Public Notice: Proposed Temporary Closure of R659 Holycross–Thurles Road for Watermain Works.
At the end of last month, Tipperary County Council announced plans to temporarily close a section of the R659 road between Holycross and Thurles to facilitate essential water infrastructure works. The proposed closure will run from midnight on Friday, May 29th 2026 until midnight on Friday, July 17th 2026, a period of approximately some seven weeks.
The works are being carried out to enable the installation of a new watermain as part of an upgrade by Uisce Éireann. During the closure, traffic management measures will be put in place, with motorists advised to follow designated diversion routes via surrounding regional roads.
Members of the public are invited to submit objections or representations regarding the proposed closure. Submissions must be made in writing to: Road Closures Section, Roads & Transportation, Tipperary County Council, Civic Offices, Limerick Road, Nenagh, Co. Tipperary, or by e-mail to roadclosures@tipperarycoco.ie
NOTE:All submissions must be received no later than 12:00 noon on Thursday, May 7th 2026.
The council encourages early engagement from residents, businesses, and road users who may be impacted by the proposed works.
A new law to legalise nuclear energy is set to come before the Dáil in the coming months.
On the surface, it is framed as a pragmatic response to high energy prices and climate pressure. But scratch beneath that surface, and what emerges is something far less reassuring; a political system once again flirting with an idea it has repeatedly rejected, often for reasons that remain unresolved.
The Ghost of Chernobyl Still Matters Any serious discussion of nuclear power in Ireland that does not grapple with Chernobyl disaster is either incomplete or deliberately selective. Ireland’s anti-nuclear stance did not appear out of thin air. It was shaped by a combination of domestic protest and global catastrophe. The planned nuclear plant at Carnsore Point, Co. Wexford collapsed not just because of local activism, but because nuclear accidents abroad fundamentally changed public perception.
Chernobyl, forty years on from the events of April 26th, 1986in Russia.
A Pattern of Crisis-Driven Thinking. What is striking about the current proposal is not its novelty, but its timing. Ireland tends to rediscover nuclear energy whenever its energy model comes under stress.
In the 1970s: oil shocks → nuclear proposed. In the 1980s: public backlash + global disasters → nuclear notion abandoned. In the 2020s: energy prices + climate targets → nuclear once again revived.
This is not strategic thinking—it is reactive policymaking. Even today, nuclear power remains explicitly banned under the Electricity Regulation Act 1999. So before any plant is even discussed, the State must first undo decades of settled law; a process that signals just how far removed this proposal is from practical delivery.
The Uncomfortable Contradiction. Supporters often point out that Ireland already imports electricity generated by nuclear power. That is true, and it exposes a possible contradiction in policy. Ireland bans domestic nuclear generation while quietly relying on it through interconnectors. But this argument cuts both ways. If nuclear energy is acceptable when produced elsewhere, why has there been no sustained effort to build domestic capability in the past 25 years? The answer is simple, because when the issue moves from abstraction to implementation, political support tends to evaporate.
The Cost Illusion. There is also a persistent tendency to present nuclear power as an Irish solution to high energy prices. This is, at best, misleading. Modern nuclear projects in Europe have been plagued by delays and spiralling costs. The UK’s Hinkley Point C, for example, has seen its projected cost balloon dramatically over time. For Ireland, a small grid, limited capital capacity, and no nuclear infrastructure; the barriers would be even higher. Even optimistic timelines suggest nuclear would not deliver power for well over a decade. That makes it irrelevant to the current cost-of-living crisis it is being used to attempt justification.
History Has Already Tested This Idea. Ireland did not “miss out” on nuclear power by accident. No it tested the idea thoroughly before rejecting it. The Nuclear Energy Board, established in the 1970s, pursued nuclear development seriously. Plans were advanced, sites selected, and policy aligned. Yet the project ultimately failed due to:-
Public opposition.
Safety concerns amplified by global events.
Overestimation of future energy demand.
These are not trivial footnotes, they are structural barriers. And many of them still exist.
A Debate Without Honesty. What is missing from the current discussion is intellectual honesty. Proponents frame nuclear as:-(1) A solution to high prices. (2) A route to energy independence. (3) A necessary complement to renewables. But they often underplay:- (A) The decade-plus delivery timeline. (B) The multi-billion euro upfront costs. (C) The lack of domestic expertise or infrastructure and (D) Continued public scepticism. Even recent polling shows a divided public, not a mandate for change.
Conclusion: Reopening or Repeating? The upcoming Dáil debate may feel like a turning point, but it risks becoming something more familiar: another cycle of political curiosity followed by practical retreat. Ireland is not debating nuclear energy for the first time, it is revisiting a question it has already answered, under pressure, multiple times. The shadow of Chernobyl still looms, not because the technology hasn’t evolved, but because the political, economic, and societal challenges it exposed were never fully resolved. Until those are addressed directly, rather than sidestepped, the latest push to legalise nuclear energy may prove less a bold new direction, and more a repetition of history.
An Garda Síochána has confirmed that more than 200 drivers have been detected either using a mobile phone while driving or failing to wear a seatbelt since the commencement of the May Bank Holiday Roads Policing Operation last Thursday.
As part of the ongoing nationwide enforcement campaign, 77 individuals have been arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of alcohol or drugs. The operation, which began at 7:00am on Thursday and will continue until Tuesday morning, includes high-visibility checkpoints and mandatory intoxicant testing aimed at improving road safety.
To date, over 1,700 motorists have been caught speeding, marking a notable increase in offences compared to earlier figures released during the weekend. Gardaí have reiterated that speeding, distracted driving, and driving under the influence remain key factors contributing to serious collisions and fatalities on Irish roads.
Despite the high number of detections and arrests, no road deaths have been recorded over the course of the bank holiday weekend so far. However, Gardaí have confirmed that 55 people have lost their lives on Irish roads since the beginning of the year, underlining the continued risks faced by all road users.
Gardaí have emphasised that enforcement efforts will remain focused on identifying drivers impaired by alcohol or drugs, warning that it is never safe or acceptable to drive after consuming intoxicants. The public has also been reminded that road safety is a shared responsibility, with particular attention urged around vulnerable road users such as pedestrians and cyclists.
Motorists are being advised to adhere to speed limits at all times, wear seatbelts, and avoid using mobile phones while driving. Gardaí have further cautioned that distractions inside vehicles can significantly increase the risk of collisions and have urged drivers to remain fully focused on the road.
In addition, pedestrians and cyclists have been encouraged to take precautions, including remaining visible and alert, particularly during busy periods. Gardaí have also highlighted the dangers associated with walking or cycling while under the influence of alcohol or drugs, noting that such behaviour can pose serious risks to both individuals and others on the road.
The Roads Policing Operation will continue through the remainder of the bank holiday period, with Gardaí maintaining a strong presence nationwide to promote safer road use and prevent further loss of life.
Recall of specific batches of Green Box Limited Enoki Mushrooms due to the presence of Listeria monocytogenes.
Alert Summary dated Saturday, May 2nd 2026.
Category 1: For Action. Alert Notification: 2026.19. Product Identification: Green Box Limited Enoki Mushroom (Cendawan Enoki); pack size: 100g. Batch Code: G22029 and G22030. Country Of Origin: China.
Message: The above batches of Green Box Limited Enoki Mushrooms are being recalled due to the presence of Listeria monocytogenes. Recall notices will be displayed at point-of-sale.
Nature Of Danger: Symptoms of Listeria monocytogenes infection can include mild flu-like symptoms, or gastrointestinal symptoms such as nausea, vomiting and diarrhoea. In rare cases, the infection can be more severe, causing serious complications. Some people are more vulnerable to Listeria monocytogenes infections, including pregnant women, babies, and people with weakened immune systems, including the elderly. The incubation period (time between initial infection and first symptoms appearing) is on average 3 weeks but can range between 3 and 70 days.
Action Required:Manufacturers, wholesalers, distributors, caterers & retailers: Retailers: Same are requested to remove the implicated batches from sale and display recall notices at point-of-sale. Wholesalers / Distributors: Same are requested to contact their affected customers and recall the implicated batches and provide a point-of-sale recall notice to their retailer customers. Caterers: Same should not use the implicated batches. Consumers: Consumers are advised not to eat the implicated batches.
Pre-deceased by her beloved husband M.L., her parents James and Catherine, siblings Bridget (Comerford), Kitty (Stakelum), Joe Ryan, Ned Ryan and Sall Ryan (Sr Bridget); Mrs Boilson passed away peacefully, surrounded by her loving family, while in the care of staff at St. Martha’s Nursing Home, Bansha, Co. Tipperary.
Her passing is most deeply regretted, sadly missed and lovingly remembered by her sorrowing family; loving daughters Mary (Twomey) and Kaye (Butler), sons Martin and James, daughters-in-law Anne Marie and Yayoi, sons-in-law Aidan and Mike, grandchildren Eva, Mel, Laura, Sean, Kane, Rachel, Calean, Emma and Stacia, niece, nephews, sister-in-law Anne (Clarke, Canada), extended relatives, neighbours and friends.
For those persons who would wish to attend Requiem Mass for Mrs Boilson, but for reasons cannot, same can be viewed streamed live online.
The extended Boilson and Ryan families wish to express their appreciation for your understanding at this difficult time, and have made arrangements for those persons wishing to send messages of condolence, to use the link shown HERE.
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