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Low turn-out no surprise

THE voter turn-out for the Stability Referendum last week was the lowest in the county in almost a decade.

Campaigners from all sides said they were disappointed with the 49.8 per cent turn-out in Clare, which was just short of the national average. However, the large number of people staying at home at the time of a referendum is not unusual in Clare’s recent history.

Just 30.83 per cent of the electorate in Clare turned out in June 2001 to vote on the first Nice referendum, the abolition of the death penalty and the criminal courts referendum.

This was a huge drop from the previous referendum of June 1999 when 60.05 per cent of the Clare electorate turned out to vote for ‘Recognition for Local Government’.

In March 2002, just 39.29 per cent of the Clare electorate turned out to vote on the Protection of Human Life in Pregnancy, with 47.05 per cent voting on Nice 2 that October.

The largest turn out for a referen dum in recent years in Clare was in June 2004, when 64.6 per cent voted on the Citizenship.

From then until last Thursday, the turn-out remained over 50 per cent in the Banner county, with 52.48 per cent voting on Lisbon 1 in June 2008, 56.9 per cent voting on the second Lisbon referendum in October 2009, while 56.12 per cent voted on the House of the Oireachtais Inquiries and 57.95 per cent on Judges Remu- neration during the Presidential election in October 2011.

Last week’s drop below 50 per cent was a disappointment to the majority of people involved in the campaign. Some blamed referendum fatigue, others a lack of knowledge on the subject.

“An element of referendum fatigue was built into the turn-out. I was disappointed that more people didn’t choose to vote but it is the norm for referendums that you don’t have a large turn-out,” said Fine Gael TD Joe Carey.

Fine Gael Senator Tony Mulcahy said he believed the low turn-out was due to frustration and annoyance among people. There was also an element of “people not understanding it” he maintained.

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New project to ‘Connect’ Clare people with jobs

CLARE’S vast Diaspora is to be tapped in an effort to create new jobs in the county, with the Clare County Development Board throw ing its weight behind the project being promoted by the Connect Organisation.

“We will succeed. We can deliver jobs in Clare by using our contacts abroad,” Connect Ireland’s Alan Gallagher said when address a meeting of County Development Board.

In backing this drive at stimulating jobs growth in the county, Clare County Council enterprise officer, Majella McNamara revealed that “many leading companies have already chosen Clare as a location for investment.

“The purpose of this new initiative is to attract smaller, more mobile companies to locate here too. The smaller companies can set up operations more quickly with the result that new jobs can be created a lot faster in smaller locations, such as Ennis and other parts of the county.

“What we need is to have suitable, attractive business space and to showcase and sell all the attractive aspects of the county,” she added.

Connect Ireland is the company appointed by the government and the IDA to deliver the Succeed in Ireland initiative with the aim of creating 5,000 jobs in Ireland within five years as part of the Government’s 2012 Action Plan for Jobs.

The initiative works by encouraging ordinary people and businesses to use their international connections to encourage companies to set up in Ireland.

An individual who introduces a company that subsequently invests in Ireland and creates new jobs will receive a financial reward of € 4, 500 if three jobs are created up to a max- imum of € 150,000.

“We would urge the people of Clare to think about the people you know all over the world: friends, family, old school friends and teammates, neighbours and business contacts.

“Just check in with them, you might be surprised at where they work, who they know and just what that quick email or phone call could result in in terms of job creation in Clare,” added Ms McNamara.

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‘Passing the referendum is the least bad option’

ONE Clare TD has described the resounding acceptance of the Fiscal Stability Treaty in Clare as the “least bad option”.

Labour TD Michael McNamara said, “It has been a difficult decision for many people, myself included, but I’m glad that clarity has been brought to the situation. The people of Ireland and Clare have provided a decisive result that will reinforce the Govern- ment’s efforts to work our way through the Eurozone crisis with greater urgency with our EU partners. We need to press ahead with the growth agenda and to work hard on getting a deal on the bank debt.Passing the referendum is not a solution to our problems. In many ways, it can be described as the least bad option,” he said.

Fine Gael’s Joe Carey maintained, “There was a very clear message that we had to pass this referendum in the interest of our country so we would have certainty going forward.”

The Clare TD was Fine Gael Director of Elections for North Munster and he was happy to see a lot of young people involved in the campaign. “It was encouraging to see so many young people getting involved in this campaign. I think they viewed it as their future. They wanted to make sure a yes vote was returned in their interest because it is really about putting our country first,” he said.

Senator Tony Mulcahy (FG) said he was arguing for the referendum from a business point of view and he believed being able to borrow at a reasonable rate is key to the future of industry. “At the end of the day, the people have spoken and said let’s steady the ship and keep the whole thing going,” he said.

Deputy Pat Breen (FG) said, “I know from speaking to people during the course of this campaign that they were very much aware of the importance of passing this treaty in terms of Ireland’s future role in the European Union. The fact that the Irish people are set to endorse the treaty is already receiving a very positive reaction all over the world. I have received quite a number of calls from colleagues throughout Europe congratulating us on the result. The fact that we were the only country in the EU to hold a referendum and that as a country we have taken the lead in support of the treaty will, I have no doubt, pay dividends into the future with foreign direct investment continuing to flow into this country. It will also strengthen our Government’s hands in future discussions at EU level,” he added.

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Shannon region swots up on Chinese tourism

THE Shannon region is ideally placed to cash in on a new tourism boom coming all the way from China, provided the proper marketing structures can be put in place to attract visitors from the world’s fastest growing economy.

This potential for the region to place itself in the shop window for Chinese tourist traffic was showcased at a Shannon Chamber of Commerce seminar last week that brought together leading Chinese academics and Tourism Ireland’s head of developing markets.

The seminar – entitled ‘Chinese Tourism on the Move: Targeting the Affluent Chinese Consumer’ – was hosted by the Shannon College of Hotel Management and supported by Shannon Development, Shannon Airport Authority and Tourism Ireland.

“Ireland has Approved Designated Status with China, which means that groups such as summer/winter schools, business tourism and spe- cial interest groups can be targeted,” Tourism Ireland’s Jim Paul told the gathering.

“A starting point for the Shannon region would be to build visits around the Cliffs of Moher, which gained a lot of air time during the Chinese vice premier’s visit to Shannon earlier this year. Ireland is often confused with Iceland, but once ‘Riverdance’ and the Cliffs of Moher are mentioned, there is an instant association,” he added.

A post-seminar workshop, facilitated by Kevin Thompstone, of the Thompstone Group, and former chief executive of Shannon Development, selected a number of areas for follow up as a first-stage attempt to position Ireland and the Shannon region as a preferred destination for Chinese tourism.

A less-restrictive visa process, direct access to Ireland, a Chinesefriendly standard for hotels, and group membership of Tourism Ireland’s Country Club to facilitate inmarket visits are listed as tier-one action items.

“Described by Emeritus Professor, Management School of Asian Studies, UCC, Deirdre Hunt, as ‘pioneering in many ways for the fifty-fifty Irish Chinese contributions and the increased depth and richness of material presented’, the seminar is but a first-step by Shannon Chamber to tackle the issues which hinder positioning the Shannon region as an attractor of a new influx of visitors to the region, from a vast country with a kindred love of family, place and space,” said Helen Downes, chief executive of Shannon Chamber of Commerce.

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USI to appeal Medb’s case

A LEGAL case involving a thirdlevel student from Ballyvaughan will be appealed to the Supreme Court later this year, in a test case which could see full maintenance grants restored to thousands of students in Ireland.

The Union of Students in Ireland (USI) confirmed last week that they have decided to appeal the case taken on behalf of Medb McCarthy, from Murtyclough, outside Ballyvaughan, after receiving advice from their legal team.

Medb, along with other students Robert Johnson from Monaghan and Iesha Rowan from Oranmore in Galway, are fighting to restore their non-adjacent grants, which were removed following changes in the Department of Education criteria which came into effect in September.

The Student Services Act increases the distance that a non-adjacent student would have to live away from the educational institution from 24 kilometres to 45 kilometres. According to the Minister for Education, Ruairi Quinn (LAB), this change was introduced to reflect the improved public transport and general transport infrastructure in the country in recent years.

Under the new rules, Mebh, who is a third-year Arts student at NUI, Galway, would be considered to live “adjacent” to the university – in an area where commuting each day would be possible.

With no effective public transport in place in the North Clare area, Mebh will not be able to reach Galway City for college each day until after 11am. Despite working to support herself during her time in college, she is not in a position to make up the shortfall in the grants payment.

Mebh is currently in receipt of a grant of between € 6,100 and € 6,700 per year to go towards rented accommodation and maintenance while she studies in NUI, Galway. If the decision is not reversed, it will lead to a loss of between € 2,440 to € 3,900 towards her maintenance in college next year.

The case is being seen as a test case by hundreds of students in Clare who will have their grants reduced if the new system is enforced.

An initial legal challenge was heard in February of this year, with Mr Justice John Hedigan reserving his judgement for more than six weeks while he considered the arguments made.

When the judgement was released in April, Justice Hedigan ruled that grants cuts were in the public interest given the dire financial circumstances facing the country. However, Vice President of the USI, Conor Murphy, confirmed last week that the students organisation would be appealing the decision.

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Night move for Ennis taxi rank

A NIGHT-TIME taxi rank could be put in place at the Abbey Street carpark under new proposals put forward by Ennis Town Council.

Council officials met gardaí and members of the Ennis Taxi Federation in April after taxi drivers outlined a number of concerns and proposals about taxi services in Ennis.

A new night-time taxi rank has been proposed for the Abbey Street car park, which would operate between 8pm and 7am.

The proposed layout was presented at last month’s meeting of Ennis Town Council.

According to the report, the rank could run alongside the roadway close to the river Fergus and would not interfere with parking spaces. “The edges of this road could be painted with a blue line and signs erected advising the public of the night-time rank.”

Town Clerk Leonard Cleary told the meeting that a technical assessment would first have to be carried out at the site.

He said the extra taxi rank had been requested to cope with the outflow of people from nightclubs at the weekends.

He said the cost and the potential loss of revenue from lost parking spaces would also have to be considered.

Mr Cleary said further consultations would take place with taxi drivers groups and gardaí before any decision is taken.

Cllr Frankie Neylon (Ind) said drivers rated the existing rank in the Parnell Street car park as one of the best in the country.

He said it is important that people can get off the streets as quickly and safely as possible during busy peri ods.

Cllr Tommy Brennan (Ind) suggested that a rank could be set up in an area of the car park close to Dan O’Connell’s pub.

Meanwhile, councillors in Ennis meet today to rubberstamp the adoption of a new coach-parking plan for the town.

In recent weeks, Ennis Town Council has extended the coach parking facilities available in the Friar’s Walk car park, providing two additional bays for large coaches and one additional bay for a smaller coach. The council has also been looking at a more long-term arrangement to create a first class coach parking facility in the town so as to attract additional coach business to the town.

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HSE defends re-hiring retired nursing staff

THE HSE have had difficulty filling nursing posts in the mid-west area which includes counties Clare, Limerick and Tipperary.

That is according to Regional Director of Operations, HSE West, John Hennessy who was responding to criticism that retired staff continue to be employed within the HSE on a part-time basis.

Mr Hennessy maintained that staff were only re-employed in certain circumstances and for a short period of time. He added, “When we had permanent nursing posts in the mid-west we had difficulty finding someone to take up the post.”

Clare County Councillor Tom McNamara (FF) criticised the HSE for its re-hiring practices.

“There are people working in the HSE that have retired in the last five years taking posts that could be filled by young graduates,” he said.

“This [practice] is forcing young people out of the country, while these people’s pensions are not touched because they can work a day or two to bring them up to their former wage before it is touched.”

He proposed that the HSE take new people into the health service on a 12-month contract instead to cover any gaps in the system.

Francis Rogers, Assistant National Director of Human Resources, said it was HSE policy not to rehire people on pensions.

“In circumstances where we found ourselves having to re-hire pensioners it was only in extreme circumstances where we do this. This would also be for a very short period and only where a very specific specialist was needed,” he said.

“There is no financial gain in this to the pensioner. During this period their pension is abated. It is an issue we very carefully monitor.”

This week Fine Gael Senator Tony Mulcahy proposed that selective redundancy be used in the public sector. “The problem is we are losing people we want to keep and we are keeping people we probably need to lose. We really are going to have to get the unions engaged on that and be supportive of that. I am 100 per cent supportive of the Croke Park Agreement because in fairness they [public sector staff] are working very hard,” he told The Clare People .

“But like everything else there is dead weight in a lot of organisations that has to be picked out and say no you don’t serve a purpose anymore and you are not doing what we need you to do and those are areas we have to tackle.”

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John’s the shooting star of Clare’s Defence Forces

SIX Clare men made up the majority of the rifle team that brought glory to the 32nd Reserve Infantry Battalion at the Defence Forces All Army Shooting Competition.

Among the members of the winning team was Kilrush man Private John Kiely who currently holds two all army shooting records, not yet broken by his colleagues in the reserve army or even the professional defence forces.

After an absence of two years from the Defence Forces All Army Shooting competition, the rifle team representing Clare, Limerick and Kerry came close to securing a historic double gold win at Kilworth Military Ranges in Cork, having won the Southern Brigade qualifying competition several weeks before.

Despite a record team score and the second highest recorded in a competition, they missed out on gold by the narrowest of margins.

Two team members also won three individual prizes, one going to Corporal John Lillis from Barefield and two to Private Kiely. The Kilrush man was also crowned All Army Champion Marksman and received the coveted red marksman badge.

This competition marked another milestone in his shooting career having attained nine podium finishes from his last 11 starts which also includes two army scoring records, a run of consistence that is unheard of in living memory.

After the competition team captain, Lieutenant Mark Burke Kilrush was very optimistic about the future of the team.

The 32nd Reserve Infantry Battalion riffle team was made up of Lt Mark Burke, Sgt Robert Adrian, Pte John Kiely all from Kilrush; Cpl John Lillis, Barefield; Cpl Tommy Lineen, Kilmihill; Pte David Cosgrove, Ennis and Pte Kevin Garvey, Kilmallock.

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Lahinch ahead of the pack with new app

LAHINCH has made it to the twenty-first century by becoming the first town in Clare to have its very own app. The app, which can be downloaded free from the App Store, was developed by local man Matthew Kelly.

Once downloaded, the applica- tion gives its user two different live video feeds from Lahinch, as well as a large amount of information about the town and its businesses.

“My idea was to make it easy for people to get information about Lahinch quickly. So if a group of golfers or surfers or even locals wanted to take a trip to Lahinch, one quick look at the app and they could see the webcams, or the surf report or any amount of other information,” said Matthew. “If someone wanted to go surfing, let’s say, it takes one click to see are there any waves, another click to book a lesson from one of the surf schools, and another to book a hotel or B&B. It is about promoting Lahinch and making it easy for people to plan their weekend.

“We haven’t come across something like this for any other town in Ireland. People have already suggested to me that I should start making these for other towns in Ireland, but we will have to wait and see how this one goes first before I look at that idea,” he said.

Both the Lahinch Surf Shop and the Ocean Scene Surf School have allowed Matthew to use their webcam images for free.

“The whole idea is that it is free for the users to download, and it will always remain that way, but maybe if it takes off I may consider selling advertising on the site in the future,” continued Matthew. “At present, this app is only for people who have iPhones. They can download this for free by going to the App Store and searching for Lahinch but I will be developing a version of the app for android phones in the future.”

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Sr Margaret gets gold seal of approval

ALMOST 1,000 people turned out at the Church of Corpus Christi in Lisdoonvarna on Sunday to witness local Sister Margaret Mary receive the highest award that the Pope can allocate.

In one of his first official engagements since his appointment, Papal Nuncio Charles Brown presented Sister Margaret Mary with the Papal Gold Cross Pro Ecclesia et Pontifice after communion at 11.30am mass.

The Papal Nuncio presented Sr Margaret Mary with the medal on behalf of his holiness, Pope Benedict XVI, in recognition of her decades of service to the Sisters of Mercy and education in North Clare.

Eternally modest, Sr Margaret Mary dedicated the medal to all the sisters who helped found and run Mary Immaculate Secondary School in Lisdoonvarna.

“I know it is mortifying for you personally to find yourself the centre of the Church’s attention this morn- ing. It is an awesome thing to feel something of Saint Peter himself point you out to us afresh, as he taps you on the shoulder to say thanks thanks for your lifetime’s companionship of Christ and your unstinting humble ministry to his people,” said Lisdoonvarna priest, Fr Conor Cunningham. “Sister Margaret Mary is deeply loved and admired by the whole community for her kindness, her hard-working nature, her humility and above all for her striking example of living faith, prayerfulness and service.

“It is this example of everyday holiness and joy that above all that has brought her life’s witness to the attention of the Holy Father so that all may benefit,” he said.

Originally from County Mayo, Sr Margaret Mary moved first to Ennistymon to take up a position with the Sisters of Mercy, before becoming one of the founding teachers at Mary Immaculate Secondary School in 1949.

“It has been a joy to me to live among you here in North Clare for most of my life and to serve God and to serve you as best I can. I never expected any notice or reward for my modest contribution. The joy of serving God and serving you was reward enough for me,” she said.

“I want very much to associate all my dear friends in the Sisters of Mercy with this honour. Today I am thinking especially of our beloved departed sisters and friends. I am very grateful to you all for coming to today’s celebration of faith and education in Lisdoonvarna.”