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Thurles Great Famine Double Ditch – Update

Firstly, since we initially raised the issue of the Great Famine Double Ditch, asking the simple question: –

“Will the planned Thurles inner relief road impinge, in a negative way, on the 1846 Thurles ‘Double Ditch’, which has been a right of way and a Mass Path for almost 175 years and which is the property of the people of Thurles?”


Now, to-date, we have not received even one denial or indeed even one admission to our simple question requiring just a ‘yes’ or ‘no’ answer from any elected national, local or senior official, charged with representing Tipperary.

Councillor Mr Shane Lee has now joined the ranks of the rest of the so called ‘Michael Lowry Team Membership’, since he became aware of the article published by ‘The Irish Mail on Sunday’, last week.

On 29th Nov 2020, @ 21:19 (6 days ago) Mr Shane Lee (Independeent [Lowry Team]) wrote: –

George,
Thank you for your email. I hope all is well with You & Your Family in these very difficult times. I’d like to highlight George in the 2019 Election I was not part of your area in the Local Elections I wasn’t on the Ballot Papers for Thurles area people didn’t vote for me.
Their vote was for the five Councillors that you are aware of in your area and five very good lads well capable guys I may add. My point is Thurles is not my area Roscrea/ Templemore electoral area is my area so for future reference if you might remove me from your mailing list please. I dont like the way you reference highlighting silence as that’s definitely not my form for sure. I work extremely hard in my own area.
I can speak with Councillor Lowry if you wish as that’s the area Micheal covers?


Kindest regards
Cllr. Shane Lee.

We emailed Mr Lee by return stating: –

Mr Lee,
No sir, as a member of Tipperary County Council you represent all of Co. Tipperary.
Proof of your position is that you were involved in passing the 2021 Co. Council budget in Littleton last week, that’s according to Council CEO Mr Joe MacGrath; latter which contained no expenditure cuts or increase in commercial rates for the year ahead.
This involved €34-35m for housing, €59m on roads, €15m on water services and €29.5m on environmental services. It assures an average spend of just over €3.5m per week; only a portion of which will be spent in the Roscrea/ Templemore electoral area.
So you now know that your power is far more reaching, and affects more communities than just your principality of Roscrea.


Your sincerely
George Willoughby
.

Cllr. Shane Lee replied: –
George,
You never answered my question was I on your Ballot Paper?

Shane.

We believe however, we possibly may have convinced Mr Lee that his obligations and commitments to his electorate as a Tipperary County Councillor, extends to the whole of County of Tipperary including Thurles, and not merely to the area of Roscrea/Templemore. (Then again, we may not, but we done our best to explain.)

A Reply from Mr Malcolm Noonan’s Constituency Assistant.
The second reply, following investigative reporter Ms Valerie Handley’s ‘The Irish Mail on Sunday’ article came from Minister Malcolm Noonan’s Constituency Assistant, on behalf of the Minister, and also on 29th November, @ 17:30 (6 days ago)

This email read,
Dear George,
Please excuse Sunday email. I am catching up with a backlog of emails to Minister Noonan’s constituency office.
Can I just confirm with you that you received the autoreply and have resent your email to the Minister’s Departmental office mos@housing.gov.ie ?
The constituency office are not able to respond to correspondence on Departmental matters.
I hope this is helpful.

Kind regards,

Grace Hamilton (Constituency Assistant, on behalf of Malcolm Noonan TD Minister of State for Heritage and Electoral Reform)


My reply to Ms Hamilton was as follows: –

Ms Hamilton,
I have attempted to contact Minister
Mr Noonan TD on four occasions at his ministerial office, but to no avail. I wrote to you again in the hope that you and Mr Noonan might be on speaking terms, and you might forward my correspondence from his constituency office to his Ministerial Departmental office.
Since he does not wish to correspond with me; he might correspond with you and you might relay his findings.

I have also written to Minister Darragh O’Brien on the 15th November last, informing Mr O’Brien regarding the failure by Mr Noonan to investigate and his refusal to communicate, other than auto reply’s; latter which has now forced me to take this matter into the domain of the national media.
Not surprisingly, Minister Darragh O’Brien, has not replied either; not even an auto reply.
Before you use the words ‘Coviy-19 virus pandemic’ as an excuse, which you might in any future correspondence; I am aware that Mr Malcom Noonan attended in Tipperary Town during the height of the pandemic and could have met with me, to briefly discuss this Issue. He chose not to do so, thus failing to protect what should be a national monument.

Yours sincerely,
George Willoughby.

In all, to-date, 16 persons including senior Co. Council officials, 4 Teachtaí Dála, two of which support this present government in Co. Tipperary [namely Michael Lowry and Jackie Cahill], have failed to answer the simple question “Will the planned Thurles inner relief road impinge, in a negative way, on the 1846 Thurles ‘Double Ditch’, which has been a right of way and a Mass Path for almost 175 years and which is the property of the people of Thurles?”

Covid-19 Update: Mon. 30th Nov. 2020 – 1 Death – 306 New Cases.

Eight further confirmed killer Covid-19 virus cases in Tipperary, same confirmed by the Department of Health up to November 28th. Total number of Tipperary cases to-date confirmed at 1,508, per location breakdown.

The Department of Health have confirmed this evening that there have been sadly 1 death caused by the Covid-19 pandemic; leaving the overall death toll, here in the Republic of Ireland, remaining at 2,053.

There are 299 new additional cases reported today, leaving the current total number of confirmed cases, since conception in the Irish Republic, at 72,544.

Of this evening’s confirmed cases; 108 are in Dublin; 30 in Limerick; 22 in Galway; 17 in Donegal; 15 in Wicklow; 14 in Cork; with the remaining 100 cases located across 18 other counties.

This evening there are 244 patients with coronavirus in Irish hospitals with 31 people in intensive care units, (ICU’s).

Other Covid-19 News

With non-essential retailers across our Irish Republic finalising preparations ahead of reopening their doors for the first time in six weeks; following advice by the National Public Health Emergency Team (Nphet) regarding “Wet Pubs”, and wisely implemented by Government; Pubs, Bars, Restaurants and Cafes across the Irish sea, in Wales, will be forced to stop selling alcohol. They are also required to shut their doors by 6:00pm in a new round of restrictions that will begin on Friday night ahead of Christmas.

Persons monitoring anti-vaccine disinformation online, state they are anticipating a spate of misleading published social media posts on this issue, which could jeopardise vaccine uptake. However, best practice always is, be guided by your local practising physician.

Total global cases up to 5.30pm this evening, now stand at almost 63 million with global deaths at well over 1.46 million.

Continue to “Spread the Message, not the Virus”.

Outlook For Ireland’s Environment NOT Optimistic

  • The outlook for Ireland’s environment is not optimistic unless we accelerate the implementation of solutions across all sectors and society.
  • Climate and biodiversity are two of the key challenges we need to address.
  • An investment in the environment is also an investment in our health.
  • Environmental indicators are going in the wrong direction across many areas.
  • A national Environmental Policy Position will provide clarity on our ambition and commitment to live up to the image of a Clean Green Island.
River Suir, Thurles, Co. Tipperary.

Launching the EPA seventh State of the Environment Report today, Ms Laura Burke, EPA Director General, has stated that, “The overall quality of Ireland’s environment is not what it should be, and the outlook is not optimistic unless we accelerate the implementation of solutions across all sectors and society.”

Ireland’s Environment:
An Integrated Assessment 2020 reveals that enduring and systemic challenges are putting pressure on the environment and remain to be solved. These cut across different environmental topics such as climate, air, soil, water, biodiversity and waste, and across organisations and sectors, business and all levels of society.

Specific examples include:

  • Almost 90% of our energy is generated from fossil fuels giving rise to greenhouse gases.
  • Air quality in some urban areas doesn’t meet WHO standards.
  • Nature and habitats are being damaged (85% of EU listed habitats are in unfavourable condition).
  • Wetland bird species, such as curlew, are under threat as a breeding species.
  • Raw sewage is being discharged to water from 35 towns and villages.
  • Even more stark is the dramatic reduction in the number of Ireland’s most pristine rivers, which have fallen from over 500 sites to only 20 sites in 30 years.
  • Nutrient concentrations in rivers and nutrient inputs to the marine environment are increasing.
  • More than one million tonnes of food waste is generated each year in Ireland.
  • Littering remains a problem, resulting in thousands of complaints annually to local authorities.

A key message from Ireland’s Environment:
An Integrated Assessment 2020 is that the absence of an overarching national environmental policy position is negatively impacting on success across multiple environment-related plans and policies: the sum of the parts does not make up a coherent whole.

EPA Director General, Ms Laura Burke has stated, “Environmental issues and challenges such as climate change, air quality, water quality and biodiversity cannot be looked at in isolation, as they are complex, interconnected and need to be tackled in an integrated way. Now is the time for an overarching environmental policy position for Ireland – to be clear on our ambition to protect Ireland’s environment in the short, medium and long-term and on our commitment to live up to the image of a Clean Green Island. We need to see a decade of action in the 2020s. A policy position would provide a national vision that all government departments, agencies, businesses, communities and individuals can sign up to, to play their part in protecting our environment.

In addition to such a policy position, our report also calls for better implementation and delivery of existing legislation and policies. Many plans and programmes are already in place which, if fully implemented, would go a long way towards resolving persistent environmental issues. Full implementation of, and compliance with, legislation is a must to protect the environment.”

In relation to greenhouse gas emissions, the report’s data confirms Ireland’s underachievement in curbing emissions and meeting stated targets. It shows that the longer we delay, the more difficult it will become to turn things around to meet our obligations. It is more than meeting targets, the real goal for Ireland in the face of climate disruption is to have a resilient and stable society and economy, one that is carbon neutral through its own efforts and natural attributes.

The report has also found that nature and wild places in Ireland are under unprecedented pressure and need to be better safeguarded, both locally and in protected areas. Our action to protect nature needs to be more ambitious. We need to identify the pathway to transformative change for nature protection in Ireland and reverse wider current trends in biodiversity and habitat loss.
Very topically, the EPA report highlights people’s greater awareness about the positive benefits of a clean environment for health and wellbeing. The coronavirus (COVID-19) crisis has shown people the importance of the natural environment in their local areas.

Dr. Micheal Lehane, Director of the EPA’s Office of Environmental Assessment, has stated: “Ireland is already losing much of what is important in its environment. Unspoilt areas are being squeezed out and we are losing our pristine waters and the habitats that provide vital spaces for biodiversity. Now, more than ever, Ireland’s green and blue spaces, which include urban parks, coasts, lakes, rivers, forest and bogs, are essential components of our health infrastructure. These allow people to get out in nature and away from everyday stresses, to the benefit of health and wellbeing and they need to be clean and protected. An investment in the environment is also an investment in our health.”

This comprehensive State of the Environment Report includes chapters on industry, transport, agriculture, air and water quality, nature and health and is available to download from HERE

Know Signs Of Stroke & Act F.A.S.T.

F.A.S.T Campaign Project Manager from the Irish Heart Foundation, Ms Helena O’Donnell reports: –

“Today we launched our F.A.S.T. campaign for stroke.

When someone has a stroke, minutes matter: because two million brain cells die every minute after a stroke.

The Irish Heart Foundation in partnership with the Government of Ireland is asking people to know the signs of stroke and to Act F.A.S.T.

We’re launching the F.A.S.T. campaign today with a video showing the signs of stroke and what you should do in an emergency. Please take a minute to watch it so you know to Act F.A.S.T.

It’s so important that as many people as possible see the video above.

By encouraging others to Act F.A.S.T. by calling 112 or 999 you are saving lives and giving people a chance at recovery.”

NOTE: You can ORDER your postal delivery of free posters and leaflets for sharing in your workplace or community, by emailing info@irishheart.ie and providing your full address and Eircode.

Mailing address is as follows:
Irish Heart Foundation
Lynn House
17-19 Rathmines Road Lower, Dublin 6,
Dublin, Co. Dublin, D06 C780.

Sunday, November 15th – World Day Of Remembrance For Road Traffic Victims

Sunday, November 15th 2020 will be the third Sunday in November, when on this day each year the World Day of Remembrance for Road Traffic Victims (WDR) seeks to remember the millions of lives, world wide, lost or injured due to tragic road crashes.

On this day we also seek to pay tribute to the many emergency responders and medical professionals obliged to deal with the trauma of road deaths and the various injuries incurred by such incidents, on a daily basis.

According to the Association for Safe International Road Travel (ASIRT), nearly 1.25 million people across the world loose their lives in road crashes every year. This figure equates to approximately 3,424 deaths per day.

2018 saw the safest recorded year on Irish roads, nevertheless there were 142 lives lost in 135 fatal crashes.

Up to 1:00pm on December 31st 2019 a total of 148 people died on Ireland’s roads as a result of 137 fatal crashes; 13 of these deaths, alas, occurring in Co. Tipperary, that very same year.

In the majority of the above cases, these vehicle crashes were completely preventable.