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Trapp promises a return to the Banner county

TRAP will be back. That was the message from John Delaney in Ennis on Thursday.

Speaking in Ennis the CEO of the Football Association of Ireland (FAI) said he was determined to ensure that Ireland manager Giovanni Trappattoni and his assistant Marco Tardelli visited the Cliffs of Moher.

The Italian duo who have guided the national team since 2008 had been due to lend their support to a campaign by the Cliffs of Moher to be named as one of the new seven wonders of the world.

However last Friday’s press conference at one of Ireland most popular tourism spots was re-scheduled for Ennistymon following strike action taken by some Cliffs workers. SIPTU members are in dispute with management at the Cliffs over pay and conditions.

At a civic reception held at the offices of Clare County Council, Delaney said Trap and Tardelli will return to the Cliffs, “It will be done”, he said, adding that it is “important that the Cliffs get this publicity”.

Reflecting on a week that saw FAI visits to over 20 clubs across the county, Delaney said it had been “magnificent week in a wonderful county”.

Delaney, whose wife and grandmother hail from Ennis, also recalled the social aspects of the club visits. He told the reception that the FAI delegation had been “marched” out of a pub in Tulla at 2.30am by the Tulla Pipe Band. He also described the visit to Kilmihil on Wednesday as one of the best since the FAI took its annual conference on the road in 2005.

FAI President Paddy McCaul praised the commitment of club coaches. He said, “This week in Clare has seen magnificent examples of volunteerism”.

Mayor of Clare, Cllr Pat Hayes (FF) said the FAI visit had served as an “inspiration to communities across the county”.

Addressing delegates at the official opening of the FAI conference on Saturday, Mayor of Ennis, Cllr Michael Guilfoyle (Ind) hailed the impact of the FAI’s visit.

He said, “The level of interest in the game at club level has been enhanced and the FAI’s commitment to the development and promotion of the game has been clearly demonstrated. The announcement of € 100,000 in grants by the FAI is very much appreciated and again underlines the commitment of the FAI to soccer in Clare”.

He added, “The extensive programme of visits to clubs all over the county over the last week was fantastic fun for each of the young players. The delegation from the FAI was warmly welcomed in every club and the presence of some of Ireland’s greatest former players can only serve to heighten enthusiasm for the game”.

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Aldo sees passion at work in Clare soccer

IT was, as John Aldridge admitted, a long week. It started with a trip to Connolly Celtic and took in trips to north Clare, east Clare, west Clare and Ennis. Along the way Aldridge and former Ireland teammate Ray Houghton, met players and coaches, signed hundreds of autographs and posed for hundreds of photographs.

Along the way there was the odd stop off in some of the Banner County’s well-known pubs – McDermott’s in Doolin, The Diamond Bar in Ennis and Daly’s in Kilmihil. Aldridge may have missed the chance to talk football with the regulars in The Diamond but he was part of a strong FAI delegation that put down, as John Delaney described it, a “long night” in Kilmihil on Wednesday.

Aldridge’s four day bus tour of the grassroots game in Clare came to an end in Ennis on Thursday at a family fun day organised by Ennis Town.

Standing pitchside at Ennis Rugby Club, which hosted the festivities, Aldridge recalled a week spent meeting the people and places that make up the county’s soccer community.

He said, “It’s been a very long week. The traveling has been quite arduous. You get a lot out of it. You see a lot. You learn a lot to be fair. There are a lot of good things happening in Clare and around Ireland. It’s very positive”

The former Liverpool and Ireland striker who scored 19 international goals in the green jersey said he was hugely impressed by the standard of facilities in Clare.

He said, “Some are more advanced than others. But you just got to look forward and plan the best for the kids in your vicinity and community and get them outside playing football rather than being on the Playstation”.

Aldridge continued, “There are some great facilities. Some that need tidying up and that will happen I’m sure in the future. John Delaney and the FAI are working very hard and striving for that to happen”.

Aldridge, who played in two World Cups, also heaped praise on the small army of volounteer coaches who are driving the game in Clare.

He said, “Some people are doing it for the love of the club and that’s great to see. There is a lot of effort going in the background by people you don’t see and don’t get noticed”.

Acknowledging the difficult economic times, Aldridge urged clubs to keep up the good work. He add- ed, “It’s hard times out there, getting money and that. Keep looking at ways you can get funding, lottery funding or whatever. The FAI help in various ways. Don’t give up hope and go out to your local community to help as well”.

The Liverpool native said meeting a group of Special Olympics athletes in Ennis.

He said, “People who are so passionate and so competitive in sport, that was great to see”.

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Trapp ticks Clare off his holiday list

THE arrival of the well travelled FAI delegation to the offices of Clare County Council on Thursday night was eagerly anticipated but not as much as the visit of one of the most successful figures in world football.

When Ireland manager Giovanni Trappattoni finally arrived at around 8pm, a ripple of excitement spread through the building.

Flanked by Ireland’s assistant man- ager Marco Tardelli and interpreter Manuela Spinelli, Trappattoni looked a picture of health as he was welcomed by Clare’s soccer fraternity.

After attending a civic reception the 72-year-old Italian told The Clare People that he had been looking forward to visiting the Banner County.

Speaking with the aid of an interpreter, Trappattoni said, “It’s a pleasure to me. And its very, very important that we go in every city and every county in Ireland because it’s important that people know me, know us, as people, normal people. And because (of) our presence the people can know better, me. Because the newspaper, the interview, the picture (only) gives a simple (one) image”.

Trappattoni, who has won league titles in Italy, Germany and Portugal, said he was keen to sample Clare’s famous hospitality.

“We haven’t a lot of time but I am curious to know every county, city in Ireland because it is important to know your customs. I like to understand this customs”

He also had advice for young players in Clare, urging them to work hard to achieve their dreams.

“Its important for the young, they have to love the football. Because only with this passion, its possible (to) learn, its possible to dream about the football. Also when I was young, I dreamed this moment. I was also a little bit lucky. I feel also lucky that I achieved this good result with the players with us also managers”.

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Enzo chips in with his tale of Tardelli

THERE was a queue of councillors and officials waiting to greet Giovanni Trappattoni in Ennis on Thursday but the Ireland manager reserved a particularly warm welcome for one of Clare’s best-known Italian businessmen.

As he entered the headquarters of Clare County Council to attend a civic reception in honor of the Football Association of Ireland’s (FAI) visit to Clare, Trappattoni stopped to talk and pose for photographs with Enzo D’Auria and his family.

Enzo, who opened the popular branch of fast food restaurants in Ennis in 1981, his son Alfonso and 10year-old grandson Gavin had their photograph taken with the football legend. It was a memorable moment for the football mad family who have strong connections with local club Avenue United.

“I introduced myself and he asked me where I come from. I told him a place called Ravello. He knows it, a beautiful spot. It’s a very tourist spot on the Amalfi coast. He’s a nice man. He never refuses to take photographs. A very down to earth man”, recalled Enzo.

Trappattoni was accompanied to Clare by Ireland assistant manager Marco Tardelli, whom Enzo had met during the heady days of Ireland’s Itlalia 90 world cup campaign

He explained, “I met Tardelli in Italia 90 in Palermo. We went to the Ireland and Holland game. Me and my young fella went there, Alfonso.

Enzo moved to Ireland 43 years ago after previously working in England. He said, “I’d done a film in Ireland with Walt Disney in 1968. That’s how I met my wife. She’s from Clare, Ennis, Tuohy. I meet my wife and we got married a year after”.

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Meaney questions trolley watch figures at Ennis General

A CLARE member of the HSE West Forum has called for trolley watch figures for Ennis General Hospital to be clarified.

Green Party Councillor Brian Meaney made the comment in the wake of INMO (the Irish Nurses and Midwives Organisation) figures showing that the number of people waiting on trolleys at Ennis General Hospital increased during the first six months of this year, to reach the highest levels in four years.

The INMO says that, nationally, there is an increase in overcrowding in hospitals.

Between January and June of this year, there were 363 patients on trolleys in Ennis. This is an increase on 215 during the first six months of this year and an increase on 251 two years ago.

The figure for 2008 was 160 and 804 in 2007, according to the figures.

Nationally, the increase so far this year compared to 2006 was 37 per cent; 67 per cent compared to 2007 and 20 per cent compared to last year.

However, Councillor Meaney says he would like to see a breakdown on how the figures are compiled.

“I would like to see how these figures are being calculated. I’ve gone to the accident and emergency at night. You do have people on trolleys but it would be in the accident and emergency. These are not corridors.

“I know many people whose lives have been saved because they have been on a bed with wheels. I am not underestimating genuine instances of people having spent long hours on corridors across the country, but I would like to see how the figures are being calculated,” said Cllr Meaney.

Mary Fogarty, who is the INMO spokesperson in the mid-west, said there is insufficient capacity at Ennis General Hospital.

“There is a concern. We have always had a concern that there aren’t enough beds in the system,” she said, adding that there are fears the situation may worsen.

“There is a shortage of nursing staff. There is a concern that if any more acute beds close in the region, they (figures) will get higher,” she said.

“In the short term, we don’t see it improving but we would hope that it would improve,” she added.

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More family programmes needed for addicts’ children

THE number of gambling addicts presenting for treatment at the Bushypark Treatment Centre has increased slightly – the issue is so acute that € 100,000 bets on horses have been placed by those in the throes of the addiction.

Those presenting for treatment for gambling problems range in ages.

“There hasn’t been a huge increase in gambling. Gambling has always been very steady. There was an increase of about three per cent on other years,” said the manager of the centre, Margaret Nash.

“Before, gambling was very much a lone activity. Now, we are seeing it combined with alcohol and drugs. Ennis is well known for its gambling. It’s not about people playing poker. It’s the illegal sessions,” she said.

“Gambling is a social activity. The defining part is escape from reality. It’s about the buzz of things. We have had clients who would put € 100,000 on a horse and not wait to see how it gets on,” she said.

She said that those addicted to gambling commonly suffer from blackouts, ranging from just minutes to an hour.

Bushypark provides a range of services for those seeking help, but a lack of funding will curb its ambitions to widen its range of programmes.

“There is a need for more family support programmes. There is lack of services for children of addicts and those living in homes with an addictive person. There is funding there for family therapy but you need more peer-led groups. You can’t have those without funding,” she said. “Family is a key part of the work. If the family doesn’t encourage it, no change will happen,” she said. Outside of Dublin, there is only one facility where people are referred on after their treatment and more places should be provided, according to Ms Nash.

“We would like more half way houses where people can be referred on to after treatment,” she said.

“We refer everybody on to a twoyear aftercare programme. They are run in 14 centres around the country. The two years aftercare is very important. We have reviews during that time. Relapse is part of recovery for people,” she said.

“Our government funding is cut. We are endeavouring to do fundraising ourselves. We are fundraising in conjunction with Clarecare. . . Also, clients are finding it harder to access funds compared to three years ago,” she said.

“The core is in our residential treatment programme and our two-year aftercare programme.

“In 2009, we secured funding under the cocaine initiative and we are in our third year of that. It is to support aftercare,” she said.

This is an interagency programme between four treatment centres – Talbot Grove in Kerry, Aljeff in Limerick, Cuain Mhuire in Bruree and Bushypark.

“In addition we run a family support programme and an after care support programme, targeted at cocaine users,” she added.

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Alcohol abuse is still the main treatment issue

ALCOHOL abuse has become a significant issue among people checking into the Bushypark Treatment Centre in Ennis.

“The main issue is alcohol. Alcohol is the big one,” said the manager of the centre, Margaret Nash.

“People can’t believe they are alcoholics because they drink pints,” she said.

“It has taken years for alcohol to be included in the National Misuse Strategy,” she said.

Polydrug use – a combination of alcohol, prescription drugs and illegal drugs – is the biggest issue among those who check in for treatment at Bushypark. This is followed by alcohol issues and this in turn is followed by illicit drugs on their own.

“Anyone who is taking illegal drugs is taking prescription drugs as well,” she said.

“Prescription drugs is huge. There isn’t a client that doesn’t take them. People take repeat prescriptions without ever analysing what the problem is. 80 per cent of clients would be coming in on prescription drugs because of their addictions,” she said.

“There are guys as young as 19 taking fistfuls of sleepers at night and something else to pick themselves up the next day. It is a quick fix solution. That is a national trend. It has not decreased,” she said.

“There is a complexity of issues that clients are presenting with. It seems to be more deep rooted. People have very complex addictions. It is very difficult to get people off prescription drugs,” she said.

There has been an increase of four per cent in admissions to Bushypark last year and a number of patterns have emerged.

“We would see that increase spread across the 18 to 35 age group. The 26 to 35 age group would have stayed consistent over the years but that has increased. More people are acknowledging their difficulties. You can get away with addictions for many years,” said Ms Nash.

In 2007 and 2008, there was an increase in the number of women presenting for treatment, but this has since steadied off. Younger women in the 18 to 25 age group attend in quite high numbers, often in relation to alcohol, polydrug use and food addictions.

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Heroin addiction cases quadrupled

THE number of heroin addicts attending an Ennis residential treatment centre quadrupled last year compared to the previous year.

According to staff at the centre – whose main client base is Clare, Limerick and Galway – heroin is now the most prevalent dangerous drug in the county. This echoes the views of gardaí across Clare, who have expressed concern over the spread of heroin, particularly in towns.

According to Bushypark, the use of cocaine has re-emerged as a major concern, following a spell where its use was reduced.

The abuse of prescription drugs has also become more prevalent among those getting treatment at the centre.

Overall, there was an increase of four per cent in the number of admissions at the centre last year.

The number of people treated for gambling addictions increased by three per cent in 2010.

“We have had a huge increase in screenings last year; people looking for help,” said the manager of the centre Margaret Nash.

284 people attended for assessment in 2010, compared with 264 in 2009. A total of 504 calls were made to the centre in 2010, while another 220 people called to the centre for help.

“158 people showed up for admission in 2010 (compared to 148 in 2009). That’s a full house,” she said.

“We now have a counsellor available from 8am to 9pm,” she said.

Weekends tend to spur people to seek help from the centre as the numbers of calls received on Monday evenings and Tuesdays are generally higher than later in the week.

“We welcome that people are looking for help; taking the first steps,” said Ms Nash. “Through assessment, we highlight the nature of the problem and the extent of it.”

Ms Nash said that there has been a significant increase in the use of heroin and while the use of cocaine dipped over the past couple of years, it has re-emerged.

“There has been a huge increase in heroin and cocaine is increasing again. The Clare People can reveal that 33 people were treated for heroin addiction at the Bushypark Treatment Centre last year, compared with eight in 2009.

“We would suggest that cocaine was very prevalent. It died down. This was down to two reasons: there was a bit of a crackdown on it because of the products from the headshops. They were much cheaper so there was no need to be buying cocaine. The recession certainly would have brought down the market and would have killed the yuppie market around it. There were a few high profile casualties. For one-and-a-half to two years, figures for cocaine us- ers were well down. We feel it was replaced by head shop products,” she said.

However, she said that the use of cocaine has risen again during the past eight or nine months.

“The main drug of choice is heroin. It has quadrupled in use since 2009. Cocaine has stabilised. In 2009 there were eight clients (at the centre) whose primary drug of choice was heroin. There were 33 in 2010. We have seen a dovetailing of cocaine during that time. We had a number of head shop users – seven – in 2009 for the first time. It pushed them over the edge,” she said.

“Heroin is the biggest in Ennis and Limerick,” she said.

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Life on Loop Head Lighthouse again

THE opening of the historic landmark that is the Loop Head Lighthouse to the public for the first time in its 117-year history is the first step towards realising the tourism potential of west Clare.

That was the message delivered by Clare County Council Director of Service Ger Dollard on Monday as the famous lighthouse landmark – that dates from 1854 – opened its doors as part of a trial visitor scheme being pioneered by the local authority.

“This trial will enable us to establish valuable information on visitor patterns in the area and the view of the public on further expansion of the tourist offering at Loop Head,” said Mr Dollard.

“In the autumn, we will be continuing to work with our partners in Shannon Development and Loop Head tourism to arrive at a consensus on the future development of the tourism product.

“Clare County Council would like to acknowledge the tremendous assistance and co-operation of the Commissioners of Irish Lights in progressing this exciting tourism initiative,” he added.

Welcoming the initiative, Shannon Development’s Ruairi Deane said, “This is another major step in enhancing west Clare’s tourism product offering. Our work on the project is part of a range of initiatives that we have undertaken this year in west Clare, which include new loop walks in Lissycasey and Kilkee, with more projects in the pipeline. We look forward to welcoming an increased number of visitors to the area.”

From 1854 to 1991, the existing tower-style lighthouse was maintained by a keeper who lived within the lighthouse compound. Loop Head Lighthouse will be open to the public from 10am to 4pm daily.

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Shannon closed as plane skids on landing

AN INVESTIGATION has been launched after tragedy was narrowly averted at Shannon Airport on Sunday morning, when a plane slid from the runway after landing in heavy winds.

The plane, which was carrying 21 passengers and four crew members at the time, was badly damaged in the incident but no-one was injured in the accident.

Investigators are believed to be focusing on the landing gear in the nose section of the plane, which is believed to have malfunctioned on landing.

After landing, the plane veered off the runway and crashed into a number of signs on the side of the runway, causing extensive damage to the plane.

The aircraft, which is operated by Aer Arann, was covering the scheduled Aer Lingus Manchester to Shannon flight when the accident took place.

The incident forced the closure of Shannon Airport for more than five hours on Sunday, with normal service suspended from 10.30am to 4pm.

A spokesperson from Aer Arann confirmed to The Clare People yesterday that an issue with the planes front landing gear is currently being investigated.

“As the aircraft landed on its second approach at around 10.30am, it experienced a suspected failure of the nose wheel landing gear and veered off the runway onto the grass,” said the spokesperson.

“Aer Arann cannot speculate as to the cause of the incident and the Irish Aviation Authority (IAA) and Air Accident Investigation Unit (AAIU), branch of the Department of Transport have been informed.”

A number of flights, both entering and leaving the airport, were either delayed or diverted but no flights were cancelled as a result of the incident.

The Air Accident Investigation Unit is currently investigating the incident but cannot confirm the likely cause of the accident until that investigation is complete.

The plane is understood to have skidded along the runway for more than 100 metres before it veered off the runway and came to a stop.

Wind speeds in the area were gusting as high as 35 miles per hour at the time and the plane had been experiencing extreme turbulence.

Fire brigades from Shannon and Ennis as well as a number of ambulances from Limerick and Ennis were sent to the scene, and all passengers and staff were evacuated without incident.