Ballybane areas angry at being ‘unrecognised’
Thu, Nov 13, 2008
There is growing anger at City Hall among residents in the Beal Strutha and Fana Glas areas of Ballybane, accusing the local authority of neglecting their estates.
The areas have no nameplates and signage and have been ‘unrecognised’ for more than seven years. According to Fianna Fáil Cllr Mary Leahy, residents believe that City Hall “does not care”. She also said the problem is “widespread” and affects Coillte Mhuirlinne, Ard Alainn and Ard Na Coille.
Read more ...Sponsor a Christmas light and remember a loved one
Thu, Nov 13, 2008
People interested in giving a unique gift this festive season can do so by sponsoring a light for €5 on University Hospital Galway’s Christmas tree.
Read more ...Jury fails to reach verdict on ex-footballer charged with sex attacks
Thu, Nov 06, 2008
The jury in the trial of a 68-year-old former top-flight professional footballer accused of raping and sexually abusing his daughter over a three year period have been discharged after failing to agree a verdict.
Read more ...Barack, come to Galway — says Mayor
Thu, Nov 06, 2008
No sooner had the news emerged from America that Barack Obama had been elected the 44th president of the USA yesterday morning, than the Mayor of Galway Cllr Padraig Conneely had drafted a letter of invitation for the president-elect to offically visit Galway city.
Read more ...Now, isn’t it high time we had a Traveller Taoiseach
Thu, Nov 06, 2008
There is a great feeling around the world today, that at last the good guys have won out, that the forces of oppression that kept the White House out of the grasp of the non-whites (Condi and Colin Powell excepted) have at last been overtaken in a mass coming together of goodness. And we are all entitled to feel proud of what has been achieved in the US, that yet another barrier has been broken, that like in South Africa, another last bastion of inherent apartheid has been shattered and that the American dream has been taken one step further. And all over the world, those who supported Obama are patting themselves on the back and are rightly proud of what this suave senator has achieved in just a few short years, even if he has been helped by the ineptitude of his opponents, but then as Napoleon said, every battle requires a large amount of luck. And all around the world, (and especially here in Old and New Europe) there is a sort of snobbery that it has taken so long for this supposedly sophisticated democracy to allow access to its top post to a person from a minority culture. When Sarah Palin emerged, the same people laughed at her ordinary-ness and at the fact she had not travelled much beyond her own continent. And so we are thinking that at last America is thinking like the rest of us. But in reality, that is not the case. This election has shown that they are ahead. The victory has been welcomed by the luvvies. And those who proclaim themselves liberal. And we all like to think of ourselves as liberal as nobody wants to think that their mind is anything but free and open to new ideas. But let’s see just how liberal we are here in Ireland. How likely is it that a Traveller will ever emerge as a leader of our Government? You would get long odds on that, especially since many of the basic rights long denied the African-American community are the ones that they have to face life without? For many years, parents were put off schools that catered generously for Travellers. And so denied education, they are denied opportunity and fairness, and so throughout life, they are prohibited from achieving what others can. You can be sure that many of the people who stayed up all night to celebrate the dawning of a new era with the election of Obama would be less than impressed if a convoy of Travellers pitched up on their local football pitch. It always amazes me how concerned people get for the welfare of Travellers when they pitch up on the front lawn. In Ireland, often the word RACISM is misspelt NIMBY. You can also be sure that the people who ring in here with short messages every time we put a person who is non-national in a prominent photograph; that the people who think twice before using a taxi being driven by a person who is not a Caucasian; may too have gone around today with a warm feeling in their hearts about Obama, glad that one form of racism has been tackled, but also enforcing the stereotyping that we create every day. We all play a role in determining and preserving stereotypes — this is done through the business of advertising, through the business of media, but mostly through the business of life. Only when the day comes that we can truly say that every person in this country has the same opportunity to sit in the Taoiseach’s seat in Leinster House or to become President of our own country, will we be really sharing in the principles that Barack Obama and Martin Luther King have both espoused, but who have so far never got the chance to put into practice. Remember, it is not just America that Obama has to change. We all have to play our own part.
Read more ...Threat of Bulmers bottle prompts security men to pin student to the ground
Thu, Nov 06, 2008
There must be good evidence of wrong-doing before security men can forcibly restrain a person, warned a District Court judge this week after hearing the case of a mature student who had been pinned to the ground outside a city centre pub because of a perceived threat of a Bulmers bottle.
Read more ...Connolly raises doubts over independence of crypto report
Thu, Nov 06, 2008
The independent review into cryptosporidium outbreak, and the Galway City Council’s handling of the crisis, is to be completed by end of month. However Independent Cllr Catherine Connolly has “serious concerns” about the report’s independence.
Read more ...Educationcuts march on Saturday
Thu, Nov 06, 2008
A major protest march and rally of parents, management and teachers to highlight what they term the “callous and savage” education cuts by the Government in last month’s Budget will take place on Saturday.
Read more ...Autism diagnostic centre to open in west next year
Thu, Nov 06, 2008
Plans are in the pipeline to open a diagnostic centre in the west next year for children with autism.
The facility is the brainchild of the Action for Life Foundation, a non profit organisation which provides services for children with autism and developmental delay.
Read more ...Mission accomplished for the Green Dragon
Thu, Nov 06, 2008
The Green Dragon sailed into Capetown earlier this week having achieved its first objective - a podium finish.
Read more ...After weeks of freeze-dried, it’s food, glorious food
Thu, Nov 06, 2008
The Green Dragon arrived in Capetown this week to be greeted by some familiar smells of Ireland.
Read more ...‘My strength stopped me from being raped,’ says city man
Thu, Nov 06, 2008
A Galway city man had his €38,000 damages claim against the Justice Minister dismissed at the Circuit Civil Court on Tuesday.
Read more ...United back Galway’s youth development programme
Thu, Nov 06, 2008
Galway United and the FAI are both backing the development of young players through the the Galway & District Football League.
Read more ...Voting genetically – it’s in the blood after all
Thu, Nov 06, 2008
Why do we vote the way we do? Because we are stupid! That’s the verdict from Rick Shenkman who has written a book called Just how stupid are we – the truth about the American voter. The book concentrates on American politics and it does not just concentrate on George W Bush – the favourite bogey man for smart people. Rick Shenkman says that voters are voting in a stupid way always. People should weigh up all the issues and analyse policies and politicians, Shenkman says. Undoubtedly, this wise man would probably come to the same conclusion if he were writing about politics in Europe or Ireland. We would all be collectively stupid.
But elections are about the voice of the people and American journalist Bob Moser – an experienced guy out in the field – hits the practicalities on the head. He says that that ultimately, electoral politics do not come down to education but to winning votes, whether voters are well informed or not. His book revolves around political attitudes in the American South and how the Republicans have gained influence in these States for a long time past. The Republicans have done this, Moser says, by appealing to Southern whites who were put off “by the Democrats with long hair and liberal views that seemed to favour communist nations, racial integrations rules and opposition to prayer in schools”. And so for years the Democrats have lost out in the Southern states. But both these “experts” – as is often the way with experts - could be well of the mark. For they are forgetting something we always knew down by the seashore, up in the hills, and in the farmland of the west of Ireland. You have your politics in the blood! People were born Fianna Fáil or born Fine Gael – and they voted that way. Off course an odd stray would vote Labour…but you couldn’t account for deviant behaviour like that. The smart people like Rick Shenkman would probably say all that was stupid. Nobody was born to do anything and we should all have been educated into making rational and sensible decisions about voting. That’s where Shenkman shows up his folly. And some very smart guys have been finding this out. People’s brains are fairly well programmed as to how they will slant politically the day they are born; in fact they could be 50 per cent programmed. And is all this stupid talk? Certainly not.
Read more ...TV firms sue man for €9.2m over 'no fee' cable
Thu, Nov 06, 2008
A legal action against a Galwayman who allegedly provided TV equipment allowing the public to get free cable channels is to be transferred to the Commercial Court.
Read more ...Mountain rescue team appeals for help
Thu, Nov 06, 2008
Galway Mountain Rescue Team (GMRT) is appealing to the public to support its annual bucket collection which takes place on Saturday.
Read more ...Ebay worker declines drugs test offer to avoid conviction
Thu, Nov 06, 2008
An Ebay employee with hopes of one day travelling abroad declined to take a drugs test this week, an ironclad condition which had to be met before a judge would concede to a request of not imposing a conviction.
Twenty-one-year-old Adam Symes with an address at 64 Willowbrook Lawns, Celbridge, Kildare, was summoned to appear before Judge Gerard Haughton at Galway District Court last Monday for possession of drugs, namely cannabis, at the Spanish Arch on September 8, 2007.
Read more ...Galway consultant first in Ireland to use Da Vinci robot to carry out heart op
Thu, Nov 06, 2008
Mr Fabio Bartolozzi, a Galway based hospital consultant - who is the only surgeon in Ireland to perform a cardiothoracic surgery procedure using the da Vinci robotic system - will be in the audience at the Late Late Show on Friday night to discuss it.
Read more ...City Hall has moral obligation to compensate tenants with token gesture says Cameron
Thu, Nov 06, 2008
Pensioners, unemployed, and people with disabilities who used their own initiative to improve their living conditions without any contribution from the Galway City Council should not be neglected by the same body.
This is the view of Labour Cllr Billy Cameron. He proposed that tenants who had already installed their own central heating prior to the introduction of the council’s installation programme be compensated with a token financial gesture.
Read more ...Contract signed for the N18 Gort to Crusheen dual carriageway
Thu, Nov 06, 2008
On Tuesday the contract for the N18 Gort to Crusheen Dual Carriageway – Design Build Contract was signed in County Buildings in Prospect Hill.
Read more ...