Closure Order served on Bansha foodstore as FSAI reports four January closures.
A food business in Bansha, Co Tipperary has been served with a Closure Order after an inspection found unsafe food being held for sale or supply past its ‘use by’ date, the Food Safety Authority of Ireland has confirmed.
What the Closure Order means for the Bansha premises. The notice relates specifically to the holding of foods labelled with ‘use by’ dates for the purpose of sale or supply. (It does not restrict the sale or supply of foods labelled with a ‘best before’ date.) The FSAI said one of the reasons for enforcement action during January included unsafe food placed on the market that was past its ‘use by’ dates.
FSAI: “No excuse for bad practice”. Commenting on the January enforcement list, FSAI chief executive Mr Greg Dempsey said inspectors are continuing to find recurring problems, including poor hygiene and pest issues, and stressed that a robust food safety management system and a clean premises are basic legal requirements.
Other January Closure Orders (briefly). The FSAI report also lists three other businesses served with Closure Orders in January:
The Shamrock Lodge (kitchen only), Finglas, Dublin 11. White Sands Hotel (small ground-floor kitchen), Portmarnock, Co Dublin. Chillers Restaurant and Lounge, Clondalkin, Dublin 22.
The FSAI notes that details of enforcement orders are published on its website, and that Closure Orders and Improvement Orders remain listed for a period after issues found are corrected.
Pre-deceased by his parents Tom and Kitty, nephew James (Quinlan) and grand-niece Grace (Ryan); the death of Mr Skehan is most deeply regretted, sadly missed and lovingly remembered by his sorrowing family; sisters Margaret (Rattigan), Mary (Ryan), Frances (Tynan) and Catherine (Quinlan), brothers Michael, Tom, John and William, aunt Sr Philomena, brothers-in-law MB, Thomas, Seamus and Dan, sisters-in-law Anne, Kay and Philly, nephews, nieces, grand-nephews, grand-nieces, cousins, extended relatives, neighbours and friends.
Requiescat in Pace.
Funeral Arrangements.
The earthly remains of Mr Skehan will repose in Hugh Ryan’s Funeral Home, Slievenamon Road, Thurles, (Eircode E41 CP59) on Thursday afternoon next, February 12th, from 5:00pm until 7:00pm. His remains will be received the former Cistercian Monastery Abbey, Holycross, Thurles, Co. Tipperary, (Eircode E41 PH01) on Friday morning, February 13th, at 11:00am, to further repose for Requiem Mass at 11:30am, followed by interment, immediately afterwards in the adjoining graveyard.
For those persons who would wish to attend Requiem Mass for Mr Skehan, but for reasons cannot, same can be viewed streamed live online, HERE.
The extended Skehan family 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.
Tuesday (10th Feb): A dull, wet sort of day overall, with rain and drizzle around and the odd mist/fog patch lingering. Temperatures remain on the mild side for February.
Wednesday (11th Feb): Still mostly cloudy, with patchy rain or showers and only limited brighter breaks. Another day where it’s worth keeping the rain jacket and umbrella handy.
Thursday (12th Feb): Cloud dominates again, with outbreaks of rain/drizzle possible. Through the day it’s cool rather than cold, but the more important change is what happens after dark.
Thursday night (12th Feb) into early Friday: This is the key window for icy conditions. As clearer spells develop and colder air feeds down, temperatures are likely to dip close to, or below, freezing in places, allowing frost and ice to form on untreated surfaces. Take extra care on footpaths, bridges and shaded back roads.
Friday (13th Feb): A brighter, colder day for many, and in general drier than earlier in the week. A few showers may drift down, and on higher ground, they could turn a bit wintry at times. Daytime highs stay low, and the night looks cold again.
Saturday (14th Feb): Expect a very cold start with a continued frost/ice risk early on, (especially if you’ve forgotten what day it is and you’re sprinting to the shop for a “definitely-planned-in-advance” bunch of flowers. At least keep the love warm). Conditions will then turn wetter and breezier as the day goes on, with rain pushing in from the west later, meaning it can feel like two seasons in one day.
Sunday (15th Feb): More unsettled, with cloud and showers around (often earlier in the day), with temperatures lifting back up compared with Friday/Saturday.
Monday (16th Feb): Another mostly cloudy day with spells of rain developing again, a reminder that the cold snap is brief, not a long freeze.
What this means on the ground: quick practical tips: Driving: Watch for black ice early Friday and early Saturday, especially on minor roads and shaded stretches. Homes/farms: If you’re exposed, consider protecting outdoor taps/hoses and checking vulnerable pipes ahead of the coldest nights. Commuting: Give yourself a little extra time Friday morning, untreated footpaths can be deceptively slippery after a clear, cold night.
Remember, forecasts can shift a little as the week progresses, but the pattern is clear: damp first, then a short sharp chill, then back to Atlantic unsettled weather over the weekend.
Songwriters: American folk singer, guitarist, producer and songwriter, the late Fred Hellerman(1927-2016) and American lyricist, librettist, singer, songwriter and director, the late Marshall Barer(1923-1998). Vocals: American country music singer, songwriter, and 2010 inductee into the Country Music Hall of Fame, the late Don Williams(1939-2017).
The Late Don Williams.
One of the gentlest country No. 1s of the late ’70s – ‘I’m Just a Country Boy’, – a 1977 hit from that era.
I’m Just A Country Boy.
I ain’t gonna marry in the fall. Ain’t gonna marry in the spring, ‘Cause I’m in love with a pretty little girl, Who wears a diamond ring. And I’m just a country boy, Money have I none, But I’ve got silver in the stars, And gold in the mornin’ sun. Gold in the mornin’ sun. Never gonna kiss the ruby red lips, Of the prettiest girl in town. Never gonna ask her if she’d marry me, I know she’d turn me down. ‘Cause I’m just a country boy, Money have I none, But I’ve got silver in the stars, And gold in the mornin’ sun. Gold in the mornin’ sun. I never could afford a store bought ring, With a sparklin’ diamond stone. All I could afford is a lovin’ heart, The only one I own. ‘Cause I’m just a country boy, Money have I none, But I’ve got silver in the stars, And gold in the mornin’ sun. Gold in the mornin’ sun.
A Roof to Save, A Night to Remember – Major New Fundraiser To Be Unveiled Soon.
Something Big Is Coming: Major New Fundraiser for Cathedral of the Assumption, Thurles – Set for Early May.
Almost every family in the Thurles area has at least one thread that leads back to Thurles Cathedral. It might be the memory of a baptism carried in a shawl and whispered prayers. It might be First Communion photographs taken on the steps, Confirmation day nerves, or the steady comfort of familiar hymns sung from the choir. For others, it is the bright lift of a wedding morning and, sooner or later for us all, the quiet dignity of farewells; funerals, anniversaries, candles lit for names we still speak.
Thurles Cathedral Baptistery.
Thurles Cathedral isn’t just a landmark you pass on the way through Thurles town; no it is a place where lives are marked, where time is measured in sacred moments, and where the community’s joys and sorrows have been gathered and held for generations.
And then there’s the detail that catches you almost immediately as you approach from the street. To the right, slightly apart, like a gentle prologue before the main story, stands a circular building, modest in scale yet rich in meaning.
That round building is the baptistery; its separation from Thurles Cathedral is no accident, and it is one of the things that makes Thurles so quietly distinctive. In Ireland, baptisteries are typically absorbed into the body of the church. Here in Thurles, it stands free, echoing the great continental tradition, where baptism, the beginning of the Christian journey, was given its own threshold-space; a place of welcome, entry, and promise, before you pass into the larger embrace of the Cathedral itself.
Stand for a moment, let the little round baptistery hold your gaze, and watch how stone and light conspire to make something quietly, heart-stoppingly beautiful.
Built in locally quarried limestone, the baptistery shares the Cathedral’s grounded, elemental strength; stone that feels native to its own landscape. Yet it totally refuses that tiresome, boring, and tedious lack of variety that results so often in dull routine. String courses and carved details break the grey with crisp definition, and in places lighter stone is introduced to lift the eye and relieve the broad limestone planes.
Then comes the architecture’s music; the repetition of arches. Below, a long, slender rhythm of limestone, pillars support lower arcade. Above, the upper arcade rests on a colonnade of stunted pillars in polished red Aberdeen granite, a sudden richness, a warmth of colour that feels almost like a flourish, as if the building has discovered ornament and decided to rejoice in it. Higher still, an upper wall, smaller in circumference than the lower, becomes more intricate, same richly decorated and pierced by twelve circular openings that read like little moons of daylight.
And naturally, the gaze rises again, to the dome, a crowning that seems to gather the whole circular form into a single upward gesture. At its summit sits the archiepiscopal cross with two arms, the sign that this Cathedral belongs to an archbishopric; not only a parish church, but a mother church with a wider symbolic reach.
All of which brings us to the urgent present. Beauty like this depends on something deeply unromantic but absolutely essential, a sound roof. And right now, Thurles is seeking to re-roof the building and a major conservation step and fundraising is underway to make that possible. It is the sort of work that doesn’t make headlines the way a new project might, yet it is the work that decides whether what we love will endure; keeping out water, preventing slow damage, protecting artistry and memory alike.
In a way, it is fitting that the baptistery greets you first. A baptistery is about beginnings. And this moment is another beginning, too; the community’s chance to put its shoulder under the task, to protect what has protected so many of our milestones, and to ensure that the Cathedral remains not just admired, but kept.
A Gentle Call To Action. If this place has ever held even one moment of your life; a prayer, a photograph, a hymn, a vow, a farewell, consider doing one small thing to help it hold those moments for the next family, and indeed the next.
A donation, a fundraiser, a share with someone who has moved away, but still carries Thurles in their heart, it all matters. Roofs are saved the way communities are built: not by one grand gesture, but by many hands doing what they can, when they can.
A major new fundraising event to support the re-roofing of the Cathedral of the Assumption, Thurles will be unveiled soon, with an early May 2026 date now in the diary. Watch this space and be ready to help keep a roof over the place that has held so many of our life’s moments. Because some buildings are more than stone. They are memory made visible, and now, quite literally, the future of this one is “In Our Hands“.
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