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Non-nationals make up 10% of Clare population

OVER ten per cent of Clare’s population are non-nationals, the latest report from the findings of the 2011 National Cenus of Population has revealed. The sixth bulletin report on the census, entitled ‘Migration and Diversity – A profile of diversity in Ireland’ has found that British and Poles make up the majority of the county’s non-national population.

The figures show that 12,076 nonIrish nationals were living in Clare at the time the census was taken in April 2011, a figure that accounts for 10.5 per cent of the total population of the county that stands at 117,196.

The report presents a profile of the non-Irish nationals living in Clare in April 2011, along with results on recent migration, foreign languages and ability to speak English.

“This report provides further analysis of the non-Irish population living in Clare at the time of the last census,” says Deirdre Cullen, a senior statistician at the Central Statistics Office.

“It examines aspects such as mixednationality households, age structure and marital status, numbers by towns, as well as new data on ability to speak English by year of arrival into Ireland. Clare has become an increasingly diverse society over the past decade and the different nationalities that make up the population of Ireland have an increasingly im- portant impact on the economy and society,” she adds.

The figures for Clare show that the county is running below the provincial and national average when it comes to non-national residents. The national average of the non-national population is 12 per cent, while in Munster it stands at 10.6 per cent.

Of the 12,076 non-nationals resident in the county, 3,622 were UK nationals – the largest non-Irish nationality in the county, followed by Polish nationals with 2,658 persons.

The census results show that of the 53,267 persons who arrived in Ireland in the year prior to April 2011, 1,010 were living in County Clare. Of these 627 or 62.1 per cent were non-Irish nationals.

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Legal aid payments down €100k in past year

ALMOST half of the fees paid to Clare solicitors under the criminal free legal aid system were paid to just under 20 per cent of those on the legal aid panel.

Figures from the Department of Justice show that solicitor Tara Godfrey was the highest earner from criminal legal aid cases in the county for the second year in a row.

The Ennis solicitor earned € 144,434 last year, a decrease of € 19,265 on the previous year when her payment reached € 163,699.

The payment to solicitors in Clare last year was down more than € 100,000 on the previous year in total.

In 2011 € 468,892 was paid to solicitors in Clare, with a further € 235,723.60 paid towards the provision of up to two counsel or barristers, doctors, psychiatrists, engineers, forensic scientists and language experts for defence cases in criminal hearings in the Clare District and Circuit Courts.

Among the other top earners on the Clare legal aid panel last year was Ennis-based solicitor Darragh Hassett who earned € 96,092. Mr Hassett had graduated from third to second place on the top earners list. In 2010 he earned € 110,130 but was then surpassed in earnings by Ms Godfrey and former Kilrush-based solicitor Eugene O’Kelly.

Mr O’Kelly who was appointed to the bench in March this year and is now a district court judge in Limerick, earned € 71,602 from free legal aid cases in 2011.

He earned € 135,748 the previous year.

Judge Kelly’s clients are now served by his former legal partner of five years Patrick Moylan.

John P Casey, based in Ennis, earned € 30,293 from legal aid work in criminal cases last year; Jenny Fitzgibbon from Shannon earned € 29,838; and, according to the Department of Justice, William Cahir Solicitor took in € 29,287.

In total, the top six earners on the legal aid panel earned € 257,112 between them. There were 23 solicitors or firms named in total.

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‘Shannon debt free’

SHANNON Airport will soon begin a new life as a debt-free, standalone airport, The Clare People can reveal. The Shannon Airport Task Force will present its plan for the future of the airport to Government next month – and that plan will include the removal of € 100 million of historic debt from the books of Shannon Airport.

This development is seen a vital boost to the airport’s prospects of survival and growth when it eventually emerges free of the grip of the Dublin Airport Authority.

County Manager, Tom Coughlan yesterday confirmed the details of a meeting which took place last week between representatives of the council and Rose Hynes of the Shannon Airport Task Force.

The statement outlines a new future for the airport, with plans to grow passenger number to 2.5 million per annum over the next five years. The task force will recommend a new approach which will see a combined focus on passengers and freight services at Shannon.

Speaking last night, Mr Coughlan welcomed the announcement, saying it is what the local authority had been hoping for and was in line with plans set out by the local authority in the Clare County Development Plan.

The news was also welcomed by Councillor Pascal Fitzgerald (Lab).

“This is great news for the airport. This gives Shannon a real fighting chance in the future. If the debt had been maintained at the airport, it would have been difficult to see how they would have managed it, to be honest.

“So this is very good news,” said

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Top legal aid earners

FIGURES from the Department of Justice show that Ennis solicitor Tara Godfrey was the highest earner from criminal legal aid cases in the county for the second year in a row. The Ennis solicitor earned € 144,434 last year with solicitor Darragh Hassett second on € 96,092.

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Shannon is the county’s ‘blackspot’ for dangerous dogs

A LARGE dog, which savagely attacked a number of other dogs in Shannon last week, was apprehended while playing outside with 12 young children.

The dog, which was a German Shepherd/ Husky cross-breed, went on a bloody rampage last Wednesday, before it was captured by Clare dog warden, Frankie Coote.

According to Frankie, Shannon has become a major blackspot for dangerous dogs and he appealed for pet-owners to take care of their pets properly.

“A lady was walking a small Yorkshire Terrier on a lead. She had just come out of her gate when a German Shepherd/ Husky cross-breed grabbed her dog by the neck and, in one snap, killed it. She was terrorised by the incident, understandably” said Mr Coote.

“I was on my way down to this incident when I received another call from the gardaí to say that another dog had been attacked. I found the dog in a housing estate running around with 12 or 14 very young children.

“I was able to capture the dog and, luckily enough, he had not attacked any young persons at that time. He was desperate to meet any small dogs and he would have killed anyone that he came across.”

The owner of the dog has been located and the owner has given permission for the dog to be put down.

“This a big issue with large dogs in Clare. If a small pet dog goes a bit wild, it can be controlled, but these [big] dogs could do serious damage. That dog in Shannon could kill another dog with one bite – that could just as easily have been a child,” continued Mr Coote.

“Shannon has become the blackspot in Clare when it comes to dangerous dogs. It really has. I’ve had major problems in other areas in the past – in Ennis and Kilrush and other areas – but Shannon really is a big problem and it is showing no sign of getting better just yet.

“People need to realise just what their dogs are capable of doing.”

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Clare second only to Dublin in gay marriages

CLARE has the second highest rate of same-sex civil partnerships in Ireland, with 15 couples from the county tying the knot since the civil partnership legislation became law in January of 2011.

According to figures released by the Gay and Lesbian Equality Network (GLEN), Clare has the second highest incidence of civil partnerships per head of population – with only Dublin registering a higher rate of civil partnerships.

While 15 Clare couple have been granted civil partnerships, only two couples have been able to have their ceremony in the county.

According to Kilrush man and Director of GLEN, Brian Sheehan, the large uptake in civil partnerships will prove a stepping stone to full marriage for gay couples.

“It has been an incredible take-up in such a small space of time. I think once same-sex couples become more visible in Clare and other places, more and more people will see that a same-sex couple is no different from a heterosexual couple. This is people making a really profound commitment to each other,” said the West Clare man.

“I think people are starting to realise that this is a marriage, with all the same responsibilities and commitments.

“So more and more people are starting to see that gay couples should have all the same rights as other [heterosexual] couples. I think it has demystified it for a lot of people.

“When you look at the figures and see that 14 people over the age of 70 have had a civil partnership, you realise that people have been waiting for this for a long time, to have their relationships recognised. Many of these couples will have been together for 30 or 40 years.”

Under the current civil partnership legislation, there is still a legal connection between a civil partner and the biological children of his or her spouse.

This also creates issues surrounding adoption, when same-sex couples are not allowed to adopt jointly.

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Half of Clare residents born outside the county

NEARLY half of Clare’s population was born outside the county, a new set of statistics relating to the 2011 National Census of Population have revealed this week.

The figures released by the Central Statistics Office in its ‘Migration and Diversity – A profile of diversity in Ireland’ report have been broken down into seven different categories – those born in Clare, those born in counties in the State outside Clare, those born in Northern Ireland, England, Walsh, Scotland, the United States and also a category for other countries.

Accordint to the census returns 60,174 people who are resident in Clare were born in the county, a figure that translates into 51.3 per cent of the county’s total population of 117,196, with the remaining 57,022 born outside the county.

The majority of these are made of up people who were born in other counties in the State – 36,863 in total which account for 31.45 per cent of the population. This large number of Irish nationals born outside the county can largely be attributed to the fact that Clare has been with a maternity hospital services for over a quarter of a century, a state of affairs that seen most of the county’s births taking place in Limerick and Galway.

British subjects make up the largest category of Clare residents born outside the country. A total of 7,529 were born in either England or Wales, 971 in Northern Ireland and 345 in Scotland. This mean that British nationals, which number 8,845 in total, make up 7.5 per cent of Clare’s population.

There are 1,732 American citizens resident in the county, a figure that translates into 1.5 per cent of the county’s population, while residents who were born in other countries number 9, 582, which represents a percentage of 8.1.

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Heavy rain causes flooding in Ennis

SECTIONS of the ceiling of one of Clare’s largest shopping centres fell in following heavy rain during the week. The incident occurred at Dunne Stores in Ennis on Tuesday when water poured onto the busy shop floor shortly before 1pm.

Sections of the ceiling have been removed for repairs. One eyewitness said, “It was like a waterfall. It was unreal the amount of water that fell.” It followed a series of exceptionally heavy showers that drowned the county capital. Parts of Parnell Street suffered flooding, with the water at one stage rising above the level of the footpath.

Local businessman Alfonso D’Auria said people in the area were shocked by the amount of rainfall. He said, “Now, in fairness to the (Ennis Town) council, they have done a bit of work on the drains. They cleared away a lot of the leaves, which made a huge difference. But the amount of rain that fell that day was incredible. I don’t know if it was just a freak thing but it looked bad for the street, the amount of water that was just sitting there. The amount of people using the footpath who got drowned wet there was just ridiculous.”

Mr D’Auria said the problem was compounded by rubbish being dumped in the area. He explained, “We have people dumping big black bags of rubbish in the lanes every week. Every week there is rubbish being dumped. I’ve had to put locks on my bin. There is only one bin on Parnell Street.”

Ennis Town Council has said that the tender process has started for phase two of the Ennis Flood Relief Scheme. Phase one of the scheme is credited with preventing floods in large areas of the town centre during November 2009.

Last week’s council meeting heard that residents in the Tulla Road and other areas along phase two of the scheme have encountered difficulties securing house insurance because their homes in a flood risk area. Town Engineer Eamon O’Dea encouraged people to contact the Council. He said the Council would request the Office of Public Works (OPW) to write to insurance companies. Mr O’Dea said that once complete, the scheme would alleviate flooding in the area.

Cllr Johnny Flynn (FG) called for the OPW to provide a blanket certificate for residents in the area.

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Two arrested for runway protest at Shannon

SHANNON anti-war protester, Margaretta D’Arcy, had planned to scatter the ashes of Booker Prize-shortlisted playwright John Arden on the runway at Shannon Airport on Sunday, but was prevented in doing so.

Seventy-eight-year-old Darcy, who has protested at Shannon Airport on a regular basis since the beginning of the war in Afghanistan more than 10 years ago, managed to scale the fence at Shannon Airport on Sunday with fellow protester Niall Farrell.

The protest was undertaken to highlight to use of unmanned drone attack craft in Pakistan and Afghanistan.

The pair managed to occupy the runway at Shannon Airport for 15 minutes before they were apprehended by security.

Ms D’Arcy was the long-time partner of the late John Arden, who passed away earlier this year. The pair were regular visitors to Shannon and recently performed a play about the Ralahine Commune, a co-opera- tive society founded in Newmarketon-Fergus in 1831.

In a statement released to the media, Dette McLoughlin, of the Galway Alliance Against War, said Shannon Airport had been used for special extraordinary rendition flights.

“Over the past 11 years, Shannon Airport has been transformed into a US military base, literally into a Warport. Millions of armed US troops, millions of tonnes of weaponry travel freely through Shannon, including the killer drones that daily rain down terror and death on the peoples of Afghanistan and Paki stan,” she said.

“Shannon Airport has been an integral part of the CIA’s illegal “extraordinary rendition” programme. It is known that the kidnappers and torturers of a number of victims of the CIA have travelled unhindered through our country. This makes consecutive Irish governments guilty of colluding in torture as well as mass murder.”

A Garda spokesman said two people were arrested, then released without charge. A file has been sent to the Director of Public Prosecutions.

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Jimmy calls time on Brohan’s

IT’S the end of an era in Ennis after well-known businessman Jimmy Brohan retired after 49 years in business. Jimmy has decided to step away from his hardware business on Parnell Street. The premises will be taken over by new Clare owners. Family, friends and a large group of traders gathered in O’Halloran’s Bar last Thursday for a presentation to mark Jimmy’s 49 years in business. A native of Ruan, Jimmy started out at John Roughan’s store just off O’Connell Square in 1963. He worked there for 20 years before leasing and eventually buying the premises in the mid-1980s. An incident in the year 2000 damaged the building and forced the relocation of Brohan’s to Parnell Street. In an interview with the paper last year, Jimmy spoke about the skills needed to run a successful business. He said, “One secret is that you have to be nice to people. If you’re nice to people and treat them right, they will come back to you. We have people coming to us since I started and now their family are coming (to us). Only for them we wouldn’t be here. “We do a good town trade but we get a good country trade as well. We get them from other counties too. A few years ago, you’d have people from Cork on the way to Knock, busloads, they would always call to me on the way back.” A family-run business, Brohan’s is known for having a wide collection of stock. Jimmy said, “People still come to me with the old spraying cans, copper spraying cans that the farmers would use. They weren’t made for 30 years or more but I still have bits and pieces for those. That’s just one item. There would be lots of other bits and pieces that people come to us looking for. I don’t care how old it is, I love to have it.”