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Sport

Flannan’s face Tralee in Glin

DARRAGH Kelly (below), the St. Flannan’s manager remained on a positive note heading into Wednesday’s quarter-final clash with Kerry’s Tralee C.B.S as we spoke with him after their last training session before the big game

After losing their first match of the campaign Colaiste na Sceilge they bounced back in their second group game to overcome Clonmel comfortably insuring them of the quarter-final spot. However, as they had lost their opening encounter they were runners-up of the group which resulted in them coming up against group winners Tralee C.B.S.

A worrying factor for Darragh and the team last week would have been the amount of dual players in the college playing hurling and football who also took part in the Harty Cup victory over St. Colman’s. There are nine players on both panels but luckily for them there are no major injuries as a result and St. Flannan’s will have a full strength squad for Wednesday’s game.

The Kerry side will be a strong one and a tough task lies ahead. They have reached many underage colleges finals in recent years and they also captured the O’Connor cup this year, the Kerry Colleges tournament, so the St. Flannan’s boys will have their work cut out for them going into the game.

Some of the St. Flannan’s squad will have had experience from playing last year and they hope that will help them through. They will be relying on players such as Jarlaith Colleran and Tony Kelly who are joint captains of the side along with Gearoid O’Connell, Eoin Enright and Cathal Doohan who impressed with a tally of 3-2 in their last outing.

Although they see themselves as underdogs for the occasion there is no fear from this team and they believe they have what it takes to overcome the Kerry side on Wednesday evening and progress to the semi-final stages of the competition.

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Sport

Clare students honoured in Sports Scholarship Awards

THREE Clare students are among 50 who have won sports scholarships in Waterford Institute of Technology. The scholarships given to Clare are for three different sports – athletics, hurling and Gaelic football. The Clare students are Jason Fahey(Athletics), Aaron Considine (Gaelic Football)and Enda Barrett (Hurling) who were presented with their scholarships at the WIT Awards Ceremony for 2010 – 2011 last week.

“This year marked the tenth year of the Sports Scholarship Scheme and from an original ceremony involving 8 students we now have 65 students

on the scheme, this sends a clear message of the value WIT places on sport, “ said Robin Croke, Clubs and Societies Officer at WIT Sport and Recreation.

The scheme was established to attract some of the best young sporting talent in the country to WIT as well as rewarding a number of existing students who have excelled in their sports during their time at the Institute.

Fahy has been awarded a Gold Level award winner; Considine won a Bronze Level award, while Barrett is the recipient of a WIT/Munster Council GAA Scholarships for hurling.

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Sport

Show of hand’s for handball

LAST weekend the Clarecastle handball club paid host to the girl’s county handball singles championships 2011. In excess of 40 players from different clubs in county Clare gathered last Saturday to compete in the A and B county championships. This was a tremendous turnout, and showed that girl’s handball is strong in County Clare. Two finals have yet to be decided and they will be played this week.

There was some exciting and competitive handball played at the week- end, which is promising for the future of girl’s handball in Clare.

This week also sees the trials commencing for the secondary schools Munster competition, which will commence in early February. Also, Clare’s top Minor players such as Ciaran Malone and Jamie Lynch will be in action this week along with a host of other bright, young county stars as they seek to try and capture the minor county title. The boys singles B competitions in the county also got underway last weekend, with each club in the coun- ty hosting a particular age bracket. These games will be run over the next couple of weekends and will culminate into one weekend of final action that will feature all age brackets in the competition.

Results
U12 A – Final To Be Played Between Ella Donnellan And Evelyn Duggan U13 A – Final To Be Played Between Clodagh Nash And Doireann Murphy U14 A – LaurenTouhy U15 A – Natasha Coughlan Beat Michelle Nihill U16 A – Alice Akers Beat StaceyWright U12 B – Amy Barrett Beat Ann Harrid Loughnane U13 B – Aoibheann Duggan Beat Joanne O’gorman U14 B – Eilish Cullinan Beat Mauve Clune U15 B – Clodagh O’halloran Beat Gail Mccarthy

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News

Charges of cruelty to horses brought

A MAN HAS appeared in court charged in connection with the illtreatment of horses in the county.

John Joe Fitzpatrick (57), of Mountbellow, O’Briensbridge, is facing two charges of cruelty to an animal, on January 25 and January 27, 2010.

He is also facing two charges of permitting a carcass to remain unburied at Kilmurry, Sixmilebridge, on January 25, 2010.

Inspector Tom Kennedy told Shannon District Court on Thursday that the case could not go ahead this week as he required veterinary inspectors and personnel from the Irish Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (ISPCA) to be present for the hearing and he sought a later date.

Judge Joseph Mangan adjourned the case until February 17, when a date for the hearing will be fixed.

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News

Shannon couple enter guilty plea

A COUPLE living in Shannon have been given seven-year sentences after being caught in Dublin handing over cash they brought from Limerick to exchange for heroin with a street value of almost € 50,000.

The couple got lost in Finglas as they headed back to Limerick with the drugs before gardaí pulled them over. They told gardaí they were in financial difficulties and were to get € 500 from criminals for the drugs run.

Ross Buckley (22) and Barbara Campion (23), both with an address at Delacey Park, Shannon, pleaded guilty at Dublin Circuit Court to possession of the heroin for sale or supply at North Road, Finglas, on August 4, 2009.

After the couple were arrested they each attempted to take responsibility for the offence and absolve the other. Their co-accused, Gerard Ledwidge (26) of Cappagh Road, Finglas, also pleaded guilty to having heroin for sale or supply on the same date and was also given a seven year sentence.

Judge Katherine Delahunt commented it was a difficult case involving the parents of young children but said she was satisfied they were all fully aware of what they were doing and had engaged in it willingly. She suspended the final two years of each sentence.

Gardaí, on foot of certain information, observed a car driven by Buckley with Campion as a passenger, being driven up Cabra Road before stopping at the junction of Ratoath Road.

Two males approached the car, one of which was later found to be Ledwidge, and the window was rolled down.

Ledwidge handed in a small package and Campion handed out a bag. The car left the area and was followed by gardaí. Ledwidge was arrested in a nearby house shortly afterwards.

Gardaí following Buckley and Campion, activated their sirens and pulled the car over on North Road. They found a bag in the glove compartment which contained heroin with a street value of € 48,060.

Campion told gardaí she had come from Limerick with € 8,000 in cash and guessed she had to collect heroin. She and Buckley were to get € 500.

She said they had been asked to go to Dublin and had been given a phone number to ring to find out the location of the hand over. She said she rang the number and handed over the money to Ledwidge in return for the drugs.

Campion, who worked as a catering assistant, said she did not have a drug problem and would not name the person she was working for.

Buckley initially told gardaí he was committing the offence to clear a drug debt but later admitted he had done the run in return for cash payment. He mentioned at one stage the money was to be used for a holiday to Spain.

He said they were to return to Limerick with the drugs for a drop off but he did not realise the value of the drugs.

Ledwidge has 31 previous convictions while Campion has one conviction and Buckley has five convictions.

Det Gda Byrne agreed with Ms Grainne O’Neill BL, defending Campion, that the couple’s role was “amateurish in nature” and they had no plan if they were stopped.

Ms O’Neill submitted that Campion had a disruptive childhood but a strong work ethic. She said she had suffered post natal depression and had been in financial difficulties after returning to work on a part-time basis after her maternity leave.

She said Campion made “a very, very bad decision” which she and her child will have to live with. Det Gda Byrne agreed with Mr James McCullough BL, defending Buckley, that the couple made no attempt to evade gardaí and there was no evidence of high living. He said he was not aware of any threats being made.

Mr McCullough said Buckley, who played soccer at underage and senior level with Shannon Town, was remorseful and that he was a vulnerable man who was quite naive. He said the couple were devoted to their young child who would suffer trauma as a result of her parents going into custody.

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News

Deadline looms for Clare people to register to vote

AS MANY as 85,360 Clare residents are already registered to vote in the upcoming General Election, but almost five per cent of those people from the Banner will be voting outside the county.

A total of 4,200 Clare people are registered as voters in the constituency of Limerick East, despite living in Clare and being registered with Clare County Council.

According to the breakdown of the new Clare register to be published in February, 88,474 people are registered to vote in local elections.

However not all will have a right to cast their vote in Clare during the General Election, as this is restricted to Irish and British citizens only.

In the case of a presidential election and a referendum, just people with full Irish citizenship can make their mark.

More than 4,000 people will also be voting for candidates in the neighbouring Limerick City constituency.

Included among those Clare people exercising their voting rights in Limerick are people living in areas that the Boundary Commission controversially believe should belong to Limerick.

Limerick East was always a largely urban constituency that contained small parts of County Clare.

A report by the Constituency Commission was published in October 2007 that also recommended changes to the electoral set up of this area.

As a result of population decline, Limerick East was replaced by a new four seat constituency called Limerick City which will also contain parts of Clare.

It is not too late however for Clare people to have their say in the democratic process as there is still time to register for the supplementary elec- tion register.

According to the Clare Registrar’s Office people have 14 working days in which to register from the date the Dáil is dissolved and the Minister has announced the official polling date.

This supplementary register can also be used if a person has changed address from one electoral area to another or from one county to another.

It is also available to teenagers who turn 18-years-old on or before the day of the election.

For citizens who wish to vote by post, they must register within two days of the dissolution of the 30th Dáil.

Application forms for those wishing to register to vote are available to download on line on the Clare County Council website.

A member of the gardaí must sign all forms before they are submitted.

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News

‘Massive’ need for special clinic

ONE of the mid-west region’s largest independent providers of therapies for children with special needs is reporting a “massive” increase in demand for its services.

Ann Norton, Director of the Clare Crusaders, said calls to the charity’s Barefield-based clinic have increased steadily over the past 12 months.

Ms Norton explained, “There is a massive demand. Monday and Tuesday alone, I got calls from seven parents. The problem that is out there, with the embargo in the Health Services Executive (HSE), is that one of the therapists in the Shannon area has gone on maternity leave and they don’t actually have someone to replace her. So we have just been inundated. I could not say that a day goes past that we don’t get a phone call from somebody.

“A few years ago, people had extra money and you were putting the money into your children. You were paying anything up to € 120 an hour for speech and language or for occupational therapy. Unfortunately people don’t have that anymore. The majority of people that have children with special needs would be getting different grant, respite or carers allowances but it has all gone. Everything has been reduced. So people don’t have that extra spare cash to put into the children.”

Founded in 2005, seven therapists are employed at the Clare Crusaders

clinic in the areas of re

flexology, physiothera

py, speech and language

therapy, occupational

therapy and Montessori.

170 children attend the

clinic on a weekly basis

while the Clare Crusad

ers also conducts ther

apy sessions in schools

in Ennis, Barefield and

Newmarket on Fergus.

Ms Norton added, “We do hands-on therapy. We don’t do assessments. We use the assessments that are provided by the HSE. We work with the kids one-on-one. We can’t do an assessment on a child and go around and say, well there is a waiting list for two years. By the time that two years comes up, you’d have to have an assessment again. So they are literally going around in circles again and it’s not good enough.”

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Talks underway for west Clare aero medical trial

A HELICOPTER charged with bringing critically ill patients from west Clare to hospital is now a possibility, although it is unlikely to satisfy all health campaigners.

When the 24-hour accident and emergency services closed at Ennis General Hospital in April 2009, protesters warned of the dangers to the people of the west, who were hours from the nearest Centre of Excellence, and outside the Golden Hour in the case of heart attacks and strokes.

Many even suggested that the only safe and quick way to get seriously ill or injured patients to proper medical help in time was by helicopter.

Almost two years on and that wish could become a reality as former Minister for Transport Noel Dempsey announced that coast guard helicopters may be deployed to transport critically ill patients to hospitals.

This is to be part of a trial in Clare later this year.

The service will not be a full-time air ambulance service – a helicopter emergency medical service (HEMS) – which many campaigners have been calling for.

The Minister, who resigned shortly afterwards, told the Dáil talks were under way about the possibility of an “aero medical trial” taking place in west Clare.

If the trial is successful, the new service could be extended to other areas along the west coast.

In response to a parliamentary question from Fine Gael TD Pat Breen he said it was hoped that the trial in west Clare might commence in the middle of this year.

“The Department maintains search and rescue [SAR] helicopters on permanent readiness at four bases for maritime emergency response, including two on the west coast in Shannon and Sligo,” said Mr Dempsey.

He continued, “These helicopters are principally employed for marine emergencies but they are occasionally used for land-based rescue tasks where other rescue agencies require assistance, as recently witnessed during the spell of severe weather, and in remote areas where the distance to hospital and a long ambulance journey would be a significant threat to a patient.

“However, the Coast Guard could not support a normal HEMS service with its SAR helicopters as this would reduce their availability for their primary task of providing helicopter marine emergency services on our coasts and waters.”

He added the new trial would be subject to a review by both the HSE and the Coast Guard to consider its effectiveness and value.

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News

Three charged with Sixmilebridge hostage case

THREE men have appeared in court, charged in connection with an incident in which a family was held hostage near Sixmilebridge a year ago.

The incident led to a major Garda investigation and charges were brought against three men – two of whom have addresses in Shannon and one in Dublin.

Noel and Martin O’Callaghan and Simon Gentles appeared before court sittings last week in connection with the incident, on January 7, 2010.

Simon Gentles (25), of Casement Grove, Finglas, Dublin; Noel O’Callaghan (39), of Rineanna View, Shannon and Martin O’Callaghan (22), of Finian Park, Shannon; are accused of committing burglary at Ardkyle, Sixmilebridge, while in possession of a shotgun.

Shannon District Court was told on Thursday that in reply to charge after caution, Martin O’Callaghan replied, “No.” The court also heard that Noel O’Callaghan did not make any reply to charge after caution.

Inspector Tom Kennedy told the court that the DPP has directed that the case be dealt with in the circuit court and he sought an adjournment for preparation of the book of evidence.

Free legal aid was granted to both defendants.

Mr Gentles appeared before Ennis District Court on Friday. The court was told that he was charged that morning and did not reply to the charge after caution by a Garda. Free legal aid was also granted to Mr Gentles.

The court was told that the DPP has also directed that his case be dealt with in the circuit court.

His case was also adjourned until March 10, for service of the Book of Evidence.

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Community in shock after tragic fire

“YOU would have to be here to know how bad it is” – the words of one Tubber native following the tragic death of Mossy and Jimmy Quinn on Saturday morning last.

The community of Boston and Tubber is in mourning today following the deaths of well known father and son Mossy and Jimmy Quinn after a fire in their house at Kiltacky More.

Both men were well known in the local community having both represented the Tubber hurling club with distinction over the years.

According to local councillor Micheal Kelly (FF), who was a classmate of Mossy at Boston Primary School, the whole community is deeply saddened by the tragedy.

“The people of Boston and Tubber, and indeed the whole area, are deeply saddened by the death of Mossy Quinn and James in this tragedy. The fact that it was the family home makes this tragedy even sadder,” he said.

“The Quinn family are very well known and well respected in both farming and GAA circles. Mossy is an uncle of Clare hurler Gerry Quinn and they have all played hurling with Tubber – they are good neighbours and will be sorely missed in this community.”

No funeral arrangements have yet been announced for the father and son as it is understood that the family is waiting for one of Mossy Quinn’s daughter to return from Australia. The daughter had spent Christmas at home in Clare and had just returned to Australia days before the tragic blaze took place.

According to one local person, the community is ready to provide all the help and support that they can to the family.

“You would have to be here to know how bad it is. The whole community is in total shock. We were in our local pub here on Saturday night and I can tell you there was no one smiling. It is a tragedy for a small community,” said the Tubber native.

“It is times like this that the local community has to come together. We are a close knit community and we do stand beside someone when they need it and I know that help will be coming to the Quinns.”

A Garda forensic examination took place at the scene on Sunday with the investigation centering around a stove which they feel may have been the cause of the accident.