Categories
News

Marking 40 years of Ennis Brass Band

CURRENT and former members of Ennis Brass Band will gather in the Temple Gate Hotel on Friday to celebrate the 40th anniversary of the band’s formation. After the main meal, at the Temple Gate Hotel, Ennis, the members and friends of the band will welcome all former members to join in the night’s reminiscing.

Re-formed in 1971, the brass band have competed numerous times at national and international level on behalf of the town and county. Over 40 years, the band has brought AllIreland and regional glory back to Ennis on numerous occasions.

The band have performed for the visit of high-profile politicians and dignatories to Ennis. In 2008, members were invited to perform at Arás an Uachtaran by former President of Ireland, Mary McAleese.

Countless young people have also passed through the ranks of the band, learning new musical skills and making friends for life.

This year, as part of the band’s celebrations, everyone who has ever played with the band is invited to join with current members at 9pm on Friday November 25, for an informal social night. Founders of the band and their partners will join with the band and their families to celebrate the anniversary and all former members who have played with the band over the years are invited to join.

Anyone who in the past has played with the band is invited to the Temple Gate Hotel, Ennis at 9pm to join in the fun.

Categories
News

Clare artist exhibits in Florence

A CLARE artist has been invited to exhibit some of his finest work at a prestigious international festival.

Philip Brennan, who is based at Stonehall, Newmarket-on-Fergus, will go to Florence next week to take part in the Florence Bienalle festival.

Six hundred artists from 60 countries will display their works at the event.

“Each artist brings three pieces of their work. All of these festivals have a very big international effect. It is a very big shop window for artists,” said Philip.

Philip’s three paintings are all locally based. One is based on the Burren area, while the other two feature images generated from his own garden in Stonehall. One is based on cutting trees, while the other features the last swallow of the year.

He is looking forward to exhibiting his works in an international setting. “Florence was purely an invitation. I don’t know where they got my name. It is only my second show abroad, following on from the Irish Festival in Milwaukee in 2007,” he said.

“For any artist, any bit of promotion at all is good,” he added.

He has forged strong international links in recent times. He took part in an artists-in-residence scheme in Wales earlier this year and will bring an exhibition there in 2013.

“I am absolutely thrilled, given the way things are now with the recession,” said Philip.

Philip has returned to the studio for the winter months, having focused much of his work outdoors during the summer.

His work is varied and he loves the various challenges presented by his art work. “I usually get a piece finished in two days but wildlife ones take a bit longer. I like the ones that involve people and wildlife in the picture as well as landscapes,” he added. While he occasionally uses pastels, inks, pencil and oils, watercolour is his preferred medium. As well as illustrating bird guide books such as the ‘Birds of Killarney National Park’ and a range of historical and wildlife illustrations, he has published a number of books which feature paintings and accompanying stories, poems and songs. He is also a traditional singer and songwriter and has a background in teaching and wildlife work. Philip will take part in the exhibition in Florence from December 3 to 11.

Categories
News

Meeting to oppose the boat ban at Kinvara pier

A PUBLIC meeting to oppose new bylaws which would see boats banned from evening dockings at the pier in Kinvara will take place in the village on Wednesday evening.

The meeting is being organised by local man Declan Connolly, who says that the new legislation will destroy Kinvara’s reputation as a maritime centre and means the end of the Cruinniú na mBád Festival.

The Cruinniú, which will celebrate its 34th anniversary this year, sees scores of experienced sailors from the Aran Islands dock their boats and traditional curraghs in Kinvara each August to celebrate the ancient sea trade routes between the two locations.

The proposed bylaw was prompted by a number of local residents who complained about camper vans and other vehicles parking overnight on the Kinvara pier. The legislation however, proposed a ban on all craft from the pier, meaning that boats with sleeping quarters would be banned from docking there at night.

“There was a legitimate concern from some residents about camper vans staying on the pier for an extended period, so the locals contacted the councillors who came up with this new bylaw for the pier but for some reason they also included boats in the legislation. This will prevent boats which are habitable from being at the pier between eight in the evening and nine in the morning,” said Declan. “If this bylaw was to come true, it would mean that we and other boat user would not be able to work on our boat in the evening time. It would bring about a ridiculous situation where the Cruinniú na mBád would have to stop – where all the boats come over for the weekend and so many people stay on the boats. This proposed bylaw in my opinions is completely ridiculous and has not been well thought out.” Declan is hoping that everyone who has an opinion on the proposed bylaws come to the meeting to allow for a compromises to be reached. “We would like to talk to the concerned residents and see if some sort of compromise can’t be worked out. I think we need to split the two issues and deal with camper-vans and boats separately. It is two different issues and we would like to see the boats removed from the proposed bylaw for a start,” continued Declan. “That said there are a lot of businesses in the town who welcome the camper-vans coming into the village. They come in, the use the local shops and spend money. The vast majority of the time they are very well behaved, elderly people who have all the right equipment and don’t cause any difficulty for people. The meeting will take place at Johnson’s Hall in Kinvara this Wednesday, November 24, at 8.30pm.

Categories
News

IAA decentralisation plan put on hold

ALMOST 250 families will no longer be moving to Shannon as the proposed decentralisation of the Irish Aviation Authority (IAA) has been shelved. The move, which would have virtually doubled the IAA’s staff numbers in the county, has been indefinitely shelved with the proposed move of Enterprise Ireland to Shannon also now under threat.

A review of the proposed Enterprise Ireland move to Shannon will also take place in the coming months, with no indication as of yet as to whether that proposed decentralisation will go ahead or not.

There was some good news for Kilrush, however, as it was announced that the movement of staff from the Office of the Revenue Commissioners to the town will not be effected.

The Irish Aviation Authority already employs around 240 people at its operations in Shannon and Newmarket. The organisations corporate headquarters are located in Dublin and it was these employees who were to move to Shannon.

“The Irish Aviation Authority have about 700 people employed all over the country. Already in Clare we have a centre at Ballycasey in Shannon and at the North Atlantic Communications centre at Ballygirreen in Newmarket. Our corporate headquarter are based in Dublin and it was this headquarters which was proposed to move to Shannon,” said a spokesperson from the IAA.

The IAA currently employs around 170 people at the Air Traffic Centre in Ballycasey and at Shannon Airport itself and a further 70 people are employed at the radio centre in Ballygirreen. A source close to the IAA told The Clare People that last Thursday’s announcement of the scrapping of decentralisation to Shannon has come as “no surprise” to the people working for the organisation and that employees are “completely unfazed” by the announcement.

It was also announced that the Commissioner for Aviation Regulation is to be merged into the Irish Aviation Authority however it is not clear what effect, if any, this merger will have on the workforce in Clare.

Meanwhile, a new military aircraft from Airbus was given its first testflight at Shannon Airport last Thursday. The Airbus Military’s A400M transport landed in Shannon Airport after taking off from the Airbus manufacturing facility at Toulouse in France.

The flight spent much of its time off the Clare coast and flew as low as 10,000ft at some instances before returning at France. Airbus Military is expected to deliver the first aircraft in early 2013 with another 170 planes on order from other customers.

Categories
News

Shannon Development role awaits report

THE future of Shannon Development remains in doubt, with everything now resting on the recommendations made by a number of Government departments and state organisations to the Brosnan Report.

The report, which was completed by the Mid-West Task Force under the chairmanship of Denis Brosnan, is currently with Minister Richard Bruton (FG) at the Department of Jobs, Enterprise and Innovation. The Clare People has learned that the Department of Jobs, Enterprise and Innovation has recently circulated the report to a number of of other Government departments for submission and these submissions will be added to the report before it will go before the cabinet for implementation.

A spokesperson from the Department of Jobs, Enterprise and Innovation could not confirm when the process will be finished but The Clare People understands that a formal announcement will be made be fore the December 6 budget.

“The recommendations of the report of the Mid-West Task Force re- late mainly to the programmes and structures of the industrial development and other agencies in the region,” said a spokesperson from the Department of Jobs, Enterprise and Innovation.

“Accordingly, this department recently sought the views of a number of other departments on the report’s recommendations. This consultation process will be completed shortly, following which the report’s findings and recommendations will be presented to Government for decision in accordance with the timeframe announced in the Public Service Reform plan an- nounced yesterday [last Thursday].”

This news follows a number of sweeping reforms to all Government-funded quangos announced in the Public Service Reform Plan. The plan gives a commitment to perform a complete review of all the tourism function currently undertaken by Shannon Development and examine a the possibility of merging these duties into other unnamed organisations. All of Shannon Development’s non-tourism related function will then be decided in the context of the Brosnan Report.

Shannon Development was one of a number of organisations who contributed to the report of the Mid-West Task Force but it is still unclear how this report will be used by Government.

“Shannon Development is considering the report which proposes to review the company’s activities as part of the implementation of the recommendations of the Mid West Taskforce Report. Shannon Development will be in discussions with relevant Government ministers and departments in the coming weeks,” said a spokesperson from Shannon Development.

Categories
News

Hair highlights – parking lowlights

WITH pedestrianisation due to be in place in Ennis for two days in December, there have been further calls for a reduction in parking charges.

Yesterday’s meetings of councillors in the Ennis Electoral Areas (East and West) heard calls for changes in parking policy.

Cllr James Breen (Ind) said that “two-hour free parking should be put in place daily in Ennis for a trial period of three months”.

Cllr Breen said the trial could benefit shoppers and businesses. He told the meeting that the one-hour parking limit in place in parts of the town centre was an inconvenience for many shoppers. He said this was particularly the case for women going to hairdressers to have “highlights put in their hair”. He said women were often in the salon for more than an hour.

Cllr Tom McNamara (FF) said current parking limits are an “awful hindrance” for rural shoppers. He said that many people are now opting to shop in Limerick instead.

In response, Town Clerk Leonard Cleary stated, “At the November meeting of Ennis Town Council, the possibility of an incentivised parking scheme to stimulate the Christmas shopping market was discussed. This matter is being further researched. Consultation with the business community has been arranged”. Mr Cleary stated that views from the Ennis Area Committees would be considered by Ennis Town Council.

Cllr Pat Daly called on the council to consider allocating the first hour of parking to shoppers in Ennis free of charge on a trial basis.

Cllr Daly said this would assist rate-paying businesses, many of whom he described as “struggling to survive”.

Cllr Tommy Brennan (Ind) requested that members of Fine Gael and Labour should lobby the government to ensure parking charges are made exempt from a proposed increased in VAT.

Town Manager Ger Dollard said yesterday that the current parking regime has been designed to ensure a high turnover of spaces.

Mr Dollard said there is a good mix of short- and long-term parking spaces in Ennis.

Ennis Town Council is proposing to pedestrianise Abbey Street from its junction with Francis Street to O’Connell Square; O’Connell Square and O’Connell Street from O’Connell Square to its junction with Station Road.

It is proposed that the areas will be closed to traffic from 11am to 6pm on December 17 and 24.

Categories
Sport

Crusheen can win Munster

CARRIGTWOHILL were applauded off the field after it was all over – it was always going to be so, given that the small east Cork club had dipped its toes in Munster championship action for the very first time.

You see, it had been a long time coming for a parish that prides and glories in the fact that it was home to hurleys over 800 years ago when at the time of Norman Invasion the men folk of Carrigtwohill ‘carried a stick bent at one end’.

So, win, lose, or draw, this was something of a celebration for them – hence the rousing applause they received from their faithful followers at, despite it being well and truly pummeled by a rampant Crusheen side.

A Crusheen side with a Munster title on their mind – and why not, admitted Carrigtwohill manager when praising the performance of the Clare champions and in particular their set of backs, whose reputation had preceded them to Páirc Uí Chaoimh.

“We knew we were going to face the toughest defence all year,” he admitted afterwards. “We certainly did. No matter what we put in there it was just coming out as quickly as it was going in.

“We had a couple of goal chances and they just wouldn’t go in. Fair play to Crusheen. They played a real tight, defensive game and fought really hard from start to finish and we just couldn’t break them down.

“We had wave after wave of attack in the first half but just weren’t able to finish it off. In fairness that was down to Crusheen’s pressure and their belief in themselves. It wasn’t down to our forwards. It was down to their strength back there. I thought we could have scored a goal or two in the first half but we didn’t when we needed to build up a bit of a lead when playing with the wind,” he added.

Given the strength of the wind, a 08 to 0-6 lead was hardly enough?

“It was still there for us at half-time. I said to the boys at half-time – the first ten minutes of the second half is going to be the winning of the game. But to be honest Crusheen came out with the same plan and they had they had a great first ten minutes. They scored three or four points on the trot and we just didn’t reply and were chasing the game after that.

“All championship games come in phases of 15 and 20 minutes. We had our phase just before half-time and we had pushed on well, but didn’t get the goal that we really needed.

“Then in the first ten minutes of the second half Crusheen really pushed on – that was their phase and the three or four points they got put our lads under severe pressure and there was no way back. They are a very good side and I think they have a great chance of winning the Munster title.”

Categories
Sport

Coughlan bows out with pride

DERMOT Coughlan has bowed out as manager of Clondegad, but as he goes the Kilmurry Ibrickane stalwart who was a member of Clare’s Munster final winning squad of 1992 has said that the county intermediate champions he guided over the past four years can be a real force at senior level in the coming years.

Speaking to The Clare People on Monday, after Clondegad’s agonising one-point defeat to Miltown-Castlemaine in the Munster intermediate semi-final, Coughlan has paid tribute to his charges after their heroic display against the Kerry champions.

“We’ve had four years and had a great time,” said Coughlan in stepping down. “We’ve had two promotions and got up to the Cusack Cup final, we’ve played in two county finals and won the intermediate championship and played in Munster.

“I’d like to pay tribute to the mentors I had with me. Kevin Tighe, Helen Murphy and Dermot Gavin – they have been brilliant over the last four years. The team needs a fresh voice now, someone else to take it on and build on it because there is great potential there,” he added.

As he spoke, Coughlan reflected on what might have been after his side saw their chance of taking the first step towards emulating Kilmihil, Cratloe and St Breckan’s, who have reached Munster finals in the last three years scuppered for a controversial late goal.

“We were unlucky. We played all the football and we can’t ask any more of the team. They were tremendous. Going into the game we knew we had to go up two or three notches – our county final performance wasn’t going to be good enough, but we had tremendous belief in our- selves,” he said.

“We started with 13 lads who were under 23 years of age and the pace they played the game at was unreal. They took the game to Miltown-Castlemaine. There was no blanket defence, no dropping back a man. We just tore into them and they gave it everything.

“The goals killed us. The first goal was from a kick he put across the square – it was going over the bar or going wide, but held up in the breeze at the last second and dipped under crossbar. If he tried it again a hundred times he wouldn’t do it. It was a freak goal.

“We moved on from that, but there was a nine-point turnover with the goal they got, the penalty we missed and then the goal we had disallowed. Things go for you are you don’t.

“The goal we got was debatable. Some say Shane Brennan was in the square, others say he was out. Gary Brennan kicked a sideline right into the square, Shane ran in and fisted it to the net. It’s easy for me to say it was a good goal, but when you’re 60 or 70 yards away, you can’t call it, but from our side it looked good.

“Kieran Browne soloed out with a ball. He was literally bundled to the ground and the ref was blowing for things like that all day. When he was bundled to the ground the ball spilled and the ball was kicked into the corner forward, who had that bit of space. The backs came around him again but his shot just trickled into the corner of the net. It was purely against the run of play. They’re the things that win tight matches,” added Coughlan.

Categories
Sport

Experience key for Crusheen

SOMETIMES economy of words are what the sports psychologist orders. A case of what’s not said, because there’s no need – no need to tell the players what they know already.

There was some of mindset hovering around the Crusheen dressing room on Sunday as the Clare champions faced up to the supreme test of the second half of the Munster semifinal.

They’d been here before, albeit that last year’s championship clash against Kilmallock was a quarter-final. In the dressing room and ready to rumble and kick on for victory – their first ever in Munster championship fare, but they failed.

Surely this is what was said and hammered home? Again and again?

Not so says manager Michael Browne, whose man management and coaching skills has been the catalyst for Crusheen to rise from the ashes of county final defeat in 2007 to back-to-back titles and now the Promised Land of a Munster final.

“It wasn’t what was said,” he says after his side’s tour de force by the banks. “It was just the feeling in the dressing room. Last year we came out after half-time in a comfortable position and looking as if we were in a nice place against Kilmallock. They absolutely destroyed us in the first few minutes, so under no circumstances was that going to happen to us this year. That’s the focus that you saw when they came back out on the pitch.

“We had never won a title in the history of the club until last year – it was a massive thing for us and maybe it was asking a bit too much to expect them to go out and perform in Munster after that.

“This year there was a real determination there that we were going to go at least one step further, the problem being of course that we were in a semi-final in our first game, which made it that little bit harder. We didn’t even think about that, we just thought about the game last year, how we messed up in it last year and how we weren’t going to let it happen again this year. Thanks be to God we didn’t,” adds Browne.

All thanks to those 13 second half points, but also the six in the first half that provided the foundations that Browne points to as the real winning of this semi-final.

“We put in a great performance in the first half. I was very pleased that we were only two points down at half-time,” he says. “I knew that the breeze was strong because we had done a good bit of a warm-up on it. We were conscious of that. I thought that in the first half our backs weren’t as outstanding as they normally are, but I knew that they rise to it in the second half and that’s how it turned out.

“We do have a really good defence and a really good team, everyone of them can play and everyone of them can play really well and I’m really delighted with the performance. Our forwards have been much maligned in Clare, yet they came down here today and took some fantastic scores in the second half.

“We’re in the Munster final now. When you reach a final, everyone has a 50/50 chance. We’ll be going for it.”

Time to celebrate and then Na Piarsaigh. Then go for it.

Categories
Sport

Fortune doesn’t smile on Clondegad

Miltown-Castlemaine 2-05 – Clondegad 0-10 at Páirc de Búrca, Miltown

WAY back in 1950 the Clare seniors went to Tralee and had Kerry beaten in the Munster championship only to be robbed by a last second point that earned the Kingdom a draw.

Clondegad knew that same sinking feeling on Sunday as they were robbed by a Miltown-Castlemaine side that could scarcely believe their luck as they stumbled over the line into the Munster final to keep alive Kerry’s hopes of landing a sixth straight provincial title in the grade.

It was a theft of grand larceny proportions, all thanks four goalmouth incidents, all of which went the Kerry champions’ way and helped them reach the final frontier despite being totally outplayed in the second half of this low-scoring, yet entertaining semi-final.

For Clondegad it was a missed first half penalty and then a disallowed goal three minutes into the second half; for Miltown-Castlemaine a freakish first goal and then a last gasp effort in the 56th minute that came totally against the run of play.

Yes, dame fortune was shining on Miltown-Castlemaine, while scowling on poor Clondegad as they were left to reflect on what should have been after producing their best performance of the year.

That performance came from the get go, with the iron-man of the Clondegad cause, full-back Paddy O’Connell winning the first ball that came his way to set the tone for his side – one that served notice that they weren’t going to be canon fodder opposition like Clare teams before them.

O’Connell’s play was the spark and inside 30 seconds Clondegad could have goaled, only for Tony Kelly’s rasping drive from 25 yards to be pushed over the bar of Miltown-Castlemaine keeper Joe Daly.

Clondegad played with the advantage of the breeze it the first half – starting well to lead by 0-3 to 0-1 after six minutes when Gary Bren- nan struck from both play and a free to add to Kelly’s opener.

However, the first in a serious of unfortunate events in front of goal started to haunt them as early as the ninth minute when Cathal Moriarty’s hopeful ball towards goal somehow ended up in the back of Clondegad’s net.

A minute later Gavin Wrenn tapped over his second free to give MiltownCastlemaine a 1-2 to 0-3 lead that their play scarcely deserved. Clondegad did restore parity by half-time, but should have done more.

By the 15 minute mark frees by Gary Brennan and Paudge McMa- hon sandwiched a like effort from Gavin Wrenn, before Clondegad’s confidence slowly began to rise once more when Francie Neylon burst up the left wing to land the point of the day in the 45th minute.

Then opportunity knocked in the 29th minute when Shane Brennan faced up to a penalty after Paudge McMahon was bundled to the ground, only for Daly to save at the expense of a 45 that McMahon pointed to leave the sides deadlocked at the break: Clondegad 0-7 MiltownCastlemaine 1-4.

Clondegad’s chance seemed lost as they faced into the breeze, only for the underdogs to produce a stirring second half performance that should have been enough to score Clare’s first ever win over Kerry opposition in the Munster intermediate series.

They looked to be on their way when Gary Brennan’s 33rd minute free was fisted to the net by Shane Brennan, only for the goal to be disallowed. Still, Clondegad never lost heart and pointed frees by Paudge McMahon and Gary Brennan ensured that they led by 0-9 to 1-5 entering the last ten minutes.

More than that, they were dominating against a Miltown-Castlemaine that had failed utterly to produce their county final winning form. However, from nowhere they conjured up a match-winning goal in the 56th minute.

Kieran Browne looked to have been fouled when coming out of defence, but when no free was given, Cathal Moriarty picked up the pieces, danced his way through a porous wall of defenders and toe-poked to the net to give his side an unlikely 25 to 0-9 lead.

Not what Clondegad deserved, but despite Gary Brennan pointing a free in the 58th minute and laying siege on the Miltown-Castlemaine goal for a further four minutes, it what they got.

Their Munster championship race was run in cruel fashion.