Application Ref: 261. Applicant: Maurice McCormack and Katie Tormey. Development Address: Archerstown & Townagha , Thurles , Co. Tipperary. Development Description: a revised dwelling house design (Permission was previously granted ref 24268). The revised design will involve single storey extensions to existing single storey dwelling house to the front, to the rear and to the side of the building. Also to carry out alterations to the existing front elevation of the dwelling and for alterations to the eastern site boundary, site layout plan and all associated site works Status: Conditional Application Received: 02/01/2026 Decision Date: 20/02/2026 Further Details:http://www.eplanning.ie/TipperaryCC/AppFileRefDetails/261/0
Application Ref: 2561330. Applicant: International Systems and Equipment Limited. Development Address: Chs Logistics, Cabragh Business Park , Cabra Thurles Co Tipperary Development Description: Creating a new vehicular entrance gateway and the construction of new boundary palisade fencing to divide the site and all associated site works. Status: Conditional. Application Received: 18/12/2025. Decision Date: 18/02/2026. Further Details:http://www.eplanning.ie/TipperaryCC/AppFileRefDetails/2561330/0.
Application Ref: 2561322 Applicant: John Shanahan Development Address: Bohernanave , Thurles , Co. Tipperary Development Description: As constructed timber out house and all associated siteworks Status: Conditional Application Received: 17/12/2025 Decision Date: 16/02/2026 Further Details:http://www.eplanning.ie/TipperaryCC/AppFileRefDetails/2561322/0
Met Éireann has confirmed that it will replace county-wide weather warnings with a new localised system from late 2026, marking a significant change to the national warning framework.
In a written reply to a Parliamentary Question by Laois Fine Gael TD Mr Willie Aird, the forecaster said it is developing a polygon-based system that will divide the country into sub-county zones. The new approach will allow warnings to be issued for specific areas rather than entire counties.
The forecaster said the new system will give more precise guidance to communities.
Noting that the current system is well established, robust and aligned with international best practice, Met Éireann added, “This enhanced localisation will provide clearer direction to those at risk and support more targeted emergency preparedness. The aim is to have this system in place later in 2026.”
Deputy Willie Aird has welcomed the proposed change, adding that the current system is too broad for Ireland’s varied landscape and island conditions and often results in warnings not reflecting the actual risk on the ground.
He said that during named storms and periods of wintry weather, Status Orange or Red alerts are sometimes issued for several counties even though only particular areas within those counties face severe conditions. Aird said this can lead to widespread school closures and disruption when the threshold for the higher‑level warning has only been reached in one part of a county.
“The new system will bring clarity. It will end the unnecessary disruption that blanket county warnings can cause while still giving clear safety information to the people who need it,” he said.
He pointed to the heavy snowfall in January 2025 as an example of where a more targeted approach would have been appropriate.
“High ground areas of Tipperary, Kilkenny, Clare, Kerry, Limerick and Laois were technically in red alert conditions with disruptive levels of snowfall, while lower lying parts of those counties had very different circumstances with mostly rain. A county-wide warning simply does not reflect that reality,” he said.
“People do not live their lives by county borders. Weather does not respect them either. This is a practical step that will help protect homes, businesses and lives,” concluded Deputy Aird.
Shannon-to-East Water Pipeline – Why Tipperary Communities Along the River Are Pushing Back.
Objections are mounting in Ireland’s mid-west region over plans by Uisce Éireann to take more than 300 million litres of water a day from the River Shannon and pipe it to the Midlands, the east, and the greater Dublin Area. The utility lodged its planning application in December last for what it describes as the largest water infrastructure project in the State’s history; a 170km underground steel pipeline, linked to new treatment and storage infrastructure, designed to bolster supply for a region that includes almost half the population.
At the centre of the debate is a familiar national tension; how to secure reliable water for the country’s fastest-growing urban areas, without placing unacceptable pressure on the communities and ecosystems where that water is sourced. Uisce Éireann says the scheme is essential to reduce the greater Dublin Area’s dependence on existing sources and to provide resilience in the face of climate pressures and rising demand. It argues that leakage reduction is necessary, but not sufficient on its own, and that a major new supply route would help prevent restrictions and large-scale outages, while supporting much needed housing delivery and further economic growth.
Opponents, however, reject the idea that the Shannon must become the answer to the east’s water challenges. Community and environmental campaigners in the mid-west region contend the project is unnecessary, premature, and risky, especially during drought periods, when the Shannon system is under pressure too. Their core claim is straightforward; if leakage and inefficiencies were tackled more aggressively, particularly in the Irish capital, the scale of abstraction being proposed would not be needed. They also argue that long-term water security should come from a wider mix of measures, including demand management, smarter network operation, and exploring alternative sources, rather than relying on a single mega-project.
While Uisce Éireann states it will abstract a maximum of 2% of the long-term annual average flow at the Parteen Basin, critics say averages can be misleading. What matters most, they argue, is what happens during prolonged dry spells, exactly when Dublin’s demand spikes and river flows can be low. In those conditions, local groups fear that removing additional water upstream could reduce downstream availability and strain an already complex system balancing navigation, ecology, drinking water needs, and hydropower operations.
Environmental concerns are a major flashpoint. Local stakeholders warn of potential impacts on habitats and water quality, and they point to sensitivities around the Parteen Basin area and the broader Lough Derg–Shannon network. Angling and river-based recreation interests have also raised alarms, stressing that changing flows, even subtly, can affect fish migration patterns, spawning success, and the ecological health of tributaries and lake edges. In response, the utility maintains that modelling has focused heavily on low-flow and drought scenarios, and that statutory flow requirements and fish passage arrangements would remain protected under the proposal. It says it has submitted environmental assessment documentation as part of its application.
Cost is another source of contention. The project has been framed publicly as a multi-billion-euro investment, with estimates in the range of roughly €4.6 billion to nearly €6 billion in recent official statements, while critics warn the final bill could escalate significantly over time. For opponents, the price tag strengthens the case for exhausting cheaper, quicker measures first, especially leak repair, targeted upgrades, and region-by-region resilience projects, before committing to decades of debt and disruption. Supporters counter that, given the scale of the population and economic activity reliant on secure water in the east, claiming the long-term benefits justify the spend.
The planning process is now the arena where these arguments will be tested. The public consultation period is now closed, with local authority submissions due by 30th March. An Coimisiún Pleanála is required to decide within 48 weeks. If permission is granted, Uisce Éireann has indicated construction could begin in 2028, with completion within five years.
Whether the pipeline proceeds as proposed or is reshaped by conditions, the controversy highlights a bigger challenge Ireland cannot avoid: building a water system that is climate-ready, regionally fair, and environmentally credible, while restoring public confidence that “fixing leaks” and planning for growth are happening at the same time, not as competing priorities.
“She’s a Mystery to Me” is a song written by Bono and The Edge of Band U2 and recorded by American rock legend, singer, songwriter and guitarist, the late Roy Kelton Orbison, (1936–1988). It was released in 1989 as a single from Orbison’s Mystery Girl album, his final release, and features Orbison’s signature emotive vocals on a dreamy, romantic track penned by the U2 members.
The Late Roy Orbison.
Recognizing the song’s potential, Bono and The Edge developed it as a tribute to Orbison’s timeless style. Orbison later recorded the song with Bono producing, adding his signature vocal depth to its dreamy, mysterious lyrics about love’s elusive nature.
She’s A Mystery To Me.
She’s A Mystery To Me.
Darkness falls and she will take me by the hand, Take me to some twilight land, Where all but love is grey, Where I can’t find my way, Without her as my guide. Night falls I’m cast beneath her spell, Daylight comes our heaven turns to hell, Am I left to burn and burn eternally, She’s a mystery to me. She’s a mystery girl. She’s a mystery girl. In the night of love words tangled in her hair, Words soon to disappear. A love so sharp it cut, Like a switchblade to my heart, Words tearing me apart. She tears again my bleeding heart, I want to run she’s pulling me apart, Fallen angel cries and I just melt away, She’s a mystery to me. She’s a mystery girl. She’s a mystery girl. She’s a mystery girl. She’s a mystery girl. Haunted by her side it’s the darkness in her eyes, That so enslaves me. But if my love is blind, Then I don’t want to see, She’s a mystery to me. Night falls I’m cast beneath her spell, Daylight comes our heaven turns to hell, Am I left to burn and burn eternally, She’s a mystery to me. She’s a mystery girl. (repeated).
Justice Minister Mr Jim O’Callaghan announces more Efficient Criminal Legal Aid Scheme.
One fee for representation from beginning to end of a case.
Reform of criminal legal aid and restoration of fees fulfils Programme for Government commitment.
Implementation on 1st July, 2026.
The Minister for Justice, Home Affairs and Migration, Mr Jim O’Callaghan has today (24th February) informed the Government of his proposals to reform the criminal legal aid fee structure in the District Court. The reform will lead to greater efficiencies in the District Court and a more sustainable Criminal Legal Aid Scheme.
Minister O’Callaghan is proposing that one flat fee will be paid for representation from beginning to end of a case. This will remove the link between payments and the number of appearances, or legal aid certificates granted.
The proposal fulfils the Programme for Government commitment to reform criminal legal aid and the restoration of fees. Restoration of fees will commence from 1st July 2026.
Engagement with the Law Society of Ireland and relevant stakeholders will continue in advance of implementation on 1st July 2026.
Minister O’Callaghan said; “My department reviewed more than 350,000 District Court cases which took place during 2022 and 2023. The reform I am announcing today aims to address structural issues identified during this review, such as unnecessary adjournments resulting from the payment per appearance model. I have informed Government of my proposal to replace the existing fee structure with one flat fee. This will be payable regardless of the number of appearances, multiple certificates for cases heard together, or number of accused represented. This reform will lead to a more efficient system by reducing unnecessary adjournments. It will also simplify the administration of criminal legal aid, resolve cases sooner, and ensure practitioners are remunerated fairly.”
While the volume of criminal cases in the District Court has decreased, expenditure on criminal legal aid has nearly doubled; from €19 million in 2015 to €37 million in 2024.
The proposed payment of one fee for cases in the District Court will:
Encourage earlier case resolution.
Reduce administrative burden.
Support more efficient court sittings.
Ensure fair remuneration for practitioners.
As stated, there will be extensive engagement over the coming months with key stakeholders, including legal professionals, in advance of its implementation on 1 July 2026.
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