed the news saying that the region must now capitalise on the opportunities this, and other recent developments at the Airport present.

Chairman Bill Doherty, © said; “Shannon Airport, with connectiv- ity to both Heathrow and Charles de Gaulle, together with daily transat- lantic flights and the strong presence

of Ryanair is at its strongest for many years. Business and tourism inter- ests, working together with the man- agement at Shannon Airport must now capitalise on the opportunities presented by daily connectivity to two of the busiest airports in Europe as well as the granting of full Cus- toms and Border Protection (CBP) pre-clearance facilities for transat- lantic services to the US. *

He added that the “pre-clearance facilities at Shannon will make it easier for airlines to do business in Ireland and will save time for busi- ness people travelling between Ire- land and the US. It also opens other

opportunities for the airport in terms of attracting corporate aviation and freight services to Shannon to avail of this facility.”

Ennis Chamber CEO, Rita MclIner- ney, said that the announcement is “a major boost for business in this re- gion. We’re absolutely delighted and we would hope that it might increase from two slots to four again.”

And she urged business people to “come out and support the route. A lot of people may have made other ar- rangements by now, and while we’re not impressed with what Aer Lingus did, we should support the service now as a business community.

Particularly with the early morning flight out and the evening return, this route was very successful before it was pulled.”

President of Limerick Chamber Sean Lally stated, “We are delight- ed to welcome Aer Lingus back to Shannon Airport. This is something which we have continued to lobby for on behalf of our members since the routes were discontinued 12 months ago.

“The restoration of these flights is a clear indicator that the region has both the critical mass and com- mercial viability to warrant their re- ate

Categories
Uncategorized

GPs hit out at HSE for services cuts

“DANGEROUS and irresponsible” is how the GPs of the county have de- scribed plans by the HSE to remove 24-hour acute surgical services from Ennis General Hospital from April iF

The removal of the services will not just downgrade the hospital’s serv- ices but it will also lead to the end of 24-hour accident and emergency services at the county’s hospital, ac- cording to the doctors.

Chairman of the Clare Faculty of the Irish College of General Practi- tioners, Michael Harty said, “The re- moval of 24-hour surgical services at MWRH-Ennis will lead in sequence to the loss of anaesthetic on call serv- ices, intensive care and coronary care services, all acute medical emergen-

cy services, and finally the discon- tinuation of all in patient admissions and casualty services. By removing surgical services, the HSE will be re- moving the key-stone which supports all other services and will lead to the domino collapse of all acute services at MWRH-Ennis.”

Dr Harty was speaking after in- formal meetings between GP rep- resentatives from Clare and north Tipperary and the project manager appointed to over see the recommen- dations of the review of acute serv- ices in the mid-west also know as the teamwork report.

The report is expected to be pub- lished in January, with its recom- mendations to be implemented in rule

“No provision has been made to provide alternative services in Ennis

or additional services in Limerick Regional Hospital, which is already unable to cope with its existing work load. Ambulance personnel will not be able to safely supply the addi- tional services required,” warned Dr eEvua‘e

“The general practitioners funda- mentally oppose and object to this poorly thought out dismantling of acute services in Clare, at a time when the alternative being offered is already over stretched and full to ca- pacity,” said the Clare doctors’ repre- sentative. “This change is not safe or sensible,” he said.

“Our understanding is that the Mid Western Regional Hospital Limer- ick is functioning beyond its means. It does not have the capacity to deal with the extra workload. There is a problem with the structure in Limer-

ick to deal with an influx of patients and how they will be processed,” said Dr Harty.

“The dismantling of acute services has been planned and is being im- plemented without any consultation with the general practitioners or the patients of the county.

“This administrative decision 1s founded on financial savings and is not based on quality of care issues or the principals of safe and sensible medical practice,” he said.

A HE spokesperson said, “The HSE is currently working on de- tailed plans to address patient safety concerns in the mid-west, which are already in the public domain. The in- tention is to communicate fully with the key stakeholders as soon as this process is complete and this includes general practitioners.”

Categories
Uncategorized

Ennis CBS parents protest

PROTESTERS in Ennis served a re- minder to Clare TDs on Friday that cutbacks in education spending have not been forgotten about.

Just over three months after Min- ister for Finance Brian Lenihan announced a raft of controversial budget measures, parents at Ennis CBS took to the streets to voice their anger at the cuts.

Members of the Parents’ Associa- tion of Ennis CBS visited the offices of Clare’s government representatives on Friday last where they handed in letters outlining the implications of the proposed budget cutbacks on pu- pils of the CBS.

They also urged TDs to support parent’s calls to reverse the decision’s taken in October’s budget.

According to a statement released by Ennis CBS, the school will lose three teachers if the cutbacks pro- ceed as planned.

“The loss of a teacher due to the increased pupil teacher ration of 28:1 will impact on class sizes and it may be necessary to split classes. This will happen in a situation where a number of pupils in the CBS are already in classes exceeding 30+ pupils. We do not hold the Principal or Board of Management culpable for this situation’, declares the state- ment.

School representatives say Ennis CBS will lose two English language support teachers and will be heavily impacted by funding cuts.

According to the school this in- cludes a loss of €1270 for learning Support and resource grants for pu- pils with special needs; a reduction in Traveller education funding with a resulting loss of €3000 to the school; the abolition of the free book scheme which equals a loss of €1724.50 and the abolition of funding for the local library which supports the school class libraries, resulting in a loss of funding to CBS of €2540.00.

Parents and teachers are also con- cerned by the cut in funding for pri- mary school building by 5%, point-

ing to rising costs in electricity, phone, fuel etc.

The statement concludes, ““Parents/ guardians are concerned that, despite a capital allocation in the Budget, we are no nearer to obtaining a new premises despite acknowledgment at political and educational level of the need for a new school”.

Categories
Uncategorized

Aleta core srants for Clare clubs

CLARE GAA clubs are set to avail of over €300,000 under Munster Council club development grants, it has been announced by the provin- cial ruling body.

The announcement of the alloca- tion for the council’s 2008 budget shows that Clare clubs lodged a total of 47 applications to the provincial council, just one short of Kerry who lodged the most applications.

However, Cork clubs received the highest grants with a total of €574,944 allocated.

The council’s budget in this area arises from 40% of it’s gate receipts throughout 2008 and the council allocates grants up to an approved maximum in various categories.

These include field purchase, dress- ing rooms, floodlighting, pitch drain- age, stands, embankments, dug-outs, First Aid accommodation, Medical Room, car park facilities, score- board, netting, boundary and playing pitch fencing, purchase of mowers, hurling walls and pitch sanding.

Under the scheme, school grounds also benefit while in addition to the club funding, €484,570 was allocat- ed to ongoing major county ground developments.

“Comhairle na Mumhan acknowl- edges this wonderful work that is being undertaken by clubs with the approval of 40% of gate receipts for club development while a further 15% of the gross gate receipts is returned in ground rents to the grounds that hosted games this year,” a spokes- person for the council told The Clare People.

“This means that overall Com- hairle na Mumhan gives back 55% of its total gate revenue for develop- ment work.”

According to the latest figures, in the last five years the council has committed almost €9 million to De- velopment Grants in the province. Central Council has committed €2.6 million to clubs in the Munster in ad- dition to this, in the same period.

Categories
Uncategorized

Crusheen and Miltown united

TWO Clare clubs are determined to take the fight to retain the Interpro- vincial hurling and football competti- tions on the GAA calendar to Central Council level, even though full-time secretary Pat Fitzgerald claims that the series now “faces a doomsday Nero tte CO ee

The commitment of both the St Joseph’s Miltown and Crusheen clubs to the Interprovincials — formerly known as the Railway Cups — that date from 1927 will be brought to the floor of Thursday’s annual conven- tion in the Auburn Lodge.

Both have tabled motions in a bid to give another strand to the long-run- ning Clare campaign to safeguard the competition and ensure that it forms an integral part of the annual GAA calendar.

Former GAA presidential candidate Noel Walsh from Miltown has been a Interpro loyalist for many years — championing the competition at local, provincial and national level — while Martin Donnelly from Co- oraclare has pumped over €500,000 into sponsoring it over the last five years.

The St Joseph’s Miltown motion reads: “That incoming Uachtaran appoint a Task Force to recommend and advice to aid the promotion and advancement of the Interprovincial Hurling and Football Champion- ethene

The Crusheen motion reads: “That the Railway Cups Interprovincial Hurling/Football competitions be retained and in particular hurling, where there is no international com- petition for players to express them- selves.

The competition to be played over

one weekend with the All-Ireland hurling and footballers winners host- ing the competition with financial Support from sponsors and Croke Park. This competition could be played early in the year before the start of all National Leagues if pos- sible.”

However, county board secretary Pat Fitzgerald paints a bleak picture on the future of the competition. ‘For the past few years I have con-

sistently expressed my reservations and questioned the commitment of Croke Park to the Martin Donnelly Interprovincial Championships.

“Is the end nigh? Reflecting on the Interprovincials over the past few years, one cannot but arrive at the conclusion that there is apathy in many quarters to the continuation of the series.

‘They appear to be on a stay of ex- ecution. It’s 1s difficult to see Martin

Donnelly continue to bankroll the much-maligned competition when the level of cooperation isn’t what it should be.

‘To me it seems there is an indiffer- ent attitude within the GAA hierar- chy towards the interpros and as long as that remains the former Railway Cup faces a doomsday scenario”.

Categories
Uncategorized

Clubs call on next Cusack Park move

COUNTY Board secretary Pat Fit- zgerald has put it up to the clubs of the county to decide on the next move in relation to Cusack Park.

It was the clubs that 12 months ago voted overwhelmingly for the sell- ing of Cusack Park for development and building a new stadium on the outskirts of Ennis — now in light of planning permission setbacks they’re being asked whether it would be pru- dent to revert to the original 2003 blueprint for the redevelopment of Cusack Park.

This question on whether the county board, with the mandate of the clubs, should finally abandon all hopes of cashing in on the potential development value of the nine-acre Cusack Park site in Ennis, will be formally put before delegates to this Thursday’s convention in the Auburn Lodge Hotel.

“The decision that now faces the clubs is where to next,” Pat Fitzger- ald has said in his first annual report to a Clare GAA Convention as full- time secretary. “Cusack Park is in a dilapidated condition, badly in need of a facelift. Do we retrieve the plans proposed by former county chair- man, Fr Michael McNamara and in- vest substantial resources, anything up to €10 million, in upgrading Cu- sack Park or do we bide our time and try with a renewed bid in a few years

to relocate to a new greenfield site? I would welcome the views of the clubs on this.”

Fitzgerald’s move to hand the con-

troversial Cusack Park subject back to the clubs comes only two weeks after former county board vice- chairman, Michael Lee, claimed that

the clubs wanted the existing Cusack Park site to be redeveloped in the first place.

“Five years ago we had the man-

date of the clubs,” said Lee, “‘and that mandate was to redevelop Cusack Park and try and get ten acres close to Ennis to develop a state of the art facility for training, not a farm of land in Tulla as they have now.

“T, as chairman of the fundrais- ing committee, with county board chairman Fr Michael McNamara had secured charitable status for the development that would allow tax re- lief in relation to subscription for the development. We had a financial pro- gramme in place. We were hoping to get €750,000 in lottery funding and Munster Council and Central Coun- cil grants to slot in the project. If I had been elected chairman it would have been finished a long time ago. We were financially set up to do the job and had the mandate to do it, but that mandate was changed. A mis- take was made.

“It is still an ideal venue and can be for the next 20 years. Then the next generation can look into where they want to go with Cusack Park,’ Lee told

Categories
Uncategorized

Greater role for underage board

BORD na nOg Iomiint is poised to have a greater role and say in the ad- ministration and operation of GAA matters in the county — that’s if the comments to the annual general meeting of the underage board made by Clare County Board secretary Pat Fitzgerald are to be believed.

This commitment was given to Bord na nOg delegates by Fitzgerald as he mounted a charm offensive on the top table of the board in the hope that the chairman Sean O’Halloran and secretary Rosaleen Monahan would row back from stepping down from their positions.

“They get very little recognition for what they do — you have people working at underage level three, four and five nights a week and they get no recognition. We do not give enough recognition for the contri- bution that is made by people who look after underage in the clubs and at Bord na nOg,” went Fitzgerald’s opening salvo.

“We are in an era of change and we’ve got to change. I started as sec- retary of Bord na nOg in 1983 and at that time I felt that we were basi- cally a fixtures committee. Twenty five years later they still have that

0) 0 a (Oren

‘“T think it’s time to reflect where we are going. If nothing else I would ap- peal to you the delegates to ask peo- ple on the top table, who are suggest- ing that they want to move, to remain with it and to effect the change that is needed and required in the future. I make that appeal to you the dele- gates. I think it would be a reflection on everybody if the expertise and the ability that they have and that they’ve built up over the years is allowed to go without using it.

“T believe it is necessary to change to bring Bord na nOg forward. Eve- ryone knows in business that if you’re not able to increase your business you’re going backwards. We haven’t been doing that and everybody in every club knows that.

“T would ask you at the top table to remain with it and to look at the possibility at bringing about change. The expertise and the experience that you have built up cannot be lost — it would be a capital sin to let it go and be lost. You have the ability and that would be lost to the association if you move on,” added Fitzgerald.

Categories
Uncategorized

Clare backbone All-Ireland bid

CLARE players will be in the van- guard of the Limerick Garda’s chal- lenge for All-Ireland honours on Wednesday evening when they take on Donegal County Council in the national inter-firms decider.

And, the Clare involvement with the Limerick Garda team is both on and off the field, with Dominic Cur- tin from Kilmihil the key member of the backroom team, while there are nine Clare players on the panel.

The Clare players are: Joe Hayes (Lissycasey), Michael O’Shea (St Senan’s, Kilkee), Shane Hickey (Kil- murry Ibrickane), Keith King (Kil- murry Ibrickane), Evan Talty (Kil- murry I[brickane), Derek Deloughery (St Senan’s, Kilkee), Niall Donovan (O’Callaghan’s Mills), Noel Nash (O’Callaghan’s Mills) and Barry O’Donnell (Crusheen).

Limerick Garda contested the final unsuccessfully two years ago, but

back in 1999 won the competition out when amalgamating with Clare Garda. Nine years on an amalga- mation of a different kind — Clare provide the biggest single county representation on the panel — has helped bring Limerick to the cusp of national glory.

“Two years ago we were unlucky in the final,’ says Dominic Curtin, “‘los-

ing out by only a point to Armagh GAA Coaches. We’re hopeful this year that we can go one better and beat Donegal in the final.

‘“We’ve had a great run to get to the final, beating Analog in the Limerick final, before having three matches in the Munster Championship. We beat Clare Garda in the first round, then Merck Sharp and Dohme in the sec- ond round and Citco in the Munster final. We then beat Seamus Byrne Electrical of Carlow in the All-Ire- land semi-final by 1-13 to 1-8.

Four current county senior play- ers are on the Limerick panel. They are: Joe Hayes and Michael O’Shea of Clare, Kevin Mulryan and Niall Fitzgerald of Carlow, while the side is captained by Brian Kinsella from Carlow. The final has a start time of 6pm and will be played under lights at Sligo Institute of Technology.

Categories
Uncategorized

Attention all Clare marshals

THE Rally Ireland marshal recruit- ment drive was officially launched recently. With less than six weeks before the World Rally Champion- ship 2009 begins, more than 3,000 marshalls and volunteers will be enrolled to Rally Ireland. The event takes place from January 29th — Feb- ruary Ist 2009 and replaces Rally Monte Carlo as the opening round.

Speaking at the launch, Event D1- rector, John Naylor said: “The mar- shals and volunteers of Rally Ireland are vital to the success of our event. Their time and effort led to Rally Ireland 2007 being ranked as one of the best rallies in the Championship. For 2009 we want to raise our game again to be the best.”

Chief marshal, Paul Goodman and his team have already been busy con- tacting all motor around the country: “If people want to marshal at Rally Ireland 2009 they have two options. Firstly, if they are a member of a mo-

tor club they should contact the mar- shal coordinator in their club. Or secondly, if they are not a member of a motor club, they should contact their regional coordinators who will direct them to their nearest motor club.

“We have had a lot of interest in marshalling at Rally Ireland but there is still a need for more people.”

Anyone who marshals at the WRC’s opening event in January will receive a copy of the event programme, a Rally Ireland beanie hat and free en- try to the Service Park, a lunch pack and a hot meal following the running of the stage.

Paul Goodman will be assisted by Regional Coordinators. Each coord1- nator has been assigned a geographi- cal area, which includes the motor clubs in that region.

Clare motor club member Gerry O’Brien from Crusheen is the region- al coordinator for the South West which also includes the Clare area.

Gerry has been an active member

of the Clare Motor Club for many years. Acting as marshal coordina- tor, he has played an active role in re- cruiting marshals from many of his neighbouring clubs in the south west for the past number of years for the Clare Stages Rally. Gerry also acted as chairman of the club for a couple of years.

Gerry also worked as Marshal Co- ordinator for the South West region for Rally Ireland in 2007.

The Clare Motor Club have also launched their recruitment drive for marshals for Rally Ireland and any- body interested in getting involved should contact Gerry O’Brien (086- 2766267), club pro Dermot Kelleher, or club chairman Joe Baker.