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Kilbaha rallies to clean up playground

IT MAY be one of the worst villages hit by the storm but the high winds and waves did not damage he community spirit in Kilbaha.

On Tuesday three young mothers returning from the early school run decided to begin a tidy up at the year -old playground that had fallen victim to the storm.

Suddenly passers bys joined in and other parents returning home with their children at 3pm joined the group with shovels, wheelbarrows and children willing to give a helping hand.

Farmers and local contractors joined the impromptu clean up with tractors and mini diggers and what could have taken weeks, according to local woman Ailish Connolly, took three hours.

As many as 30 adults and 20 children were involved in the clean up, with council workers and Rural Resource workers staying around to help.

“We are so privileged to be in a community like this where the methil is alive and kicking,” said Ms Connolly adding that there was time for the odd seaweed fight and some merriment.

The mother of three who is part of the playground committee said an engineer is expected next week to access the damage, but she is hopeful that the community will be able to do the repair work themselves.

Already farmers have pulled the buckled fencing into place using their tractors.

As clean ups are planned for neighbouring Ross and Rhinevella on Saturday, the community remain concerned about the impact the storm will have on local tourism.

Many of the roads have been com- promised which is a concern ahead of the launch of the Wild Atlantic Way next month. The Loop Head peninsula has been included in the bus tour of the west coast of Ireland so proper roads are essential.

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Carrigaholt carries on after flooding

THE community spirit continued into Carrigaholt as neighbours worked together to ensure people got to work, school and to the shops.

Local postmaster Pat Gavin, whose family was one of six marooned on a temporary island in Kilcredaun as a result of the storm and sea swells also praised the work of Clare County Council.

“Fair play, Clare County Council have done everything they can given their resources, but central Government have let us down,” he told The Clare People . “Part of what happened was due to neglect, even though I accept some flooding would have occurred,” he said.

The postmaster added he was referring to promises from the Government two and a half years ago that work would be completed at the seawall at Kilcredaun Irish College.

This work was estimated at the time at € 90,000. The sea wall was torn away in the storm and the college flooded as the people living there were segregated from the rest of the county by floodwater.

According to a Clare County Council report this week, restoration and reconstruction work on this part of the peninsula will cost € 622,000.

Mr Gavin said the generous spirit of neighbours, who loaned him a four-wheel drive, means he can now get to the post office every day.

Up to 250 yards off the main road remains under water as just 30 per cent of the water has receded. Clare County Council has put gravel on an old track so that the people living in Kilcredaun can now move around again.

Meanwhile farmers are struggling as their land remains under water. Even when the water recedes, they will have to reseed it in a bid to undo the damage of the seawater.

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Farm land submerged in water as sea wall’s destroyed

THOMAS Burke is fighting for his livelihood and facing the stark possibility that it may no longer sustain him following the storm and sea swells of early January.

The Kilrush farmer is one of just many dependent on the lands of West Clare for survival, now in serious trouble.

The suckler farmer is facing the real possibility of selling a portion of his herd as three quarters of a mile of his land along the coast at Shannakyle in now covered in gravel. More than 100 metres more has been washed into the sea.

Each day more and more land is eroded away as the sea walls he built to protect his land were also victim of the storm and high waves.

Mr Burke’s land is in the form of a mini peninsula that juts out into the sea, across from Scattery Island. As a result his 80-acre farm has been damaged on all sides.

During the height of the bad weather at least 30 acres, more than one third of his land was under water. This land will now have to be reclaimed from the damage of the seawater and all the debris that has been washed up.

He has also suffered thousands of euros of damage at three other points on his farm, including the loss of the sea wall he built.

“A half of mile of fencing was also destroyed and about 100 metres of land sucked out to the sea,” he told The Clare People . “The days that followed the storm caused more problems as the sea continued to erode the land that was no longer protected,” he said. “It will take three weeks with a digger to clean up,” he added explaining that the repair work will then begin. Even when the repair work is complete there will still be under-lying damage that will take years to rectify itself. “I am looking at the possibility of selling stock this year because the land won’t be recovered,” said the worried farmer. “There is no help coming as of now.”

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Full funding urgently needed for work

ONE hundred per cent of the € 23.76 million requested by Clare County Council from central government must be forthcoming and soon if the local authority is to begin restoring the storm ravaged county. That was the message from county councillors at a special meeting on Friday, during which warnings were issued that lives will be lost if the infrastructure is not repaired immediately.

Cllr Richard Nagle (FF) said that one such urgent case was the main thoroughfare to the tourist attraction – the Cliffs of Moher.

“If something isn’t done at that location and other locations highlighted in this report, what is going to happen? Is it that that road will simply collapse and it is very close to that now? And if the road collapses, without ever talking about loss of life, it is going to result in a huge loss to the local economy, the main way to the cliffs will be collapsed and it will cost millions then. Whatever it is going to cost now that the road it there it will cost a lot more to be rebuild,” said the North Clare councillor.

He added however that priority must be given to people displaced by the storm and sea swells.

“We need a swift response from central government and a swift allocation of funds to start this work as a matter of urgency,” he said.

Cllr Michael Hillery (FF) was not confident that the close on € 24 million will cover the cost of the “damage I have seen along the coast line”.

Senior engineer with Clare County Council Tom Tiernan said the coun- cil will be working hard to restore local authority infrastructure.

He said the council’s focus would also be in making serous inroads into the village of Kilbaha in the coming weeks and Clahane north of Liscan nor “where serious damage has been done and a number of other areas where access is seriously curtailed”.

“We are a long way from having Lahinch ready for what is needed for the tourist season, but we will achieve it. This is something that is obviously very important to the county during the tourist season.”

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Storm repairs to cost €24m

IT WILL cost almost € 24 million to repair storm damage to 60 kilometres of coastline and 35 specific areas of Clare County Council managed infrastructures, with bills for the Office of Public Works, to private individuals and community groups expected to run into millions of euros more.

According to the Preliminary Storm Damage Report submitted to the Government by the local authority on Friday, it was the “worst experienced in living memory”.

More information relating to infrastructure the council maintains is the responsibility of the OPW will be forwarded to the Department of the Environment, Community and Local Government in the coming days.

These areas in question include Kildysart, Ballynacally, the Shannon embankments at Shannon Airport and Doonbeg at the site of the golf course.

“Clare County Council accepts there has been further significant damage to infrastructure not under the control of the council, in particular to estuary embankments along the Shannon Estuary and strategic tourism enterprises. An assessment of this damage will now be completed for the Government’s consideration,” said the county manager Tom Coughlan following a special meeting of the council.

The largest cost to the council will be repairing the promenade and dealing with the compromised rock armour at the seaside resort of Lahinch at € 5.84 million.

The county’s most westerly village of Kilbaha was also extensively damaged with repair work estimated at € 3.42 million, and a further € 622,000 estimated for Kilcredaun where six families were isolated from the main land for days.

Cloughaninchy, Quilty, which was the sight of devastating damage to homes is estimated to cost € 2.58 million.

Damage at New Quay is also over a million euros estimated at € 1.84 million with € 1.12 million of damage estimated to the N67 road at Moneypoint, Kilrush.

Senior engineer Tom Tiernan, who compiled the report, warned that the figures are as realistic as they can be at this early stage and are subject to change. He explained the vast bulk of the report relates to the destruction caused by the high winds and surging tides throughout the length of the Clare coastline through the first week of 2014.

“The vast bulk of damage caused by the first of the aforementioned three storms was most severely impacting inland – within 10 miles of the north and west coasts of the county. The vast bulk of the impact of the latter two events manifested itself at several locations along the county’s entire coastline and their respective severities are explained by the coincidence of very high tides, extremely low pressure centres moving in a south-west to north-east direction off the west coast of Ireland and severe south-west to west winds gusting at speeds of up to 150 km/hr onto the coastline,” he said.

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CCTV captures effects of storm on Lahinch

AMAZING film from CCTV cameras at the playground in Lahinch during the early hours of Monday, January 6, shows massive waves sweep away recycling bins weighing half a ton as the playground disappears under water.

Clare County Council’s Paul Moroney, who monitored the footage explained that no human could have survived the ferocity of the waves and a car would have been crushed with the impact.

The senior engineer with the council’s water department showed the film to county councillors at a special meeting on Friday last in an at- tempt to depict the terrifying weather conditions the people living along the county’s coast were exposed to during the end of December and early January.

Shortly after 3am on the fateful morning a wave dislodged the bottle and can banks weighing 250kg each.

Three minutes before 5am all of the bottle banks were dislodged and moving at speed with the force of a wave across the playground.

Half an hour later the film captured the playground now under water and the final bank – the half tonne back containing wet clothes, being swept across the screen.

Just 20 minutes later, at 5.50am, the playground was full of water with none of the play equipment visible.

Mr Moroney explained that in flood hazard terms the area was calculated to be “extremely hazardous”, “making it hazardous to life”.

Just seconds later a wave took out the streetlights, and even though the cameras kept running the screen was black and the only sound came from an angry sea.

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Shoplifters used back to front swimsuit for thefts

THERE is a ‘huge problem’ with theft in Clare, a Judge has warned.

Judge Patrick Durcan made his comments at Ennis District Court on Wednesday as he imposed a 12month prison sentence on a Romanian man convicted for his role in a number of theft offences.

Emil Brasoveanu (27), with an address at Dun Leinn, Monivea, Galway, was part of a three strong gang who targeted small businesses in West and North Clare in a crime spree on December 17 (2013).

In December, a husband and wife Anton Makula (26) and Anca Grancea (23) of Cluain Rocaird, Headford Road, Galway city, received prison sentences for their role in the offences.

All three had pleaded guilty to various theft charges on three businesses in West Clare.

In December, defence solicitor Fiona Hehir said the couple had “stupidly got involved in the operation” because they needed money for their children’s Christmas presents.

The court heard Mr Brasoveanu wore a ladies swimsuit during the commission of the thefts.

Last month, Sgt Ronan O’Hara of Kilrush Garda Station, told the court the accused wore the swimsuit back to front.

“By wearing it back to front, you can conceal more down the back of it”, explained Sgt O’Hara.

“It’s a new one on me”, said Sgt O’Hara when asked if he had come across this type of theft before.

The businesses targeted were McGrotty’s Medical Hall, Ennistymon, William’s Pharmacy, Kilkee and Miltown Malbay Post Office. All property was recovered, the court heard.

“These people (businesses) were very specifically targeted by these people in a deliberate and organised fashion”, said Judge Durcan at the time.

Praising the actions of local gardaí and the bravery of a post office worker who helped foil the theft of a charity box, Judge Durcan said of the accused;

“Their actions are putting jobs on the line, businesses in jeopardy and leads to a situation where a commu nity could’ve been deprived of essential services.”

On Wednesday, defence solicitor Fiona Hehir said Mr Brasoveanu was an unemployed father of two who committed the offences to get money for Christmas. Judge Durcan said, “I do not believe a single word of what your client has instructed you”.

He said Mr Brasoveanu was part of a gang that had engaged in the “commercial tyranny” of small businesses in West Clare.

“The court has to look on these type of offences with the greatest severity and it does”, he added.

The court heard the accused is currently serving a prison sentence, activated by a Cork court last month.

Judge Durcan imposed a 12-month prison sentence, noting that there is “huge problem with theft in Clare.”

“You can’t have people perpetrating this type of crime against the retail sector which is on it’s knees”, he added.

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‘One of the saddest probation reports I’ve ever read’

A TEENAGER who claimed she fell into debt to moneylenders has received a 15 month suspended sentence.

The 19 year-old had pleaded guilty to a string of shoplifting offences. She admitted stealing almost € 1300 worth of goods from businesses in Ennis and Clarecastle over an 11 month period.

The case came before Ennis District Court on Wednesday after sentencing was adjourned from December.

Last month, the woman told the court she owed € 1000 to a money- lender in Ennis. Asked by Judge Durcan how she would re-pay the money, the woman said, “I’ll have to give them money out of my dole.”

Her solicitor Tara Godfrey said, “I’ve done what I can to get her to make a statement but she won’t”.

Ms Godfrey said the woman fell into debt because of her cannabis addiction.

“This is not like AIB or the Bank of Ireland, the terms are quite severe. My client was afraid to be at liberty”, she added. The court heard the woman’s father and mother are both dead and her younger brother died when he was just three years old.

The woman was described in court as a “vulnerable person at the end of her tether”. The court heard she was a victim of neglect as a child.

After reading a Probation Report on the woman’s family history and apparent troubles with moneylenders, Judge Durcan said, “In my time as a Judge this is one of the saddest reports I have read.”

He remanded the woman in custody to appear again in court on January 8. On Wednesday, Judge Patrick Durcan said this was a “difficult case”.

Addressing the woman, Judge Durcan said, “I don’t want to imprison you for 18 months but the indications are that if you are at liberty you will continue to re-offend.” Defence solicitor Tara Godfrey said her client would agree to stay out of Ennis.

Inspector Tom Kennedy said it would be helpful for all parties if the case was finalised. Imposing a 15-month suspended sentence, Judge Durcan said the woman was a “persistent shoplifter” who had grown up in “particularly difficult personal circumstances.”

Ms Godfrey told the court her client wanted to thank Judge Durcan, the court services, Probation services and gardaí for their patience in dealing with the case. A T IPPER A RY man accused of illegally cultivating cannabis plants has been sent forward for trial to the Circuit Criminal Court. ColmCafferkey (32), with an address at Demense, Roscrea, is facing three charges under the Misuse of Drugs Act It is alleged Mr Cafferkey did without license, cultivate plants of the genus cannabis, at Ballymulcashel, Sixmilebridge on August 14, 2012. The accused is also charged with having cannabis for sale or supply and unlawful possession of cannabis arising out of the same date and location. Mr Cafferkey first appeared before Ennis District Court in December where a garda Inspector said the matter would be proceeding to trial on indictment. The book of evidence was served on the accused in court onWednesday. Garda Sheila McGrath gave evidence of serving the book of evidence on solicitor Stiofán Fitzpatrick for his client. Inspector TomKennedy told the court the Director of Public Prosecutions (DPP) had consented for the accused to be returned for trial to the next sessions of Ennis Circuit Criminal Court on February 18, 2014. Judge Patrick Durcan delivered the alibi warning and made the order returning the accused for trial. Legal aid was granted for Mr Fitzpatrick and one junior counsel. A N EN N IS man has denied an allegation that he harmed a dog by throwing it against a wall a number of times. Cathal McNamara (22), with an address at Old Military Barracks, Ennis, appeared at Ennis District Court onWednesday. He is charged in connection with an alleged incident that occurred at a named address in Ennis on December 15, 2013. It is alleged Mr McNamara contravened a safety order made at Ennis District Court in June by putting the applicant in fear by allegedly using threatening and abusive behaviour. It is alleged this behaviour included the accused harming a dog by throwing it at a wall a number of times and locking himself into a roomwith a child.The alleged of fence is contrary to the DomesticViolence Act. Defence solicitor Tara Godfrey said she was seeking a date for hearing. She said her client denied what is alleged against himin the charge sheet. Judge Patrick Durcan said the alleged facts, as outlined in the charge sheet, indicated this was a very serious case.The case was adjourned to April 27 for hearing. T W O W ES T Clare man charged in connection with an alleged cannabis find last year have had the charges against themstruck out. Neil Casey (35) and Mark Lyons (25) appeared before Ennis District Court onWednesday. Mr Casey, with an address at Rinemacderrig, Carrigaholt, was alleged to have cultivated cannabis plants without license at Curragh, Feakle on June 18. Mr Casey also faced further charges of unlawful possession of cannabis and having the drug for sale or supply also at Curragh, Feakle on June 18. At a court sitting in December, Inspector Michael Gallagher said the Director of Public Prosecutions (DPP) had directed trial on indictment. Mark Lyons (25), with an address at Fleetrock, Carrigaholt, was charged with having cannabis for sale or supply and unlawful possession of cannabis. In December Insp Gallagher said the DPP had directed summary disposal of Mr Lyons’ case, meaning it was to proceed in the District Court. But onWednesday, Inspector TomKennedy told the court the State were seeking to withdrawthe charges as presented against both accused. He said an issue had developed on the State’s side. Judge Patrick Durcan approved the application and struck out the charges against both accused. A MA N charged with in connection with a serious assault in Ennis last summer will learn next month howthe case is likely to proceed. Michael Doherty (22), with an address at Bay 2, St Michael’s Park, Ballymaley, Ennis, appeared before Ennis District Court onWednesday. He is charged with assault causing harmto a teenager at Bank Place, Ennis on August 13, 2013. Inspector TomKennedy told the court he was not in a position to give directions fromthe Director of Public Prosecutions (DPP). Insp Kennedy said he expected to knowthe views of the DPP by next month. Judge Patrick Durcan adjourned the case to February 2. Defence solicitor Daragh Hassett consented to the matter being put back. T H E B OOK of evidence has been served on a Shannon man charged in connection with a serious assault in a pub.AdamDoody (19), with an address at Cluain Alainn, Shannon appeared at Ennis District Court onWednesday. He is charged with committing assault causing harmat Darcy’s Pub,Tullyvarraga, Shannon on February 9, 2013. Garda Sheila McGrath of Ennis Garda Station gave evidence of service of the book of evidence. Inspector TomKennedy said the DPP had consented to the accused being returned for trial to the next sessions of Ennis Circuit Criminal Court. Judge Patrick made the order and delivered the alibi warning.

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CLOSED FOR BUSINESS – GARDAÍ IN DRUGS BUST

GARDAÍ in Clare have recovered more than three quarters of a million euro worth of cannabis plants at three different grow houses on the West Clare peninsula.

Three people were arrested yester- day (Monday) during the raid of two different houses in the Kilkee area, as part of ongoing investigations into the cultivation of drugs in west Clare. On Wednesday half a million euro worth of cannabis plants were discovered in Carrigaholt by local Gardaí working as part of a national operation – “Nitrogen”.

Yesterday afternoon Gardaí in Kilrush arrested a man believed to be a Vietnamese national following the planned raid of the rented house in Kilkee. The number of cannabis plants secured in the raid will not be known until later today (Tuesday) but it has been described by Gardaí as “sizeable”.

The man in his early 50s was arrested and detained in Ennis Garda Station last night under Section 2 of the Drugs Trafficking Act.

Earlier that morning Gardaí from Kilrush discovered 200 cannabis plants, worth an estimated € 160,00, in another rented house in the Kilkee area.

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Doolin businesses call for swift action to repair damages

BUSINESS people in Doolin are keen to ensure that damage inflicted on Doolin Pier over the weekend is addressed as soon as possibly. The pier, its access road and the car park took extensive damage on Thursday night, with much of the flood defenses also being destroyed.

This left the pier vulnerable to a second wave of flooding on Monday morning, which undid much of the repair work undertaken by locals and Clare County Council over the weekend.

Eugene Garrihy of the Doolin2Aran ferry company is keen to ensure that the damage to Doolin not be left on the long finger while repairs are carried out elsewhere.

“Lahinch is getting a lot of the attention and rightly so; there was incredible damage done there, but the situation in Doolin needs to be address also. It is a terminal port and many of the tourists there are international tourists,” he said.

“We need the ESB to bring electricity back to the area and we need the council to restore some sort of road service so we can access the pier and start to get things back to normal.”

The Doolin Pier was hit with a double whammy with the smaller Monday morning storm doing more damage that the Friday storm, because all the flood defenses had been washed away on Friday.

“The fact that a lot of defenses were broken down on Friday meant that this morning surge [Monday] did an awful lot of damage even though it wasn’t as big. A lot of boulders and debris at the ferry offices on the pier were moved again last night, but at least we had a bit more warning about it,” continued Eugene.

“The basic infrastructure of the pier – the road and walls – have all been disturbed so that will have to be reinstated as soon as possible. It was the water rather than the wind that did the damage in Doolin.

“We took it upon ourselves to get the clean-up started on Saturday. We had five or six men there with a machine and we got a lot of the infrastructure back in action. The council also sent up a JCB and started to clear the car park. Hopefully we have seen the worst of it and we can get back to the clean up work tomorrow [Tuesday, January 7].”