Quantcast
Channel: featured – Connacht Tribune
Viewing all 5004 articles
Browse latest View live

Plan to make Galway a ‘global leader’ in film and TV

$
0
0

An ambitious plan has been unveiled to position Galway as a “global leader” in the film and TV industry.

It has the potential to create hundreds of jobs and generate tens of millions of euro each year for the local economy.

Already, the industry employs 600 people in Galway, and is worth €72 million.

As part of its pre-election €250 million ‘West Action Plan for Jobs’, the Government has earmarked the film industry here as a ‘priority commitment’.

A new Regional Film Fund is also being considered, with Galway set to be the biggest beneficiary, thanks to its UNESCO City of Film Status.

Industry chiefs locally believe the new plans contained in the 110-page Action Plan could prove a ‘game changer’.

Declan Gibbons, Director of Galway UNESCO said the very real commitment by Government would further develop the film sector in the West.

“This great news adds to our designation as a UNESCO City of Film, and offers significant potential for further growth, and for Galway to become a global player in this industry.”

For more on the proposals, see this week’s Galway City Tribune

The post Plan to make Galway a ‘global leader’ in film and TV appeared first on Connacht Tribune - Galway City Tribune.


Headford’s village classification halts expansion

$
0
0

A small Galway town is bursting at the seams, according to planners – and now they don’t want any more space zoned for residential development.

But Galway County Councillors are raging at the Department of the Environment’s decision to reject their plan to approve more space for housing in Headford – because officials have classified it as a village.

A discussion on the matter became hot and heavy at the recent meeting of Galway County Council where members were told that there were 1,500 residents in the ‘town’ and that it was being over-zoned for residential development.

Cllr Donagh Killilea told the Connacht Tribune that it was an insult to decision making and that it put the future of Headford in jeopardy.  He added that the original decision to rezone for residential was not a decision that was made lightly.

The Fianna Fail councillor said that he felt that the future of Headford was in jeopardy because of the lack potential of future growth, because this block stopped the town was not progressing.

“”It is obvious that local knowledge has nothing to do with what goes on in Headford because it is not taken into consideration. It is a town that is growing in terms of population,” said Cllr Killilea.

“We are talking about the future viability of the town and the fact that its potential growth has been stifled,” he added.

He said that he had serious issues over the fact that the Headford Area Plan had been rejected by the Department of the Environment because it is over-zoned for the development of housing.

Cllr Tom McHugh said that he could not accept that Headford was being deemed a village by the Department. He added that there were two primary schools and a second level school along with an award winning supermarket.

The Fine Gael councillor said that it would reach a stage that the County Council would have to canvass for planning applications given the housing need in the county.

Councillor Des Joyce remarked that all of their hard work for the good of the people of Headford was being over-ridden by someone behind a desk in Dublin who has never been to the town.

He suggested that Minister Paudie Coffey should visit the area and speak with locals if he had questions over the plan Councillors had put forward.

County Cathaoirleach Peter Roche said he simply couldn’t accept the Ministerial direction after all the hard work they had carried out in the community.

Councillor Karey McHugh warned that if they didn’t put up a fight now, they would face the same situation in every district going forward.

Chief Executive Kevin Kelly said the Council would prepare a report for the Minister which would include the concerns raised at this week’s meeting.

The post Headford’s village classification halts expansion appeared first on Connacht Tribune - Galway City Tribune.

Ambulance delays to become election issue

$
0
0

Ambulance delays in Connemara – where three-hour waits have become the norm – are set to become an election issue for locals ahead of a meeting with the Health Minister.

Campaigners have been assured that Minister Varadkar will meet a delegation in Dublin before the end of the year.

A spokesperson for the Connemara Ambulance Crisis Steering Group said they were “very pleased” with assurances from Galway West TD Seán Kyne that the Minister will meet with them within the next two months.

The main issue which will be raised with Minister Varadkar will be the waiting time for ambulances to arrive following call-outs.

In recent months, the group has stepped up its campaign, warning that locals in need of urgent hospital care will die, as three-hour waits for an ambulance have become the norm.

“As it stands, it is a matter of time until a life is lost due to this delay in transferring patients to hospital. Already delay has impacted negatively on patients, for example, on victims of strokes where fast transfer to hospital is vital.

“It is also highly disrespectful to the people living in this community – we feel discriminated against because of where we live.

“We have several issues to take up with the Minister; the main one being the frequent two- to three-hour wait for an ambulance – from call out time to time of arrival at patient.

“In recent months, the group has received correspondence from some local doctors detailing serious delays in response time and expressing their concerns regarding patient safety,” a spokesperson said.

Recent incidents included a young mother who was haemorrhaging badly a few days after giving birth, who had to wait more than two hours for an ambulance; while separately, a doctor called an ambulance for a patient with a serious heart condition at 2.30pm, but he did not arrive at UHG until 6.45pm.

The group has also called on people to make ambulance response times a General Election issue, but asking representatives that they intended to do to improve the service.

Locals have also expressed frustration that the National Ambulance Service rejected their proposal that a Red Cross ambulance – which was paid for by community fundraising – be used to transfer patients from around Connemara to University Hospital Galway from around Connemara. The NAS claimed it was not up to standard. However, at a previous meeting with the NAS, locals said they would prefer a voluntary ambulance that was not up to standard, rather than one which can take three hours to arrive.

The campaigners also claim that despite several requests to the NAS for response times, they have still not been given statistics.

The group has also set up on online petition at change.org under the search term ‘Connemara ambulance’.

The post Ambulance delays to become election issue appeared first on Connacht Tribune - Galway City Tribune.

Bridgework to cause motorway closures

$
0
0

Night-time closures and restrictions on the Galway-Dublin motorway are to be introduced next week to facilitate the construction of the new ‘super junction’ at Rathmorrissey.

From Monday to Friday of next week, the westbound lanes will be closed between the Athenry and Oranmore junctions from 10pm to 6am.

There will also be ‘rolling closures’ on the eastbound lanes – traffic will be escorted at reduced speeds between Oranmore and Athenry junctions, so delays can be expected.

The westbound closures will also be in place for Monday and Tuesday of the following week during the same times, with some eastbound restrictions from Monday to Friday.

Already, a reduced 80km/h speed limit has been introduced “to ensure the safety of the public road users as well as construction personnel”.

According to the Council’s Director of Services for Transport, Liam Gavin, the closures are to facilitate the delivery of large pre-cast concrete beams to the three new bridges being built at Rathmorrissey – thesewill  form part of the new interchange between the M6 and the new M17/18 Gort-Tuam motorway.

“This activity will occur during the night so as to minimise any disruption on the M6 while the work is taking place. These plans include a diversion route for M6 westbound traffic between Junction 17 Athenry and Junction 19 Oranmore with a combination of temporary lane closures and rolling closures for eastbound traffic.

“Rolling closures effectively means that the M6 eastbound carriageway of the motorway will remain open with traffic being escorted at reduced sped between J19 and J17, which will result in minor localised delays.”

The post Bridgework to cause motorway closures appeared first on Connacht Tribune - Galway City Tribune.

New car sales getting back into top gear

$
0
0

Dealerships in Galway have recorded a boom in new car sales this year – so far in 2015, they’re up by more than one-third on the same period last year.

According to new figures from SIMI (the Society of the Irish Motor Industry) and website DoneDeal, new car sales were up 36.1% in the first nine month of this year on the January-September period last year.

The figures tally with separate data provided for the Connacht Tribune by Motorcheck, which show that 4,964 new cars were registered in Galway so far this year, up from 3,661 during the same period (35.6%).

The most popular new car in Galway on ‘151 G’ and ‘152 G’ plates this year is the Volkswagen Golf, with 247 sold (up from 212 for the same period last year).

Alan Nolan, Director General of SIMI, said: “The continued increase of sales in Galway is a big positive for the area. The motor industry is to the fore of recovery across the country and this is no different in Galway.

“This shows a great increase in consumer confidence across the county, which is helping to create jobs and pumping more money into the local economy and is a huge boost for the region.

“The acceptance in the recent Budget that the motor industry should be let continue to grow without any additional taxes has shown that it’s working and that it will continue to work into 2016,” said Mr Nolan.

A breakdown of the cars sold in Galway shows 2,056 were diesel; 336 petrol; 20 were hybrids and eight were electric.

Motorcheck.ie figures show that 73 cars were sold in Galway in October (compared to 79 in October last year), with 12 sold so far in November.

After the VW Golf, the other most popular marques are the Nissan Qashqai (225, up from 161); the Toyota Corolla (219, up from 208); the Skoda Octavia (175, up from 101) and the Ford Focus (168, up from 148).

Used car imports are down by 15.4% in Galway – from 2,863 in the first nine months last year to 2,421 for the same period this year.

The post New car sales getting back into top gear appeared first on Connacht Tribune - Galway City Tribune.

Woman seriously injured in hit and run

$
0
0

Gardaí have appealed for witnesses to a hit and run in Salthill overnight in which a woman was seriously injured.

The woman – understood to be in her 30s – was struck by a vehicle outside the Dun na Carraige estate at Blackrock at around 2.30am.

The vehicle failed to stop, and the woman was brought by ambulance to University Hospital Galway, where her injuries are said to be serious, but not life-threatening.

Gardaí are examining footage from their CCTV cameras in Salthill and have appealed for witnesses to contact Salthill station on 091 514720.

 

The post Woman seriously injured in hit and run appeared first on Connacht Tribune - Galway City Tribune.

Humble guest house is top hotel

$
0
0

A seven-bedroom B&B located on the edge of Oranmore village has seen off the challenge of such marquee venues like Glenlo Abbey, Ballynahinch Castle, The Lodge at Ashford Castle, to be named as the ‘top hotel’ in Connacht for 2015.

Oranhill Lodge, which is located just off the N18 on the old Limerick Road in Oranmore, has been named by hotel search website Trivago.ie as the best-rated hotel in Connacht for 2015. The website used aggregated online user ratings to compile its top 20, and Oranhill Lodge came out on top in Connacht with a rating of 94.59, which also put it eighth in the whole of Ireland.

The award-winning B&B has been operated by Anne and Michael O’Neill for the past seven years, and Ann says they are both surprised and delighted to have won the award.

Owners Anne and Michael O'Neill.
Owners Anne and Michael O’Neill.

“We have a good rating for Galway on the likes of TripAdvisor, but this came as a bit of a surprise. Naturally we are delighted with the award, and the fact that it is a result of ratings by people who have stayed with us makes it all the more valuable.

“The website used an algorithm to work out the overall ratings, so it gives a real authentic feel to the award that it was based on the views and votes of customers,” Ann told the Connacht Tribune this week.

Oranhill Lodge has operated as a B&B since 2001, with Ann and Michael and family taking over seven years ago.

“It is wonderful to be acknowledged for the hard work we put in and we thank our guests very much for rating us so highly. It is truly humbling to achieve this accolade when you consider the level of competition within the region,” said Michael.

They say that 2015 has been a particularly busy year, and credits the likes of the strength of sterling and the dollar against the euro, and the marking of the Wild Atlantic Way, as major boosts to tourism in Ireland this year.

“People who come to Ireland, they certainly don’t come for the weather,” Ann said. “The likes of the Wild Atlantic Way have given tourism a major boost, and we are right on that route.

“We enjoy what we do, but you would have to as it can be very stressful. We operate for ten and a half months of the year, and it is great to get recognition like this, especially when you consider other places that featured in the list,” she said.

The overall national winner was Harvey’s Point just outside Donegal town, which had a rating of 96.44; followed in second by the Killarney Park Hotel (95.56); and Heaton’s Guesthouse in Dingle in third (95.53). The top three in Connacht were Oranhill Lodge, boutique hotel the Waterfront House in Enniscrone in Sligo (93.88); and the serviced apartments, Jameson Court in Salthill, in third (93.71).

“It is really pleasing to see such a range of accommodation in our top 50, and it is fascinating that B&Bs are rated as highly as four and five-star hotels. It appears that holidaymakers in Ireland are attracted to the family-run nature and personalised service of B&Bs,” said David Lintott of Trivago.

The post Humble guest house is top hotel appeared first on Connacht Tribune - Galway City Tribune.

Hero London policeman has Galway roots

$
0
0

A UK policeman, who has his roots in County Galway, was honoured in London last Thursday for saving the life of a distressed woman who had climbed over the railing of a footbridge with the intention of jumping onto the road below.

PC Leighton Gill and his colleague PC Iain McAllen responded to a call to the Metropolitan Police back in February about a woman on a footbridge over the A2 at Bexleyheath in London – the A2 is the major road that connects London with Dover in south-east England, and around the Bexleyheath area is a motorway in all but name.

They approached the woman and attempted to talk to her, but when a jogger ran onto the footbridge, she climbed over the railing and leaned backwards, eyes closed, towards the traffic below.

PC Gill – the son of Thomas Gill from Ballinderreen – grabbed the woman, who began kicking and screaming. He was lifted off his feet and almost pulled over the handrail. Both he and his colleague held onto the woman, who was now dangling over the traffic, before eventually managing to haul her back over the railing. She was sectioned under the Mental Health Act and taken to hospital for treatment.

“We are obviously very proud of Leighton and it is a great honour for him,” his aunt, Bridie Sheridan from Dangan Heights in Galway City, told the Connacht Tribune this week. “He was very lucky he wasn’t pulled over the railing and onto the road with the woman, who was kicking and screaming and obviously wasn’t well.

“It just shows the levels of danger policemen, and our own Gardaí, face regularly. The Gardaí can get an awful time of it, but it shows the levels they go to for the public, things that might not be seen by everyone.

“It is frightening to think of the dangers they can face, but thankfully Leighton was okay, he just got a bang on the arm but didn’t have to go to hospital,” said Bridie of her nephew, who along with his colleague was presented with a royal Humane Society Testimonial last Thursday by Commissioner Sir Bernard Hogan-Howe, the head of the Metropolitan Police. They had previously been presented with commendations by Bexley police and Bexley Borough Council.

PC Gill is the eldest of three sons born to Thomas Gill, who emigrated to England about 40 years ago. Thomas is the son of Mary-Ann and the late Tom Gill from Ballinderreen, and is the grandnephew of Mick Gill, the only man to have won two All-Ireland medals in the same year.

“My father’s brother, Mick, was a guard, and is the only man to have won two All-Ireland medals in the one year. He won the 1923 All-Ireland hurling final with Galway, but that game wasn’t played until 1924.

“By then he had joined the new Garda Siochána and was stationed in Dublin, so he started playing with Dublin and as things would have it, they reached that year’s All-Ireland final and were up against Galway! That final was played in December that year, and Dublin won it, so he won with Galway in September and Dublin in December,” Bridie says.

The post Hero London policeman has Galway roots appeared first on Connacht Tribune - Galway City Tribune.


Dole numbers at lowest level in past seven years

$
0
0

The number of people on the Live Register in Galway is at its lowest point in seven years, according to new figures from the Central Statistics Office.

The statistics show that at the end of October, there were 15,677 people registered as unemployed in the city and county – that’s down by almost 40% from the high of 25,389 recorded in August 2010.

It’s also the lowest level recorded for Galway since November 2008, when there were 15,379 registered.

Year-on-year, the figures are down 13% (from 18,025), while month-on-month, the figures are down almost 4% from 16,311.

The Live Register drops are higher than the State averages of 10.5% over the past year and 3.6% month-on-month.

For Galway City, figures were at their lowest point since June 2008, at 7,849 – that’s down 1,094 (12.2%) in a year and 480 (5.7%) in a month.

The biggest yearly drops recorded in unemployment in the county were in Loughrea and Clifden at 15% and 14.6% respectively.

The CSO figures show that at the end of October, there were 1,644 unemployed in Loughrea (down 337 people), while the monthly drop was 78 people, or 4.5%.

In Clifden, there were 823 on the Live Register, down 141 from the previous year and 10 from the previous month.

Ballinasloe dropped from 2,154 to 1,847 (14.25%) year-on-year and 34 people (1.8%) month-on-month, while in Gort, the drop was almost 14% (from 1,282 to 1,103) over the year and 20 people (0.9%) in a month.

The figures show that Tuam’s Live Register dropped 12.2% from 2,748 to 2,411 over the year and 1.7% (42 people) in a month.

For comparison, Dublin County dropped 11% year-on-year from 86,721 to 77,160; Cork City down 11.5% from 14,763 to 13,060; Limerick City down 11.1% from 11,276 to 10,022 and Waterford City down 7.6% from 9,705 to 8,963.

The post Dole numbers at lowest level in past seven years appeared first on Connacht Tribune - Galway City Tribune.

Families’ grief multiplied by robberies from graves

$
0
0

A 39-year-old man has been found guilty by a jury of handling statues and other religious ornaments which were stolen from graves, including children’s graves, in Lackagh and Annaghdown four years ago.

Marian Lingurar, who used to live at the time in a rented house with his family at Loughgeorge, Claregalway, pleaded not guilty before Galway Circuit Criminal Court last week to eleven charges of handling various religious items at Loughgeorge, knowing they were stolen, on October 4, 2011.

The items mentioned in the charges included various statues of Our Lady, an angel with a harp, a white angel with candle, a white angel with frosted globe, a statue of the Sacred Heart, and an angel holding a gold cross.

The accused, who was afforded the services of a Romanian interpreter during the arraignment, replied “No” when each charge was put to him.

A jury of eight women and four men was empanelled to hear evidence in the trial which lasted three days.

Nine people gave evidence they noticed religious ornaments had been taken from the graves of their loved ones in late August and early September, 2011.

In early October, Gardaí informed the public they had recovered items and an array of religious objects were put on display in a shed at the rear of Oranmore Garda Station for people to come and claim.

All of the witnesses said they went to the Garda Station and positively identified the objects which had been taken from their loved one’s graves.

Some of the witnesses gave heart-rending evidence of how and when they noticed items had been taken off their children’s graves.

Some lovingly handled the ornaments – which were exhibits in the trial – while in the witness box and they positively identified them for the jury by pointing out certain characteristics which set their ornaments apart from the others.

Other witnesses gave evidence of statues being “yanked” out of grotto’s erected by local communities in Oranmore and Kiltrogue.

One woman said a statue erected as part of a headstone on her parent’s grave cost €650 to replace as it had to be ordered from Spain.

The woman said she identified the statue of Our Lady with the Infant Child at Oranmore Garda Station.

It had been taken by force, she said, from her parents’ headstone in Lackagh New Cemetery, and she did not want it back.

“I helped my mother choose the headstone with the gold statue of Our Lady for my father’s grave.  It cost a lot of money.  She was subsequently buried there herself.

“Even after it was found, I didn’t want the statue back. As far as I was concerned, it was tainted.

“Someone had walked across my parents’ grave and stolen it. It was made from a marble resin with gold paint. It was very well glued into the headstone, and it would have taken some effort to take it from the grotto,” the woman said.

Sgt. John Moloney gave evidence he and other Gardaí searched Lingurar’s house after obtaining a search warrant early on the morning of October 5, 2011.

For legal reasons, the jury was not told during the trial that Gardaí had, in fact, gone to the house with a search warrant as part of an investigation into the killing of the late John Kenny from Oughterard, who was found dead in his pub on September 25, 2011.

To their surprise, they were confronted with a large array of ornaments stolen from the graves a month earlier when they entered Lingurar’s house.

Numerous religious ornaments were openly displayed on shelves and tables and around the TV in the living area of the house.

Sgt. Moloney said he got a shock to see so many religious ornaments and he felt it strange as he would normally associate such items with graveyards.

Lingurar told Gardaí he and his wife had bought the items from Claregalway and Clara flea markets.  He said they enjoyed buying such items and he would never steal items like that.

Sgt. Moloney said he had visited Claregalway market on a number of occasions and no such items were ever on sale there.

Detective Sergeant Adrian O’Neill said he arrested Lingurar at the house at 7.24am that morning and he was later interviewed at Galway Garda Station.

Lingurar, he said, told him he and his wife bought the statues at Claregalway and Clara flea markets and that they had been buying religious objects like this since 2006.

He denied stealing any of the items and said “I do not like to steal things like this.”

He said his wife, Crisa Rostas, was in the trade of statuettes.

Lingurar gave evidence he had been in Ireland since 2002 and he and his wife had bought the religious ornaments as it was the tradition of Romany gypsies to keep religious items on display in their homes.

He said they started buying items from both flea markets in 2006 and kept adding to their collection year on year. He was not aware, he said, that any of the items were stolen.

During cross-examination by prosecuting barrister, Conor Fahy, Lingurar pointed to photographs of several ornaments and claimed to have bought them between 2006 and 2010.

Mr Fahy said that could not be true as the items had only been reported missing in August and September 2011.

Lingurar told the jury he had paid for the items from money earned working as a security guard in a new building situated adjacent to Galway Garda Station and from social welfare payments.

Following legal argument in the absence of the jury, Judge Rory McCabe directed the jury on their return to enter “not guilty” verdicts on three of the charges, due to insufficient evidence.

The jury took just under two hours to find Lingurar guilty on the remaining eight charges.

Defence barrister, Gary McDonald asked for sentence to be adjourned so he could obtain a prison governor’s report on his client.

Judge McCabe directed the preparation of the report and adjourned sentence to next Friday, November 27.

Lingurar is currently serving a four-year sentence imposed on him last April for withholding evidence during a Garda investigation into the death of the late John Kenny.

The post Families’ grief multiplied by robberies from graves appeared first on Connacht Tribune - Galway City Tribune.

Mercy-Presentation merger to cater for 500 girls

$
0
0

There will be an official launch of Galway’s newest secondary school – the amalgamated Presentation and Mercy colleges – but far away from the grounds of the chosen school site.

The new school, Our Lady’s College, will open next September on the site of the Presentation after a protracted process to decide where to locate the new institution.

In advance of that, an official launch and celebration of the merger will take place on Monday at the Radisson Blu Hotel.

Mayor Frank Fahy, representatives of the steering committee, management of both schools, pupils, TDs and representatives from Galway City Council have been invited to attend. A combined school choir of 60 pupils will perform on the evening.

Catering for over 500 girls, the new school’s motto is ‘Excellence Together’.

“The school will allow for a broader curriculum and new programme options. Both schools are already cooperating closely in terms of the enhanced provision,” according to a statement issued by a PR company.

Dr Marie Griffin, CEO of CEIST, patron of both schools, stated: “The enhanced facility on the Presentation site will offer the opportunity to further develop the teaching, learning and holistic education of students into the future”.

Dr Griffin did not respond to queries from the Galway City Tribune.

The interim Board of Management for Our Lady’s College consists of parents, teachers and Trustee nominees, with Dr Pauline Logue of GMIT as chairperson.

The Presentation site was recommended by independent consultants in 2014 as it “requires the least amount of re-modelling of the existing structure and has the potential for expansion to accommodate a combined curriculum and additional teaching spaces”.

However parents and students of the Mercy were deeply unhappy with the decision, pointing to the deficit of facilities at the Presentation site such as a fully equipped gym, stage/concert hall, technology room, catering facilities and adequate parking.

The school uses the pool in NUIG and facilities at the rowing club and a local hall for its sporting needs.  Following a review into possible amalgamation in 2009, the Mercy site was assessed for its suitability while the Presentation Road site was not reviewed as it was unavailable at that time. After the Mercy site got the green light, there was considerable investment in facilities at the Newtownsmyth building.

The Government definitively ruled out funding a gym or technology room for the amalgamated schools, putting the onus firmly back on the patron to cough up for the facilities.

During a debate in the Seanad, the Junior Minister in the Department of Education, Damien English, said there was a policy in place to prioritise funding for teaching facilities.

He suggested that money raised from either the sale or rent of the Mercy building once it is empty could be used to fund resources such as gyms and computer suites.

Dr Griffin said earlier this year that students could be assured that facilities will be provided in the Presentation site to ensure they can access the full curriculum.  “CEIST, as patron, will engage with the Department of Education and Skills in relation to the provision of any identified deficits in the site.”

The post Mercy-Presentation merger to cater for 500 girls appeared first on Connacht Tribune - Galway City Tribune.

Private rental sector in Galway reaching crisis point

$
0
0

Housing agency Threshold has warned that tenants are at serious risk of homelessness – prompted by a spike in rents in Galway City.

According to the charity group, some tenants in the city have been hit with increased rent demands of up to 30%.

Meanwhile, new figures from property website Daft.ie show that rents in private accommodation in Galway City have surged by almost one-third since their lowest point in 2008/9, while average rents in the county are up by one-fifth since the trough.

These increases – coupled with supply that has effectively ‘dried up’ – are putting some tenants at risk of ending up with nowhere to live, Threshold has warned.

Diarmaid O’Sullivan, Services Manager for Threshold in Galway, said: “A severe shortage of supply in the private rented sector in Galway is resulting in dramatic increases in rents and is putting some tenants at risk of homelessness.

“At the end of October, a mere 80 properties were advertised as available for rent on Daft.ie for the entire city and suburbs. The average cost of a one-bed apartment in Galway was €674, a two-bed housewas €1,076 and a three-bed house was €1,190.

“The situation in the private rented sector is reaching crisis point. Supply has all but dried up and this is driving rent inflation. This is a national trend, which is reflected locally in Galway.

“Threshold regularly deals with tenants who are faced with 15%, 20% or even 30% increases in their rent. Many tenants simply cannot afford such increases and are left with little option but to move out and seek alternative accommodation. But with such a shortage of supply, this may not be possible and they can quickly fall into homelessness,” said Mr O’Sullivan.

He said that new measures introduced by the Government last week – including limiting rent increases to every two years instead of annual rent reviews, and introducing a tax incentive for landlords to take people on rent supplement payments – will help, but are not a solution.

“These measures should go some way towards easing the challenges faced by tenants, but they don’t provide a complete solution to what is a complicated and multi-faceted problem.

“Tenants in receipt of Rent Supplement are finding it nearly impossible to find properties to rent under the maximum rent levels, as set by the Department of Social Protection,” said Mr O’Sullivan.

According to the Daft.ie report, average rents in the city are now €868 per month – up 12.2% on a year ago, and almost 32% since their lowest point in 2008/9.

At the moment in Galway City, a one-bed apartment is renting for €607 per month; a two-bed house for €672; a three-bed house for €835; a four-bed house for €898 and a five-bed house for €958.

The post Private rental sector in Galway reaching crisis point appeared first on Connacht Tribune - Galway City Tribune.

Planners shoot down Lidl supermarket plan again

$
0
0

An Bord Pleanála has overruled one of its own inspectors and refused permission for a controversial €2 million Lidl supermarket off the Western Distributor Road.

It is the second time in 18 months that the Board has overturned City Council planning grants for the site.

Rejecting the plans, the Board said there was no justification for a discount supermarket on the two-acre site bounded by the Ballymoneen Road and Distributor Road and that it would seriously injure the visual amenity of the area.

Last July, Florence Thomas was granted permission for a single storey mono-pitch roofed discount foodstore with off licence over a gross floor area of 1,894 square metres (net retail area of 1,271 sq m), as well as 100 parking spaces.

The permission came less than 18 months after An Bord Pleanála rejected an almost identical application for the site.

The current application was appealed by RGDATA – the small retailers’ representative group – which expressed concerns about “the proliferation of planned and permitted convenience stores” in the western suburbs of the city in recent years.

The group also argued that the cumulative effect of retail developments posed a “real threat to the future vitality and viability of the city centre”.

Planning Inspector Lorraine Dockery recommended to the Board that permission be granted on the grounds it would add to facilities available in the area.

“The general area is characterised by residential development and it is my opinion that a development of the nature and scale proposed would add to the facilities being provided within the area.

“It is a good quality development that would increase competitiveness in the retail sector without being detrimental to the town centre in terms of vitality and viability, especially having regard to its location and scale,” she said.

That recommendation was rejected by the Board, which said that a ‘Master Plan’ for the development of adjacent lands – earmarked for the provision of a neighbourhood centre – would not permit for an attractive form of development.

It said that the substantial amount of parking adjacent to the main road “would fail to provide for adequate visual connection to lands to the south”.

“The proposed development would therefore seriously injure the visual amenities of the area and of properties in the vicinity,” it ruled.

It added that in the context of the new Aldi supermarket nearby – which opened this week – an adequate case had not been made for this type of facility.

The Lidl plans met with huge opposition from local residents – a series of objections to the application were lodged, as well as a petition with more than 130 signatures.

The post Planners shoot down Lidl supermarket plan again appeared first on Connacht Tribune - Galway City Tribune.

Council looks to canals to generate electricity

$
0
0

Ambitious proposals for the generation of hydro-electric power on the city’s canals – to light the city’s streets and bridges within five years – are being considered by the local authority.

The idea is part of the City Council’s aspiration to become a ‘green city within a park’.

City Chief Executive Brendan McGrath said there is potential for the generation of electricity on the Eglinton and other canals in the city.

This electricity, he said, could be used to power street lights.

“If future funding becomes available, in a city that aspires to be a green city and a sustainable metropolis, hydro-electric power could potentially be generated along the Eglinton Canal or other canals in proximity to Parkavara, for example, with the potential to generate electricity to supply electricity for all the city’s public lighting.

“While the Council has commenced the programme of gradually replacing the city’s lights with modern LED lighting, concentrating first on the older and most costly lights to operate, how wonderful would it be if within five years, the City Council could be generating its own electricity to power modern, cost-efficient, much-enhanced public lighting?

“Another benefit that could accrue from such an initiative would be the lighting of all of the city’s bridges using technology and cost-efficient lighting to demonstrate to all that Galway is a green, sustainable, bio-diverse city, described by one councillor as a ‘city within a park’,” said Mr McGrath.

He said such an initiative would require extensive funding from Government, and access to European funding streams, which would then have to be matched by the Council.

New LED street lights, or ‘white lights’ have already been installed in parts of the city, including the Western Distributor Road, where they have been praised by road users as a huge improvement in terms of visibility.

The post Council looks to canals to generate electricity appeared first on Connacht Tribune - Galway City Tribune.

Jobs boost for Connemara company following investment

$
0
0

The Chief Executive of a Connemara-based company which has just seen a €580 million investment by a French firm, says it hopes to grow the Galway workforce in the next three years.
Eurazeo has today confirmed the purchase of a 90% share in Fintrax, based in Ballinahown in Connemara and in the city.
There are 150 staff employed at the two Galway locations.
Eurazeo is one of the leading investment companies in Europe with a portfolio of over €5 billion in assets.
Fintrax was set up in 1985 to facilitate VAT refunds for international visitors to Ireland.
It’s the parent company to Premier Tax Free and now operates in 30 countries serving 14,000 retail merchants.
Its main clients include, Chanel, Gucci, Michael Kors and Ralph Lauren.
The value of the investment is €550 million, which includes €300 million for the stake and more than €200 million invested in debt.
CEO of Fintrax, Patrick Waldron said more jobs are on the way for Galway if the company keeps expanding at the same rate.

The post Jobs boost for Connemara company following investment appeared first on Connacht Tribune - Galway City Tribune.


Doctors query findings into death of patient

$
0
0

A second pathologist will have to review the file of a 60 years old man, who died almost a year ago in the Galway Clinic, as the two consultants who had attended him could not accept that he had died from pneumonia.

Dr Ciaran MacLoughlin, the Coroner for West Galway, made the unusual move after hearing two hours of evidence at Galway Courthouse. The pathologist who had carried out the post mortem examination was no longer living in Ireland, and could not be called-on to back-up his findings.

“If it is pneumonia, I will return a verdict of bronchial pneumonia and medical misadventure, as he was not given the appropriate treatment at that time,” Dr MacLoughlin said.

“The pathologist is an independent professional hired by myself – once the opinion is challenged, I feel the integrity of the court is challenged, and the integrity of the court has to be above all suspicion.”

Patrick Kelly of Lifford, Co Clare, underwent surgery at the Galway Clinic on January 8 last, to treat a large rectal polyp.

The surgery had been postponed from the previous month as his surgeon, Professor William Joyce, was of the opinion that a low platelet count could lead to post-op bleeding.

By the following month, Mr Kelly had followed recommendations, was in better shape, and was anxious to proceed with the surgery.

Professor Joyce described his patient’s post-op recovery as “excellent” and when he performed an examination on January 14, he said that Mr Kelly was “incredibly well.” He died the following afternoon, however.

Professor Joyce said that in almost 30 years of practice he had rarely seen such a progressive death, in the absence of cardiac disease or sepsis.

He could not accept, either, the findings of the consultant pathologist, Dr Frans Colesky, that his patient had died from pneumonia.

“In my own mind, I’m still unclear as to what exactly the cause of death was,” he said.

He further reiterated that the surgery had been successful, and that Mr Kelly had developed no complications ‘locally’ as a result of the polypectomy – the post mortem examination confirmed this.

However, barrister for the Kelly family, Patrick Whyms, referred to the nursing notes which stated that staff had voiced their concerns on two occasions to senior colleagues.

He further said that Mr Kelly had been complaining of a worsening distended abdomen – his son compared it to a woman expecting twins – from January 12 up until his death on the afternoon of January 15.

Doctors on call were not concerned, however, as he was not vomiting, his abdomen was not tender, and bowel movements were normal.

When asked, Professor Joyce said that the distention was common after this type of surgery, while the bowel gets back to normal. He said that a chest x-ray on the afternoon of January 14 and the early morning of January 15 showed no signs of abnormalities, such as pleural effusions.

He further said if the Consultant pathologist’s findings were to be accepted, that Mr Kelly did indeed suffer from bronchial pneumonia, it was “an unusual presentation.”

However, Dr MacLoughlin said he would have to give precedence to the microscopic diagnosis made by Dr Colesky, rather than to Prof. Joyce’s clinical opinion.

Surgeon, Mr Osama El Sadig, also questioned the conclusions drawn by the pathologist, and said that he was also at a loss as to what had caused the death.

Mr Kelly’s son, Brian, said that his father’s health had visibily disimproved in the days following his surgery.

“(On the 14th) he looked worse than when I’d seen him in the ICU a few days before,” he recalled.

“He had no energy to shake my hand, he was very weak. He didn’t want us to see him like this, after such a high in ICU to this low.”

Dr Frans Colesky’s report, which was read into the record by Dr MacLoughlin concluded that the cause of death was pneumonia in a post-operative setting.

For the first time in his 30 year career as Coroner, Dr MacLoughlin made the unusual move to have a second pathologist examine the file.

“I’m doing it out of fairness to the doctors, who find it hard to understand how the sequence of events occurred . . . although it is a very well-recognised condition, but thankfully does not occur very frequently because of the intervention of early diagnosis and antibiotic treatment,” he said.

The post Doctors query findings into death of patient appeared first on Connacht Tribune - Galway City Tribune.

Firm gets EU funding to find new ways to battle bacteria

$
0
0

A Galway company is among four Irish Enterprises to receive funding in the latest round of Horizon 2020 SME Instrument for Phase 1 from the European Commission.

Westway Health joins a further 141 small or medium sized enterprises (SMEs) that will receive €50,000 in funding and up to three days of business coaching.

The company will also have the opportunity to be considered for further financial support from the Commission worth €2.5 million.

Professor Vincent O'Flaherty
Professor Vincent O’Flaherty

Westway Health is a start-up company from NUI Galway who have developed a suite of non-antibiotic technologies effective at killing all microorganisms.

The idea largely stems from almost ten years of research from the laboratory of Professor Vincent O’Flaherty, Head of Microbiology at the School of Natural Sciences at NUI Galway.

CEO of Westway Health, Dr. Ruairi Fiel believes there is an urgent need for novel, effective treatments against bacteria as the lack of effectiveness of antibiotics and the growing number of bacteria becoming resistant such as MRSA is a major concern.

“The WHO has described this as an ‘increasingly serious threat to global public health’.

“These technologies have a range of applications in human health, animal health and for environmental sterilisation, in eliminating and eradicating microorganisms, such as bacteria, yeast and fungi,” said Dr.Friel.

The lead product in the pipeline of Westway Health’s technologies is for the treatment of bovine mastitis through PanaMast LC that boasts zero milk discard during or after the period of treatment, which is a short 2-3 days.

Bovine mastitis is a potentially fatal mammary gland infection, causing an inflammatory reaction of the udder tissue.

Milk-secreting tissue and various ducts throughout the mammary gland are damaged due to toxins released by the bacteria.

The common disease in cattle can cause lower protein levels and calcium in milk produced by the animals suffering from the disease.

Furthermore, milk from cows being treated by antibiotics cannot be marketable until drug residues have left the cow’s system.

The disease costs the US dairy industry $1.7 to $2 billion annually.

According to Professor Vincent O’Flaherty, current mastitis treatments involve unsatisfactory antibiotics that are not always effective as bacteria can become resistant to them.

“To avoid antibiotics entering the human food chain, the milk must be discarded during treatment and cannot be sold or consumed for a number of days afterwards,” he said.

“Our technology avoids these problems, allowing for a potentially effective zero withdrawal treatment that is, allowing farmers to treat mastitis and sell their milk throughout product- becoming the world’s first such product.”

The post Firm gets EU funding to find new ways to battle bacteria appeared first on Connacht Tribune - Galway City Tribune.

Neighbour and son got letters of harassment

$
0
0

A HSE clerical worker put harassing notes through her next-door neighbour’s letterbox and on the windscreen of his son’s car, while also sending a email to his daughter at her place of work in the HSE.

Mary Sampier (60), 24 Whitestrand Park, Salthill, pleaded guilty before Galway District Court to harassing a man at Whitestrand Park on dates between February 10 and March 9 last.

She said she sent the notes because her husband had been assaulted previously by the complainant.

Garda Nora Brady gave evidence the accused had put notes and letters through the man’s letterbox and she had also left harassing notes on the windscreen of his son’s car.

Garda Brady said the man’s daughter worked for the HSE, as did the accused, and she received an email at work from the accused during the period of the harassment.

She said Sampier was co-operative at all stages of the investigation and made admissions about sending the letters and notes to her neighbours.

Judge Mary Fahy asked to see the letters and notes and read them without making any comment.

Garda Brady explained those concerned were next-door neighbours and they had not got on for 15 years. Down through the years, she said, there had been small, minor incidents about children and dogs.

Sampier pointed out that she had sent the notes from March 3 onwards and not in February.

Her solicitor said the notes had been sent in the space of a week.  He said his client had moved house because of this incident and she hoped to move to the US in the near future.

“There was a previous allegation of the complainant assaulting my client’s husband and she got upset and fixated on that,” the solicitor said.

He pointed out no charge had been brought against the complainant but that was the background to the notes. He said Sampier now realised she should not have sent the notes.

Handing a medical report into court, the solicitor said Sampier had a history of mental illness and had reported with anxiety after the incident.

Judge Fahy asked if the Gardaí had looked into the allegation of assault and she wanted to know if Sampier’s husband had made a complaint to Gardaí about it.

Garda Brady confirmed he only made the complaint after she began to investigate the offence before the court.

The solicitor pointed out that his client’s husband did make a informal complaint to Gardaí before this. Garda Brady explained Sampier’s husband did go into the garda station but he just wanted it noted.

“He didn’t follow it through.  He didn’t want anything done.  He just went to the front desk and wanted it noted,” she said.

Judge Fahy said to Sampier that what she did was not the way to deal with matters.

Sampier, who looked at times upset and distressed and stood wringing a hanky in her hands, replied:  “My husband is a very quiet man.  He is not a bitter man. I did the wrong thing.  He did complain to the Gardai.”

Judge Fahy reminded her that her husband did not want to make a formal complaint or give a statement to Gardai so nothing could be done.

In reply to Judge Fahy, Sampier said they had moved out of No. 24 Whitestrand Park and she would never set foot in that house again.

She said her mother-in-law lived in the US and she and her husband hoped to go and live there as soon as she retires from the HSE early next year.  She said they had somewhere else to live until then.

Hearing the accused had a clerical position in the HSE, Judge Fahy said she would have had some ida that her actions were not the way to go about something like this.

She explained to Sampier that she had to hear from the injured party to see how he was affected by her actions before she could finalise matters.

“She wishes to travel to the US and that will be taken ‘on board’ if possible but I have to give the injured party a chance to come in here and tell his story,” Judge Fahy said.

She then adjourned the matter to next Wednesday, November 25, to give the injured party a opportunity to come to court.

She said that he was being invited to attend to tell his side of the story and how he had been affected, but if he didn’t want to come into court, he didn’t have to.

The post Neighbour and son got letters of harassment appeared first on Connacht Tribune - Galway City Tribune.

€7m in pipeline to plug city water leaks

$
0
0

Irish Water plans to upgrade the city’s leaky pipe network with a €7.3 million investment.

The replacement of about 20 kilometres of defective water mains pipes throughout the city forms part of the company’s water conservation plan for Galway.

It is one project of many announced by Irish Water in its new €36 million programme of work to develop new and upgrade existing water and wastewater infrastructure throughout Galway.

The central plank of the city aspect of the Galway plan includes upgrading of 20 kilometres of defective pipes.

Irish Water said “site investigation” work on the city’s pipe network will begin this coming January and construction work is expected to begin in the first three months of 2017.

The company said, “sections of water mains in the poorest condition will be replaced first,” and the entire upgrade is due to be completed in the autumn of 2018.

The remainder of the ‘new’ elements in this latest announcement by Irish Water are for projects located in the county.

Some €3 million has been set aside for the upgrade of Oughterard wastewater treatment plant, which will have a significant impact on the quality of water sources supplying city homes and businesses. The project will go to tender next month and is expected to be finished by 2017.

Irish Water said: “The upgraded wastewater treatment plant will result in a significant improvement in water quality, will allow for growth and will reduce the risk of pollution to the Owenriff River and Lough Corrib, one of the premier fishing lakes in the country and the drinking water source for much of Galway City and County.”

Other new announcements in the latest investment plan include upgrading water supply schemes in Leenane, An Cheathrú Rua, Inis Oírr, Inis Meáin, and Williamston. All five schemes are on the Environmental Protection Agency’s remedial action list. The boil water notices in place in Leenane and Williamstown will be lifted once the works are complete.

Meanwhile, Irish Water used this latest announcement to give updates on city projects that are underway and nearing completion. The replacement of water mains on Thomas Hynes Road in the city are on schedule to be completed later this month, the company said. This €420,000 project began last June and was needed “to alleviate water supply problems” that have been experienced in the area for more than a year.

The upgrade of Mutton Island wastewater treatment plant is due to be finished before Christmas. The €5.7 million works will almost double the capacity of the plant from 91,000 population equivalent to 170,000 population equivalent.

Galway West Fine Gael TD, Seán Kyne welcomed the investment and said it was made possible through the people of Galway paying water charges.

Deputy Kyne said: “Investment of this scale in our wastewater network will help end the discharge of untreated waste into rivers in Galway and off the Galway coast which will improve the environment and protect the water supply.

“The substantial investment is being made after decades of under-investment in our water and wastewater services. Undoubtedly this investment will be welcomed by public representatives who are opposed to paying for treated water and the proper and safe disposal of wastewater.

“It must, however, be recognised that this substantial and necessary investment is only possible through the combination of central Government funding and the revenue being collected by Irish Water through the payment of water charges by many citizens across Galway.”

The post €7m in pipeline to plug city water leaks appeared first on Connacht Tribune - Galway City Tribune.

Gardaí reviewing CCTV following vicious city assault

$
0
0

Gardaí are reviewing CCTV footage in an effort to identify the culprits of an unprovoked assault in the city centre on Sunday.
The incident happened close to Woodquay Stores around 1.30 last Sunday morning when a young man was attacked.
A 23-year-old man was assaulted by a group of young people believed to be in their late teens in Woodquay.
The group included males and females.
The victim, Ronan Greaney, who works in the family business, Dough Bros in the city, sustained serious injuries to his face and remains at University Hospital Galway to undergo treatment.
Ronan’s brother Eugene says the assault was completely unexpected and explains that his brother now has to undergo serious hospital treatment.
It follows another serious incident in the Woodquay area two months ago, where a man was stabbed in an unprovoked assault.
Gardaí are appealing to anyone who may have noticed anything suspicious in the Woodquay area in the early hours of last Sunday morning to contact them at Millstreet Garda Station at 091 53 8000.

The post Gardaí reviewing CCTV following vicious city assault appeared first on Connacht Tribune - Galway City Tribune.

Viewing all 5004 articles
Browse latest View live