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Renewed calls for waste water facility

THE Mayor of Ennis, Cllr Tommy Brennan, has called on the incoming Government to make good on promises to upgrade the sewage treatment network in Ennis.

Plans to upgrade wastewater treatment plants in Ennis were first announced in 1995 but the project suffered a major setback in 2001 when the Department of the Environment refused funding.

Gerry O’Donnell of Clare County Council’s water services section, told the meeting that the council is currently working on an overall strategy for the waste water treatment infrastructure in Ennis.

He said that while previous plans had been drawn up, the new strategy had to take into account the “raft of environmental legislation” that has been published in recent years.

Cllr Johnny Flynn (FG) said that the Clondroadmore project opens up the potential for commercial and residential development in Ennis.

Cllr Brennan (Ind) said that Clondroadmore formed part of the overall strategy and that the incoming Government had given funding commitments to the council.

In supporting the upgrade to Clonroadmore, Cllr Brennan called on the council to seek funding for the overall wastewater network scheme.

Cllr Neylon was skeptical about the project, describing it as a sticking plaster and claiming councillors will still be talking about in “30 years time”.

“We might never get the chance again. The plug was pulled in 2001. We’ve said it before, but if an industrialist were to come to town we would have to refuse planning because we don’t have capacity,” he added.

The council intends to upgrade the existing waste water treatment facility at Clonroadmore. The current design capacity of the treatment plant is 17,000 pe. According to Town Manager Ger Dollard, the proposal will allow for a design capacity of 30,150 pe. The project will improve stormwater capacity and treatment at the plant as well as increasing the plant’s hydraulic capacity.

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Parking concessions sought for HSE staff

OFFICIALS from Ennis Town Council are to hold a meeting with the Chamber of Commerce with the aim of resolving parking issues in Ennis “once and for all”, Town Manager Ger Dollard has said.

Speaking at yesterday’s monthly meeting of Ennis Town Council, Mr Dollard said the meeting was being organised to address “actual or perceived problems” with parking in Ennis.

He said it was necessary to resolve the matter as ongoing criticism of parking policy in Ennis is doing a “great disservice” to the town.

Mr Dollard was speaking during a lengthy debate on new parking byelaws for Ennis, which heard calls for parking concessions to be given to Health Services Executive (HSE) workers in Ennis.

HSE staff have requested parking permits from the council, claiming the reduction in maximum stay car parks from three hours to two hours “would greatly inconvenience staff and patients accessing services at Francis Street and Bindon Street clinics.

Mr Dollard said that any decision to grant preferential treatment to one particular group in Ennis would, in his view, “be inappropriate and pos- sibly illegal”.

Mr Dollard said members of the executive would “strongly advise” against councillors amending the council’s draft parking byelaws to allow for the granting of parking permits to HSE workers.

Mr Dollard said that councillors had been informed of proposed changes to the council’s parking permits policy last November.

This was disputed by councillors who claimed that they had not been made aware that the changes would affect frontline HSE workers.

Cllr Johnny Flynn (FG) said that a concession for HSE workers had been in place since 1996.

Cllr Paul O’Shea (Lab) said the council should be working to support people who are working with the most vulnerable people in society.

The Mayor of Ennis, Cllr Tommy Brennan (Ind), told the meeting that it would be easy for councillors to act in what he called a “populist” fashion to try and secure parking concession for different groups in Ennis.

Cllr Brennan said the issue of parking concessions had been discussed last year during the council’s discussions on the preparation of the 2011 budget.

He asked that if concessions are introduced, “where do we get the money to balance the budget”.

However Cllr Brennan said that solution could be found if council officials entered discussions with the HSE.

Cllr Brian Meaney (GP) said the workers are not “looking for a free pass” and are willing to pay for parking.

He urged the council to deal with cars owned by HSE workers in the same way they deal with ambulances and cars owned by doctors.

Mr Dollard said he would meet with the HSE prior to next month’s council meeting. The byelaws were subsequently passed.

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Over 50 groups to take part in parade

AROUND 50 groups are expected to participate in this year’s St Patrick’s Day parade in Ennis.

The announcement was made yesterday by town clerk Eddie Power who said that currently 30 groups had registered to take part in the parade on Thursday, March 17.

Mr Power told yesterday’s Ennis Municipal Policy Committee (MPC) meeting that more community groups and associations are expected to sign up in the coming days.

Mr Power said the parade offered the perfect opportunity to promote the vibrant and active community that existed in Ennis.

The parade will commence at 11am on March 17 from the Courthouse in Ennis and follow a route along Newbridge Road, to Abbey Street, O’Connell Square, O’Connell Street and to terminate in the Market.

The organising of the parade is well underway at this stage. Community groups and associations are preparing for what has become a significant community event in the local calen- dar.

Mr Power added that the parade would last for roughly an hour.

MPC chairman Cllr Johnny Flynn (FG) said that St Patrick’s had assumed greater significance for many famillies due to the high number of young people being forced to emigrate to look for employment.

He described the multicultural aspect of the Ennis parade as “extraordinary”.

Cllr Paul O’Shea (Lab) praised the work of the Ennis St Patrick’s Day committee but added that there was “room for improvement”.

He urged the council to consider inviting groups from England, Australia and American to perform at next year’s parade.

Mr Power said that a delegation from the German town of Langenfeld had attended last year’s parade in Ennis.

Cllr Michael Guilfoyle (Ind) said there was a cost factor associated with inviting groups from abroad to perform at the event.

“They don’t come on a volountary basis,” he added.

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‘The DAA would prefer Shannon empty’

THE Dublin Airport Authority (DAA) discriminates against Shannon Airport and Ryanair in favour of propping up Dublin Airport and the national carrier Aer Lingus.

That’s the claim levelled at the ruling body of Ireland’s three State airports this week by an angry Ryanair boss, Michael O’Leary, after the DAA refused to give the green light for the low-cost carrier’s one million traffic offer for Shannon, in return for a ‘growth incentive scheme’ of € 4.20 per passenger.

“We wrote to them offering to increase our passengers from a base of 300,000, where it is currently, to 1.3 million if they did nothing other than extend the existing transfer incentive scheme, which they admit they have given to Aer Lingus,” said Mr O’Leary.

“The growth would start from November with the introduction of a winter schedule and would grow to 600,000 passengers in year one to a total of a million passengers in year five. I don’t understand why Shannon say it’s unsustainable when it mirrors exactly the deal that the DAA are paying Aer Lingus in Dublin.

“They have this transfer growth incentive scheme they’ve given to Aer Lingus and when we ask for this for Shannon and say we’ll deliver a million additional passengers, they say it’s too expensive. I don’t understand why Shannon say it’s unsustainable when it mirrors exactly the deal that the DAA are paying Aer Lingus in Dublin. The DAA would prefer if Shannon Airport was empty, which it is,” added Mr O’Leary.

Continuing the Ryanair chief said that the DAA was responsible for the collapse in Shannon’s traffic and that his airline was the only one capable of delivering substantial passenger growth at the airport.

“The DAA has overseen the collapse of Shannon traffic from 3.6m passengers in 2007 to just 1.7m passengers in 2010,” he said. “Ryanair is the only airline willing and able to deliver dramatic new route and traffic growth at Shannon and the refusal by the DAA of Ryanair’s one million passenger growth offer proves, yet again, that Dublin Airport has no interest in traffic growth at Shannon.

“If they did, Dublin would not have raised Shannon passenger charges by 33 per cent in November 2010 ( just four months ago) when inflation was 0 per cent and Shannon traffic was collapsing. Furthermore, if the DAA was ‘committed to incentivising growth’ as Declan Collier claims, the DAA would have accepted Ryanair’s offer of 1m growth passengers at Shannon, on similar terms to those currently enjoyed by Aer Lingus at Dublin,” he added.

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Man charged with text death threat

AN ENNIS man has been brought before a special sitting of the district court on Sunday, charged with threatening to kill his ex-partner.

Michael McDonagh (20), of Ashline, Kilrush Road, Ennis, is facing three charges of threatening to kill or cause serious harm to his former girlfriend Amanda Malone.

It is alleged that he telephoned her last Friday, March 4, and that he sent her two text messages, containing threats, the following day.

Garda Marie Burke told the court that she charged the accused on Saturday evening. Free legal aid was granted by Judge Joseph Mangan, on foot of a request from defence solici- tor Daragh Hassett.

Mr Hassett told the court that his client “denies fully the allegations in this matter”.

Inspector Tom Kennedy said that gardaí were opposing bail and said gardaí were concerned for the safety of Ms Malone. “She was in a relationship with the defendant which has now broken down,” said Inspector Kennedy.

Gda Burke told the court: “According to her [Ms Malone], she received a phone call from Michael McDonagh in which he threatened to kill her, at 18.54 hours on March 4. Ms Malone alleged he asked her where she was and that he was going to kill her.”

Gda Burke said that Ms Malone made a complaint about this to gardaí. While the complainant was at Ennis Garda Station on Saturday, she received a text message which she said was from the accused.

The garda said that she spoke to the accused on Saturday afternoon in relation to the allegations. “When I alerted him to the allegations; once I told him I was arresting him, he took a mobile phone out of his pocket, snapped it in two and smashed it into a number of pieces,” said Gda Burke. She said that gardaí were unable to retrieve information from the broken phone.

Amanda Malone told the court that she had a child with the accused, but that the relationship has ended. She said the defendant phoned her last Friday evening and was “roaring” at her. She said he told her he was “going to get me”.

Mr Hassett put it to her: “You are not happy this relationship is over.” She replied: “I’m very happy.” The solicitor said: “You pleaded with Mr McDonagh to take you back into his life.” She denied this, adding: “I’m afraid of him.” Mr Hassett said: “You have been jilted and you have made all of this up.” She denied this.

Michael McDonagh told Judge Mangan that he did not phone or text Ms Malone, as had been claimed. He said that he met her on Friday and she asked him to get back with her, but he declined. The judge remanded the accused in custody to appear in court again later this week.

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Ennis forum bids to ‘Create the Magic’

CLARE can become the nationwide leader in fighting the recession, thanks to a new initiative being launched this week to make the county capital Ennis the friendliest town in Ireland.

The Ennis Development Forum and Ennis Chamber of Commerce is launching its ‘Create the Magic’ campaign this week, by bringing in international consultant Kathleen Sullivan, whose company KT Sullivan & Associates is based in Charleston, South Carolina that was voted America’s favourite city in 2010.

“Ms Sullivan lives between Charleston and Ennis,” says Aoife Madden of the Ennis Development Forum “and she has gladly come on board to give a seminar to Clare businesses this Thursday,” he adds.

“Her company focuses on inspired leadership and customer service excellence and we want to draft up a customer charter for Ennis business that can help them going forward and make Ennis the friendlies town in Ireland,” says Cllr Johnny Flynn, who is also one of the driving forces behind the forum.

“This is Ennis refusing to sit back,” says Aoife Madden. “We are watching other towns fall down around them and we’re not the worst in Ireland, because with the recession we’re six to 12 months behind other towns and a determined to fight the recession and the goal of the forum is that Clare will become the first county to come out of recession. We are determined to do that.”

Thursday’s seminar, which takes place in The Old Ground Hotel at 6.15pm follows on from the Business Forum held with the General Election candidates last month with the aim of retaining and creating jobs.

And, this interaction with public represenatives will be taken to the next stage when members of the Ennis Deveopment Forum meet with Clare’s newly elected TDs.

“The business community want to meet with them every three months that they are in office during the lifetime of the new government,” says Cllr Flynn, “to see what they’re doing for the town and the county.

The first meeting with Deputies Pat Breen, Joe Carey, Michael McNamara and Timmy Dooley is scheduled to take place on March 28.

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‘We just have to learn our lesson’

IT WAS pretty much a carbon copy of last year’s game in that Clare were always in control of their own fate without ever decisively closing the door on Westmeath. And despite conceding their highest total of the year, in the end Clare managed to ease to a seven point victory.

However, while last year was all about the result as Clare just needed a victory to guarantee their place in the Division 2 final, Sunday’s game was all about the performance and showing a marked improvement from their opening ties and on that score, manager Ger O’Loughlin was predominantly satisfied.

“1-27 was a good score and again we looked good at times, especially for the first ten minutes of the second half when we came out of the traps great and we got some great scores. But again we just made life a bit uncomfortable for ourselves by letting them back into it and I think just when we drop our workrate, we invite teams onto us and most teams, even the likes of Westmeath, will capitalise on it so we have to just learn that lesson.

“We scored 1-27 which is brilliant and I’m delighted with that and I think there was a good improvement again there today. The conditions and the field were fine and going forward, I think the better the ground the better for us but I also think conceding 2-17 is a concern again so we have to try and work on that.

“Overall we are delighted that at least we are back on track and things are in our own hands again.”

Now back in control of their own fate, Clare now have two home games to further stake their claim for a final place.

“We have Down next Sunday and Kerry the following week and as I was saying to the lads, we just have to treat every game in the league as a knock-out game and we have to try to win every one of them. But it is in our own hands and as I say I thought we saw an improvement but we knew we also have to work on conceding 2-17 because if we don’t, it’s going to cruxify us somewhere along the way.”

If they are to tighten up at the back, another carbon copy of their 2-20 to 0-06 demolition of Down on Sunday would be greatly welcomed this Sunday.

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No place in the Cabinet for Clare

FOR only the second time in the history of the State, Clare will be without a full cabinet ministry, while having three government TDs elected in the county.

This state of affairs will be confirmed on Wednesday when Enda Kenny becomes the country’s 13th Taoiseach and selects a Cabinet that won’t have any Clare representation.

The only other time when a government with three TDs in Clare failed to win a seat at Cabinet was during the ill-fated 1992-94 coalition between Fianna Fáil and Labour.

Now, almost two decades on, Clare’s failure to win high office is being blamed locally on “internal Fine Gael politics” that came between the party and a history-making haul of three seats in the constituency.

“The fact is,” one Fine Gael councillor told The Clare People this week, “that had Fine Gael shown the ambition to win three seats and blow Fianna Fáil out of the water altogether and then gone out and done it, Clare could not have been denied the right to sit at Cabinet.

“This is what Fianna Fáil did in 1997. They had a vote strategy and managed their vote brilliantly rather than having a situation where every candidate was out for themselves and as a result they won three seats. The reward was a full ministry. Fine Gael could have that now,” the councillor claimed.

Now Fine Gael are clinging to the hope that a junior ministry will come the county’s way, but both Pat Breen and Joe Carey could be left disappointed as the massive majority that see the combined Fine Gael/Labour numbers at 113 means huge competition for Minister of State positions.

“We have returned three Government TDs here tonight and three Government TDs can make a difference. I would hope also that the Taoiseach would take the opportunity to give one of us in Government a ministry,” General Election poll-topper Pat Breen told The Clare People last week.

However, Clare’s failure to gain any type of post would leave former TD Dónal Carey as the only politician from the Fine Gael or Labour benches to have held down a government ministry, having served as Minister of State during the lifetime of the Rainbow coalition from 1994 to ‘97.

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Clare lags behind in job creation

COUNTY Clare is lagging behind the rest of the country in terms of job creation, with the recession now likely to linger in the Banner County when job growth returns in other areas.

New figures releases from the Central Statistic Office (CSO) revealed that 10,814 people signed on the Live Register in Clare last month, the second highest amount recorded in Clare since records began.

The number of people signing on the Live Register nationally has fallen by 22,624 or 4.51 per cent since the peak of the unemployment crisis in August of 2010. However, the number of people signing on in Clare has actually increased by almost one per cent (0.81 per cent) over the same period.

This means that the rate of change in the numbers signing on in Clare is more than 5 per cent worse than the number signing on in the rest of the country.

According to CSO figures, 10,814 people signed onto the Live Register in Clare last month, a drop of 69 peo- ple from the January figures.

More than half of all those people signing on were located in Ennis, where 5,998 people signed on last month. This represents a small drop of 0.34 per cent or 21 people since January.

Similar small drops were recorded around the county with offices in Ennistymon, Tulla and Kilrush reporting 1,747, 1,568 and 1,501 people signing on respectively.

While the news is bad in Clare, Seán Murphy of Chamber Ireland believe that the figures indicate a stabilisation of the unemployment levels nationally.

“The seasonally adjusted Live Register figures provide another indication of an ongoing stabilisation in the economy. While this suggests that we are slowly turning our economy and jobs market around, clearly much needs to be done to reduce unemployment levels further,” he said.

Chambers Ireland has called on the new Government to abolish Employment Regulation Orders (ERO) and Registered Employment Agreements (REA) as a means of prompting jobs growth.

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Ballyvaughan boil notice until April

A BOIL notice will remain in place in Ballyvaughan until the new multimillion Ballyvaughan Water Scheme comes on line later this month. The Clare People has learnt that Clare County Council plans to bring the new € 5 million scheme on line within the next two weeks. The development was originally due to come on line before the end of 2010, but a number of small delays have delayed completing the project until this month. Once the scheme is fully connected, the local authority will then enter into a period of consultation with the Health Service Executive (HSE) with a view to possibly lifting the boil water notice.

This latest boil notice came into effect at the beginning of February and is the third boil notice to be put in place in Ballyvaughan in the past nine months. A spokesperson from the local authority confirmed to The Clare People yesterday that the boil notice would not be stood down until the connection to the new water supply is completed.

However, even if the new scheme becomes operational before the end of March, it could be mid to late April before the boil water notice itself is lifted.

“It is anticipated that water supply from the new scheme will be made live in the next fortnight. Once commissioning is complete we will meet with the HSE with a view to removing the boil notice. This may take a further number of weeks at which point we would officially advise consumers,” said a council spokesperson.

The new € 5 million project will connect the Ballyvaughan water supply with the local Ennistymon water supply drawn from Lickeen Lake. A number of local groups in Ballyvaughan campaigned against the development, requesting instead that measures be put in place to improve the existing water supply in the village.

Clare County Council also confirmed yesterday that it still taking numbers from north Clare residents who wish to be informed via text message if there is any future disruption in the water supply.

The innovative new text service was introduced in Ballyvaughan earlier this year after a number of local residents and businesses complained at not being informed that their water was not fit for human consumption.

The current boil water notice effects all homes on the Ballyvaughan Public Water Supply including the Muckinish, Gleninagh, Gregans, Knocknagrough and Newtown group water schemes.

Anyone who receives water from these schemes is asked to boil all water used for drinking, cooking, making ice-cubes and brushing teeth before using it.