This article is from page 16 of the 2011-09-13 edition of The Clare People. OCR mistakes are to be expected so download the original SWF or the rendered page 16 JPG
ENNIS lost out on staging Fleadh Cheoil na hÉireann for the first time in 35 years by one vote in a nail-biting selection process that took place at the Comhaltas Ceoltóirí Éireann headquarters in Dublin on Saturday afternoon. The Clare People has learned that the Ennis bid were beaten into second place in the three-candidate election by just one vote on the second count of a selection process believed to the closest contest in the 60-year history of the showpiece of the traditional music year.
The Ennis bid to stage the weeklong traditional music spectacular next August, which would have been brought an influx of over 250,000 visitors to Clare and be worth over € 20m to the county, was edged out by Cavan as the host town for 2012 on 14-13 vote.
Three centres were in the running to host the festival – Cavan which staged the 2010 and 2011 events and Sligo, which last hosted Fleadh Cheoil na hÉireann in 1991 and Ennis, which previously staged the event in 1956 and 1977.
Comhaltas Ceoltóirí Éireannn sources have revealed that Ennis topped the poll after the first count – garnering ten votes, to Cavan’s nine and Sligo’s eight. However, following the elimination of Sligo from the contest a second ballot saw Cavan edge the vote by the mininum margin.
“It was a great disappointment, because we had obviously done an awful lot of work. We did an excellent presentation and we felt that we couldn’t have done anymore than we did,” said Micheál Ó Riaghaigh, chariman of the Fleadh Cheoil Working Group.
“We were fairly confident. We believed we had done everything to get Fleadh Cheoil. On the other side we were always realistic that we recognised that there were two other strong contenders – Sligo’s was a good bid and Cavan had a very good track record,” he added.
In winning the vote, Cavan will become only the fifth centre to play host to the event for three successive years. The others were Listowel (1985, ’86, ’87), Sligo (1989, ’90, ’91), Clonmel (1992, ’93,’94) and Tullamore (2007 , ’08, ’09).
However, crucially these other centres were automatically given the right to host the festival for the third year in succession because there were no competing bid from other towns.
“There always the chance that we wouldn’t get it and that’s what we were hoping against,” continued Ó Riabhaigh. “It was down to one vote. There are 31 members of the Ard Comhairle and the chairman only exercises a casting vote. There were two or three of the Ard Comhairle who weren’t available for the meeting. It wasn’t on the casting vote.
“We were very close to landing. If we had lost by more than one vote it wouldn’t have reflected the amount of effort, time and commitment given by everybody involved in the whole bid,” he added.