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Another dry, cold February

DESPITE going more than two weeks without any rain, Clare recorded a year-on-year increase in the amount of rain which fell last month.

According to figures obtained from the Met Eireann station at Shannon Airport, the monthly rainfall last month was almost half what it normally is for the month of February. Despite the unseasonably dry conditions, last month actually represented a year-on-year increase in rainfall in the county from 38.6 millimeters in 2012 to 49.6 this year.

Indeed, last month’s dry weather is a continuation of a trend which has been seen in Clare over the last three years. Rainfall levels in February, March and April have been uncommonly low since 2011, with wetter than normal months of June and July also recorded.

Farmers and gardeners in the county can also expect a slower than normal start to the growing season this year, as average temperatures are down on previous years. The average ground temperature in Clare last month was just 5.3 degrees, compared to a posi- tively balmy 7.7 degrees for the same month in 2012.

Despite the positive effects of the recent dry spell, the low soil temperature will hamper the growth of grass and non-hardy vegetables and plants.

The recent cold snap could also have a detrimental effect on grass growth in the county. The sub-freezing of this week looks likely to knock back any early growth across the county.

This comes as many farmers throughout the county are struggling for winter feed as a result of last year’s poor silage harvest.

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Clare women ‘not provided with’ 20-week anomaly scan

CLARE’S expectant mothers are not getting the best pre-natal case possible, according to a member of Ennis Town Council, who argues that a 20week scan would provide for a safer delivery in cases where the baby may need urgent treatment.

Cllr Paul O’Shea (Ind) received the support of his colleagues as he called on the HSE in the region to provide a 20-week anomaly scan for all pregnant women in Clare as part of the routine ante-natal screening process.

According to the former Labour councillor, these scans are only provided at the discretion of the obstetrician or through private healthcare providers.

“This routine scan can determine if the newborn child should be delivered in a territory centre so as to ensure the best chance of corrective surgery upon birth, such as cleft pallets, cleft lips and minor heart condi- tions,” he said.

The HSE does not have any plans to introduce the anomaly scan as part of a woman’s pre-natal check ups however.

“The maternity services in the midwest are not in a position to provide a 20-week ‘anomaly’ scan as a routine measure. However, far from it being provided at the discretion of a consultant, women with a high risk of an anomaly are referred for a 20-week detailed anatomy ultrasound, which is provided by a cohort of our obstetricians/gynaecologists who specialise in foetal medicine. There are four such consultants in the mid-west,” said the local HSE spokesperson.

“This service is not provided on a private basis,” he added.

Cllr O’Shea is adamant that in the interest of safety for the mother and child, such a scan should be introduced, and soon.

“There is a major disparity here between international antenatal care standards. For example, in the UK, the Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists recommends that all women undergo a two-scan regime. Women in other European countries receive an average of four to five scans during pregnancy. In 2010, Prof Fergal Malone, Royal College Surgeons Ireland and Master of the Rotunda, agreed that a two-scan regime should be available,” he said.

“I have been contacted by expectant mothers who do not have the means to pay for anomaly scans and who feel discriminated against as they live outside Dublin.

He continued, “These routine anomaly scans are presently only provided under the HSE at the Rotunda Hospital and the National Maternity Hospitals in Dublin. There is an equality issue here, as expectant mothers in Clare attending the Mid West Regional Maternity hospital in Limerick are not provided with the scan, and it is only available at the discretion of the obstetrician or through private healthcare providers.”

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Phoenix delegates to join the festivities

THE Deputy Mayor of Phoenix, Arizona, will lead a delegation of almost 100 people to Ennis next week to participate in a comprehensive programme of events marking the 25th anniversary of the twinning link between the Clare County and Arizona State capitals.

Michael Johnson will be joined in County Clare by Phoenix City Council representatives and executives, business leaders and Phoenix Sister City personnel.

One of the highlights of Phoenix Week 2013 will be the participation in the St Patrick’s Day parade of 35 members of the Saint Mary’s Catholic High School marching band from Phoenix. During their weeklong visit to the Banner County, the Phoenix delegation will also meet Clare business and tourism interests on the business opportunities that the region offers, participate in the St Patrick’s Day parade, and receive a guided historic tour of Ennis as well as visit some of Clare’s best-known tourism attractions.

Speaking ahead of next week’s visit, Mayor of Ennis, Cllr Peter Considine stated, “It is very important that we celebrate the real and enduring association between Ennis and Phoenix. We all benefit from this association in terms of culture, education and business. I wish to congratulate all of those who have been involved over the past 25 years.”

“Since the formation of the twinning relationship in 1988, civic and community leaders from both sides of the Atlantic have visited each other on exchanges and have developed strong ties and personal friendships. Phoenix Week 2013 is an opportu- nity for all of us to celebrate the very special relationship that has been established,” explained T J Waters, Chairperson of Ennis Phoenix Twinning Board.

He added: “The twinning arrangement has presented tremendous opportunities for the residents of both Ennis and Phoenix. For example, political and business leaders, arts and cultural representatives, technical experts, teachers and students from each location have participated in regular exchanges. We look forward to welcoming our friends to Ennis next week. ”

Meanwhile, Ennis Phoenix Twinning Board will host a breakfast forum for visiting Phoenix business people and officials. The forum on March 15, which is supported by Ennis Town Council and Ennis Chamber of Commerce, will concentrate on opportunities for employment in the region as well as showcasing the tourism opportunities on offer in Clare. Topics covered will include transport infrastructure, links to third-level research projects and opportunities for global business.

Visit www.ennisphoenix.com or the Ennis Phoenix facebook page.

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Hands-on devotion at Shannon Airport

THE 200-year-old hand of St Don Bosco was on show in Shannon Airport last Sunday, before it boarded a plane bound for Croatia.

The hand, which is a preserved relic from the 19th-century saint, has spent the last week travelling around Ireland. The relic arrived in Shannon in a casket, which is used to transport it around the world.

John Bosco, who is popularly known as St Don Bosco, was born in Castelnuovo d’Asti in Italy in August of 1815. In the run up the 200-year anniversary of his birth, the relic has been engaged in a world tour.

Don Bosco dedicated his life to the betterment and education of street children, juvenile delinquents and other disadvantaged youth. He devised teaching methods based on love rather than punishment which became known as the Salesian Preventive System.

A follower of the spirituality and philosophy of Saint Francis de Sales, Bosco dedicated his works to him when he founded the Salesians of Don Bosco.

Together with Maria Domenica Mazzarello, he founded the Institute of the Daughters of Mary Help of Christians, a religious congregation of nuns dedicated to the care and education of poor girls.

Following his beatification in 1929, he was canonised as a saint in the Roman Catholic Church by Pope Pius XI in 1934.

Meanwhile, Shannon Airport yesterday welcomed the early launch of Aer Lingus’ US schedule for the summer season.

Flights will operate from Shannon to Boston four times weekly and to New York three times weekly.

“The summer season does not officially begin until the end of the month but there’s definitely a sense that it’s kicking off early for us this year, with Aer Lingus commencing its transatlantic services earlier and in time for St Patrick’s weekend,” said Declan Power, head of Aviation Development at Shannon Airport. EXCITEMENT is mounting in Clarecastle as preparations are being made for a fashion show which is taking place this Thursday in the West County Hotel to raise funds for a new playground in the heart of the village. Nerves are getting to some local people as they prepare to make their debut on the catwalk but the anticipation of a great night out and the prospect of a fabulous new facility for children in the area overrides these initial fears. Seventeen local boutiques will be showcasing their spring/summer collections at the fashion show and many other businesses have been extremely supportive with donations, advertising and the provision of fantastic raffle prizes. It is open to everyone and it really should be a very enjoyable evening for all. Tickets are € 20, which includes a complementary glass of wine, a chance to win a weekend away and an opportunity to browse some fantastic stands. Tickets are available at the West County Hotel or Clarecastle Post Office or at the door on the night. The playground project was initiated at the end of last year by Clarecastle Community Development Ltd (CCDL). The total project is estimated to cost around € 150,000. Leader funding has been secured to fund 75 per cent of the total cost and Clare County Council has granted € 16,000 towards the project. This leaves around € 25,000 to be raised by the community and local generosity has already raised some funds to help reach this target. The fashion show is one of a number of fundraising projects that will take place over the coming months to raise the matching funds and it is hoped the children of Clarecastle will have their playground in the latter half of this year.

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Elderly Lisdoon man recovers after road accident

AN ELDERLY Lisdoonvarna man is recovering in hospital today following a serious accident just outside Ennistymon on Sunday afternoon.

The man, who is in his 60s, was injured when the van he was travelling in collided with a concrete pillar at the Kilfenora junction on the N67 between Ennistymon and Lisdoonvarna.

The man is understood to have suffered a blackout before the vehicle veered off the road and into the pillar.

Two units of the fire brigade and an ambulance from Ennistymon, along with a rapid response paramedic and the Doolin Unit of the Irish Coastguard, all responded to the incident.

The man was transferred by helicopter from North Clare to the Mid Western Regional Hospital in Limerick where injuries were said to be serious but not immediately lifethreatening.

The road remained closed for several hours on Sunday while a forensic examination was completed.

Meanwhile, a stag weekend in the Burren nearly turned to tragedy on Saturday when a male climber had a lucky escape after falling nearly 30 feet while abseiling.

The incident happened just before 5pm on Saturday afternoon when a group was climbing near Moneen Mountain in the Burren.

The Doolin Unit of the Irish Coastguard stretchered the injured man from inside a rocky gorge to an area where the Shannon-based Coastguard helicopter could airlift him to hospital.

The man is understood to have broken both of his ankles in the incident, as well as suffering back injury.

“There was a group of people on a stag in the Burren. One man fell around 25 feet and had suspected fractures to both his ankles and some lower back pain. The spot was just 400 metres from the road but, because of the way his body landed, it was difficult to move him,” said Mattie Shannon of the Doolin Unit of the Irish Coastguard.

“The helicopter was on the scene and we assisted the winch-man to airlift him from the location and on to Limerick.”

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Homeless figures on the rise

THE NUMBER of homeless people in Clare has skyrocketed over the last 12 months with local agencies reporting scores or families going hungry in the county each week.

A total of 304 homeless people presented in Clare last year, an increase of more than 23 per cent on the 2011 figure. That is according to the draft report of the Mid West Regional Action Plan, which is due to be published later this week. The report also reveals that 17 Clare people identified themselves as being homeless to Limerick City Council, 14 to Limerick County Council at 2 to North Tipperary County Council.

Domestic violence was the main cause of homeless in Clare last year with 83 people made homeless because of an unsafe home environment. Nearly 200 of the people were aged between 20 and 40 years of age but 10 Clare people in their 60s were made homeless last year as-well-as 19 teenagers.

Josie O’Brien of the HELP homeless organisation in Ennis has seen a large increase in the number of people going without food in Clare over the last 12 months.

She is currently providing food each week for two familes in the Ennis area, including a seven month old baby and a newborn infant.

“HELP has been feeding a little baby and his mother since October. Over the past few weeks I have also been bringing food to another Ennis based family with four children, including a newborn infant,” she said.

“The people of Clare have been so generous. I put a request for food up on our facebook page and invariable someone always comes up with the goods. They are in a desperate situation, I went out to them [the family with four children] yesterday and they had nothing in the fridge but butter. We went out with a load of food that a woman in Miltown donated but other than that they had nothing.”

According to Orla Ní Eile, of the Clare Immigrant Support Centre, legal and illegal immigrant in Clare and their Irish-born children are currently falling through the cracks and not receiving any support from the authorities.

“People are going hungry in Clare each week. It is sad to say it but it is the truth,” she said.

“A lot of these people are returning Irish nationals or foreign workers, who were working legally in Clare but they discover, when they lose their job, that their employer has not been paying tax for them.

“Without a record or paying tax it is almost impossible for them to get any assistance from the state.

“There are dozen of families going without basic food in Clare each week and the situation is getting worse.”

For more information on HELP, search for ‘help the homeless in Clare’ on Facebook.

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North Clare church and school burgled

A CHURCH and a primary school in North Clare were broken into last week as criminal activity in county reaches a new low.

Gardaí are investigating the theft of eleven laptop computers and a number of other pieces of electrical equipment from New Quay National School while Gardaí in Ennistymon are also investigating the theft of two collection boxes from Kilfenora Church.

The New Quay school break-in took place some time between 10pm last Wednesday night, March 6, and 9am on Thursday morning. The thieves gained access to the school’s computer room by forcing open a back window.

Gardaí are investigating after thousands of euro worth of equipment were stolen from a school in North Clare. Eleven Toshiba laptops were taken along with, a white camcorder, two Fuji digital cameras, a black Nikon camera and a small amount of cash. Clare’s Crime Prevention Officer, Joe Downey, has asked that anyone with information on the stolen equipment or those responsible are urged to contact Ennistymon Gardaí on 7072180.

Two black collection boxes were also stolen from the church in Kilfenora last week. The theft took place between 9am on Saturday, March 2, and 7pm that evening.

Clare Gardaí are also looking for information from the public on a number of burglaries which have taken place recently. Between 1pm on March 3 and noon on March 5 a house at Islandmore Farm in Flagmount was broken into with 17 brass rods taken.

A house in Tullyglass in Shannon was ransacked at some time between February 20 and February 26 while the occupants were away on holiday. Nothing was stolen from the house during this incident.

A burglary also took place in a house in Gort na Blath in Ennis at some time between 11.15am and 9.30pm on Friday, March 8. A small amount of money was taken. There was also a burglary in the Willowgrove in Ennis on the same day – at some time between 8.50am and 11.30pm. Anyone with information about any of these crimes is asked to contact their local Garda Station.

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Clarecastle man is leading the way with US business logistics

A CLARECASTLE man made international business headlines in America over the past week as his company was head hunted by billion dollar US corporations to supply logistics for them across Europe.

Gerry Kierce, who hails from Clarecastle, is a former student of St Flannan’s College and was part of the Clare minor hurling panel that captured the historic Munster minor title back in 1981.

His company, Euro Route Logistics, which he founded in Dublin in 2003 was just named as a partner to a number of high profile US companies on the back of their innovative research and methods which are delivering 23 per cent savings for their customers.

The news that Euro Route was being selected as logistics partners for a number of US companies was headline news with NBC, CBS and the Wall Street Journal in North America.

Gerry, who started working the freight business in Shannon back in 1981, now oversees a huge operation from his logistics centre in Blanchardstown which employs 18 staff and has an office space of some 75,000 sq ft.

This announcement from the US assures Euro Route Logistics place as a leading player in the competitive business of logistics and, according to Gerry Kierce, is the latest positive development for a company that prides itself on innovation at the cutting edge of the industry.

“We’ve never lost a customer through service and are dedicated to stay years ahead of our time. In fact, the more complex the company’s requirement the better.

“We’re proud to keep our staff long term and assist them to grow as the industry continues to develop and adapt.

“The pride I have for my native county reminds me of when we ran team logistics for a national team. You can’t beat the rush of being part of a well oiled machine that keeps a major organization on its feet,” Gerry told The Clare People this week.

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Hermitage rallies against burglaries

THE establishment of a new neighbourhood watch scheme for the Hermitage area of Ennis will be discussed at a meeting in the town next Monday.

The meeting, which will be attended by crime prevention officer Sgt Joe Downey, will take place at the Junction, Cloughleigh Road, at 7pm.

All residents in the Hermitage area are invited to attend.

Local councillor Tony Mulqueen (FG) said the meeting is aimed at tapping into the strong sense of community spirit that exists in Hermitage. He said residents are taking a proactive approach to any issues around crime that might arise in the area.

He said, “There have been a couple of break ins in the area. Hermitage is not unique in that respect; there have been break ins at houses in other parts of the town as well. The one thing that does exist in the area is a strong community of friends and neighbours. Some of the families in Hermitage have been living in the area for 40 or 50 years so it makes it easier to set up a Neighbourhood Watch Scheme than say in an area where you have a lot of rented houses.”

He added, “It also gives the Guards a means of liaising with the community on issues that arise. There hasn’t been any serious escalation of crime. Instead of reacting its about taking steps before it gets out of control.” Cllr Mulqueen said all resident are welcome to attend.

Cllr Michael Guilfoyle (Ind) welcomed the scheme, saying it had been a success in the Turnpike.

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Alan s(hits) the jackpot with whale dump

IF A large lump of whale vomit found on the beach at Lahinch is authenticated by whale experts, the seaside town could end up attracting a whole new type of tourist.

Because if there is whale vomit on “them thar beaches”, it could be worth more than gold dust to those who find it, as Alan Davey from Ennis is hoping.

The 38-year-old found what he believes is the rare whale ambergris on the beach while getting a surfing lesson from his friend, Brian Miller from Cratloe.

The Ennis man became aware of the value of the waste product of the sperm whale’s digestive system when one found in the UK recently made headlines after it was sold for £100,000 sterling. It is estimated that the 20cm-diameter ambergris found by Alan could make between € 10,000 and € 50,000.

Ambergris is used mostly in highend perfumes, and its rarity adds to its value. Since discovering the “floating gold”, so-called because it can float for years in the sea before being discovered, Alan and Brian have been making national headlines and taking to the national airwaves.

In order to protect their potential loot, they have now left it with a mutual friend for safekeeping until an expert can confirm whether or not it is the coveted whale bile.

The potentially precious substance is securely wrapped in a cotton bag as directed by Alan’s online research.

The Jersey native has said that while he is trying not to get too excited about the possible value of his find, the money will come in handy.

He has also promised to split any profits with his friend and surf teacher Brian.