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Nine Clare schools to get a facelift over summer months

NINE schools that cater for 1,600 students in Clare will get a face lift this year as the Government announced its first round of the Summer Works Scheme for 2014.

The seven primary schools and two post-primary schools include Cratloe NS, Scariff Central NS, Killaloe Boys NS, Cooraclare NS, Scoil Mhichil Cahermurphy, Connolly NS, Kilnaboy NS, Ennis Commu- nity College and St Michael’s Community College, Kilmihil.

The nine Clare schools are among 387 schools nationwide to receive funding under this year’s scheme, which covers projects such as electrical, gas and mechanical works.

A second round of the scheme is expected to be announced in coming weeks. This round will cover other types of improvement works, with applications still being assessed.

The Minister for Education and Skills, Ruairí Quinn (Lab), said, “These works will be carried out in schools over the summer months, when the pupils are on holidays, so the disruption to schooling will be kept to a minimum.

“In this Year of Jobs, I and the department are committed to doing everything we can to ensure as many people as possible get back to work. These projects will stimulate economic activity by supporting 2,160 direct and 430 indirect construction jobs in the local economy,” he concluded.

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West Clare dyeing to aid cancer charity

AMONG those lining up to have their heads shaved or their hair dyed in Cooraclare at the weekend is local man Noel Morrissey who has agreed to lose hair that has been years in the growing, if he gets 1,000 likes on the charity’s facebook page.

The brainchild of local men Declan Meaney, Fergus Conway and Seamus Hehir this one-off event – ‘West Clare Shave or Dye’ – features up to 26 heads from Cree, Cooraclare, Kilmihill, Kilrush, Kilkee, Doonbeg and Quilty that will go under the blade or the hair dryer on Saturday night, March 29, from 9.30pm at the Danganelly Tavern.

A dozen of those signed up are having their hair dyed by stylists from Lover Your Hair, while Jimi’s Barbers in Kilrush will take charge of the razors.

People can also donate on the night for the chance of shaving part of some of the charity raisers’ heads.

All money raised will do to the Shave or Dye Irish Cancer Society Campaign.

Declan has already had his hair dyed for the last three weeks, green, blond and blue, which has proven to be a less than appropriate look as he has had to attend funerals and other more sombre occasions.

“Sure it is all for a good cause,” said the man who will have his head shaved on the night.

Three women are among those lined up to lose their lovely locks.

Tickets for the event are € 5, which includes a raffle and music by In Tune. Masters of Ceremonies on the night are Joe Garry and Bernie Kelly.

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Clare people get least home help hours in the mid-west

SENIOR HSE management has admitted that there are less home help hours available to the elderly in Clare compared to other counties, but it has already begun work to address the historical deficit.

HSE area manager Bernard Gloster said the HSE delivered more home help hours in Clare, Limerick and North Tipperary last year than were funded or set out in projections at the end of the year.

In 2012 the HSE was ordered to cut home help hours and meet new targets.

“There is a significant challenge about the distribution of home help hours across the country and here within the mid-west across the counties,” Mr Gloster said during a special meeting to unveil the costings and general plans for community health services in the region this year.

“I have been the first to recognise there is a difference per head of population in Clare compared to the other two counties,” he added.

However he said that the HSE was addressing the disparity by providing 20,000 more hours last year.

In 2013 in Limerick the HSE midwest provided 17,000 less hours than the previous year, but above the year’s target, and 12,000 hours less in North Tipperary but again above target. In Clare it delivered 20,000 more hours.

“I hope that is indicative to our commitment to fair and equitable balance, while not allowing you to think at the same time we can go and turn the tap off in another county and correct an historical balance,” he said. “You can not look at home help in isolation however. You must also look at the available bed profile. The public bed profile in County Clare is 224, in Limerick it is 192, in North Tipperary it is 114 so you have to balance other emphasis that were based historically.”

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Nicholas’ Room use up at Cliffs

TRAGEDY has turned into triumph at the Cliffs of Moher, as more than 200 sick or injured people benefited from the facilities at Nicholas’ Room at the North Clare tourist attraction last year.

Usage of the first aid room increased dramatically last year, with poor weather conditions and a general increase in visitors understood to drive the increase.

The facility was established in the memory of baby Nicholas Kelly, who was born prematurely at the Cliffs of Moher in 2006, before passing away on route to hospital.

Nicholas’ parents Delia GarciaStokes and her husband Kelly Stokes, raised the money to fund the first aid room at the cliffs in memory of their son.

“The hurt never goes away but we have had an opportunity to make something very positive from those circumstance, and that’s been our miracle. It didn’t work out the way we prayed [when we became pregnant], but in a way our prayers have been answered,” said Delia last week.

A total of 87 people received first aid in Nicholas’ Room last year – up from 55 in 2012 – and more than 150 people borrowed a wheelchair from the room for the duration of their visit to the Cliffs of Moher.

“This was an increase on the volumes in the last year which is due to both the increased volume of visitors to the centre and the higher incident of extreme weather events, usually wind, during the year,” said Katherine Webster of the Cliffs of Moher Visitors Experience.

“The majority of first aid incidents are minor cuts, bumps and scrapes but we have also treated visitors for broken bones, sprains and allergic reactions. It’s not just visitors who benefit from the facilities provided in Nicholas Room but staff also.

“Visitors from as far field as India, Russia and Israeli were treated on site. On top of providing valuable services to those in need the story of Nicholas Room also continues to provide inspiration to both staff and visitors alike.”

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HAIR TODAY, GONE TOMORROW

AN 11-year-old Clare girl will cut off her Rapunzel-like locks later this week, as part of her bid to raise money for charity.

Zoe O’Donoghue, who is a fifth class student at Broadford National School, has been growing her hair for more than five years and her flowing locks now reach all the way to her ankle. Zoe’s hair will go under the knife this Friday – with the hair itself going to make wigs for people who have lost their own hair through illness, and sponsorship money going to Milford hospice.

Her hair is currently well over 30 inches long and it is hoped that a number of ill people will receive human-hair wigs from Zoe’s donation.

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Burglars break into Sixmilebridge house and clean out the fridge

WHILE there maybe an increase in the number of burglaries reported around the county, some hungry thieves are now being sought by gardaí following a break-in at a house in Sixmilebridge during which the only items reported stolen were taken from the fridge.

Gardaí were called to investigate the crime in Cluain Droichead Sixmilebridge last Wednesday night and discovered the house in question had been broken into via a forced rear window.

“When we searched the house with the owner we discovered that the only items taken were from the fridge.

“There was nothing else taken, although the fridge was cleaned out,” a garda source told us.

The robbery occured between 6pm and 9pm on that Wednesday, March 19th, and the house was searched completely by the thief or thieves, who then only helped themselves to some food from the kitchen.

It is thought this is not the first ‘food crime’ in Clare over the past number of years as economic circumstances have driven some to stealing food in desperation.

“Strange as it sounds this is not the first time we have encountered this, the only thing taken in a burglary being food,” a garda told The Clare People.

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Fresh warnings to avoid Dusty dolphin

DUSTY the Dolphin has become jumpy and wary of human contact, following a number of high profile incidents with members of the public in Doolin last year.

Members of conservation group, Dolphin Day Ireland, spent the weekend in Doolin warning members of the public not to get in the water with Dusty. This follows a number of dangerous interactions with members of the public last year – with one person being hospitalised after swimming with the dolphin.

Vanessa Fagan-Vanhorn of Dolphin Day Ireland says that last year’s incidents have taken a toll on the Clare dolphin.

“She is definitely more jumpy and easier to startle then she used to be. The incidents of last summer do seem to have had an effect and her behaviour has changed. I was last swimming with her in October but I have been swimming with her in Doolin for more than eight years now,” she said.

“What was noticeable in October was when I put my hand into the water, she flinched. After a moment she recognised me from the camera that I bring with me and after that we swam together for two hours.”

Recent storms in Doolin have blown away all the warning signs, advising members of the public not to swim with Dusty. Dusty was not sighted in Doolin for a number weeks during the storms of January and February, leading to concerns that she might have left the area or been injured in the storms.

“Dusty has never left Doolin. She has been there right through the winter and through all the storm. I don’t think she will ever leave the area. She is very territorial and she has made it her home,” continued Mrs Fagan-Vanhorn.

“Really, people should sit on the rocks and enjoy watching her from there. It’s not that people want to cause her harm but they just don’t understand the species. People desperately want to have the experience of swimming with a dolphin and sometimes that gets the better of them.

“On a positive note there has been a big change in people’s understanding of dolphins, which is a result of last summer’s incidents. People seem to have more of an understanding that dolphins are wild animals.”

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Wave energy farm for Killard

THE first wave energy farm in Eu- rope is being planned for waters off Killard near Doonbeg. It could begin operating as early as 2018 according to the ESB. The energy company confirmed last week that its West Wave project will go ahead off the West Clare coast, and that five wave energy de- vices will initially be deployed to help “prove” that the technology can work on a commercial scale. The project is expected to cost between € 40 million and € 50 million. The company has secured a foreshore licence, and a number of environmental studies are currently under way that will take up to 18 months to complete. Planning permission will also have to be secured before the project goes ahead. According to reports, the ESB hopes to prove that the fledgling technology is durable and can produce power on an ongoing basis, which will help drive the wave industry forward. West Wave has been described as a critical project for the whole ocean energy business. The ambitious plans are being supported by Sustainable Energy Authority of Ireland (SEAI), which is providing € 1.3m in funding to help complete feasibility studies. Five firms have been shortlisted to supply the technology, and the successful bidder will be chosen by the middle of 2016. The successful bidder will supply five devices, which will be moored in an area of one square kilometre. The ESB aims to produce 26 per cent of its electricity from renewable sources by 2025, and become ‘carbon neutral’ by 2050.

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Kilbaha road to Loop Head opens ahead of start of tourist season

THE main road to the Loop Head Peninsula, which was closed for almost six weeks following severe storms, reopened on Friday afternoon.

Clare County Council completed extensive works to rebuild and repair over 100 metres of the regional road and coastal wall along Kilbaha Bay.

The reopening of the road was welcomed by the Mayor of Clare, Councillor Joe Arkins, who said, “The temporary reconstruction works were necessary to re-establish connectivity in Kilbaha and the wider Loop Head Peninsula, and are a timely boost for the upcoming tourist season. Recent weeks have already seen the launch of the Wild Atlantic Way with a number of Discovery points along that route situated in the greater Loop Head area.”

Works undertaken by council staff include the positioning of over 3,000 tonnes of rock armour along the sea- front, 1,200 square meters of surfacing works, and the pouring of over 200 cubic metres of concrete.

Siobhan Garvey, Marketing and Development Officer for West Clare said, “There is no doubt that visitors planning a trip to Loop Head Lighthouse and the Bridges of Ross on the Loop Head Peninsula will appreciate the improved coastal protection works, car parking facilities and increased safety infrastructure that has now been put in place at these locations.”

“The improvement works completed today add to a number of tourism infrastructural projects that were completed at both these locations along with the West End in Kilkee late in 2013. The speed at which these works were completed and the continued investments made in the Loop Head area reflects the Council’s commitment to tourism and to continually building the tourism product in the rural parts of County Clare,” she added.

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Tourism indicators positive for 2014

EVEN on the back of the Gathering and a reinvigoration of the American market.

Early bookings for Clare in 2014 indicate a major growth in visitors from England, mainland Europe, especially Germany, and Irish tourists.

Despite a slow start to 2014, brought about as a result of the storms in January and February, early booking at the Cliffs of Moher put them on target for a sizable increase on 2013, which was the attraction’s best year on record. If these number continue throughout the year, the Cliffs should break the one million visitor mark for the first time ever.

Despite a 12 per cent drop in visitors numbers to the Cliffs of Moher so far this year, manager Katherine Webster is predicting a healthy growth over the 12 months of 2014.

“No less than the rest of coastal County Clare, the Cliffs of Moher Visitor Experience had a challenging enough start to the year with the storm conditions experienced in January and the first half of February. Extreme weather led to the visitor centre clos- ing on a total of seven days in these two months. Prior to 2014, the Cliffs of Moher visitor centre had closed a total of 7 times in 7 years,” she said.

“As a result of the storm closures our visitor numbers for the first two months of the year are down on last year by 12 per cent on the same period in 2013. However, the month of March has started strongly and our advance bookings for the remainder of this month and for the season ahead are ahead of last years levels.”

Ennis hotelier Brian O’Neil yesterday urged Clare businesses to take advantage of the tourism trends and put Clare back on the Irish and inter- national map. He cites the introduction of a regular and inexpensive bus connections between Dublin and Ennis by Dublin Coaches a game changer for the local tourism market.

“There is a sea-change coming for tourism in Ennis and in Clare. The problem for tourism over the last few years has been the day tours coming out of Dublin to the Cliffs of Moher and other venues and spending very little in Clare,” he said.

“They [Dublin Coaches/Quick Tours] are going to make Ennis their mid-west hub. So people can stay in Ennis for a number of days and take day trips to the Ring of Kerry.