HSE Test Purchases Show Over One in Five Vape Retailers Found Selling to Children.
Despite the under-18 sales ban, 51 retailers failed compliance checks between January and October 2025.
More than a fifth of vape shops tested are selling highly addictive vaping devices to children, despite a ban on sales to under 18 year olds, since 2023.
Between January and October last year, (2025), 51 retailers were caught selling vapes to children. This represented more than 22% of the 224 shops where inspectors carried out tests to see if the devices would be sold to under-18s.
Inspections were carried out by the HSE’s National Environmental Health Service, which is responsible for enforcing a 2023 law that banned the sale of nicotine-inhaling vaping products to children. The ban came into effect on December 22nd, 2023.
Retailers caught selling vapes to under-18s face a fine of up to €4,000 and up to six months in prison.
Tipperary: local enforcement: While the HSE figures on failed test purchases are published nationally (and do not provide a county-by-county breakdown), HSE tobacco-control conviction lists for 2025 include recorded enforcement outcomes in Co Tipperary, including: Thurles, Co Tipperary(HSE West / North Tipperary): a retail premises listed with an outcome of €500 fine plus €1,400 costs under Section 28 of the Public Health (Tobacco) Acts (date of court: 15 April 2025). Cashel, Co Tipperary(HSE South / South Tipperary): a licensed premises listed with an outcome of €500 fine plus €1,150 costs under Section 47 of the Public Health (Tobacco) Acts (date of court: 5 June 2025). Note: The published conviction list records outcomes under tobacco-control legislation and may relate to tobacco products and/or nicotine-inhaling products, depending on the case. Details outlined HERE.
Ireland also regulates the safety, quality and advertising of vapes through a 2016 European Union directive. Since March 2024 the HSE has had the power to carry out “test purchasing” to detect retailers who may be continuing to sell vapes to children. In 2024, the HSE carried out 256 inspections to make sure basic regulations on the sale of vapes were being upheld. From these inspections, 14 prohibition orders stopping the sale of unregulated vapes were served on shops which the HSE felt were not complying with the law.
A proposed law to ban the sale of disposable electronic cigarettes or vapes is making its way through the Oireachtas. One of the purposes of the Bill is to make vapes less attractive or accessible to children by banning cheaper disposable vapes. It will also restrict the flavours of vapes and limit any description of a flavour other than its basic name. Colours and images on vape packaging will also be restricted.
The law is also designed to lessen the environmental impact of the disposable nicotine products.
The Public Health (Single Use Vapes) Bill is now being asked to include an outright ban on brightly coloured and sweetly flavoured nicotine devices, which, it is alleged, are targeted at children. At committee stage on the disposable vapes Bill, the Government is understood to be addressing these issues.
The Child Law Project, under the executive directorship of Dr Carol Coulter, has been commissioned by the Department of Justice, Home Affairs and Migration to deliver a new Family Law Reporting Project, aimed at improving public understanding of private family law proceedings, while safeguarding the privacy of children and their families.
This project was awarded following a competitive procurement process that was launched on August 21st 2025 last. It is intended to build confidence in how private family law disputes are determined by the courts, while ensuring proceedings continue to remain private for those involved.
The Family Law Reporting Project is an initiative under Goal 6 (Data, Information and Management) of the Government’s Family Justice Strategy 2022-2025, which commits to improving data collection and sharing across the family justice system. Once established, the project is expected to run for three years.
Dr Coulter founded the Child Law Project in 2012 and has served as Executive Director since then. She is a former Legal Affairs Editor of The Irish Times and previously ran a pilot family law reporting project for the Courts Service in 2006/2007.
So what will the project will do:
Once operational, the Family Law Reporting Project is expected to:
Gather and analyse information on key aspects of private family law cases to support statistical reporting and trend analysis.
Produce accessible, anonymised reporting to enhance transparency and understanding of proceedings, while maintaining privacy protections for children and families.
Background The Family Justice Strategy is also committed to reviewing the operation of the in-camera rule. An independent research report published in May 2025 made 21 recommendations on balancing transparency with the privacy rights of families and children, including recommendations related to private family law reporting.
Homelessness in Ireland hits new record, with almost 17,000 people in emergency accommodation in November 2025.
Homelessness has risen to yet another record high, with 16,996 people accessing State-funded emergency accommodation in November 2025, according to the latest monthly report from the Department of Housing. The figures show 11,675 adults and 5,321 children were in emergency accommodation during the week 24–30 November, an increase of around 200 compared with October (16,766). The data also points to continued pressure on family services, with 2,525 family households and 7,382 single-adult households recorded nationally in November.
Tipperary and Munster. A county breakdown in the Department’s report shows 97 adults were accessing emergency accommodation in Tipperary during the November count week (24–30 November).
Across Munster counties, the same table records the following adult figures for the week:
Cork: 736; Kerry: 63; Limerick: 576; Clare: 98; Tipperary: 97, and Waterford: 112. Same above totals 1,682 adults across Munster counties during the count week.
Cold weather warnings. The latest increase comes ahead of a sharp cold snap, with Status Yellow warnings in place for snow/ice and low temperatures/ice, and Met Éireann warning of hazardous travel conditions and poor visibility in affected areas this weekend.
Calls for action: Focus Ireland have stated that the figures underline that the Government’s new housing plan must begin delivering in 2026, with urgent measures needed to speed up exits from homelessness and increase delivery of suitable homes.
Met Éireann have issued snow and ice warnings as temperatures set to fall to -4°C.
Snowfall last year in January on Kickham Street.
Temperatures are forecast to drop to around -4°C in parts of the country over the coming weekend, as Met Éireann issues a series of Status Yellow warnings for snow, ice and low temperatures. Forecasters have warned of hazardous travel conditions and poor visibility, with frost and icy stretches also expected.
The first warning comes into effect at 8:00pm tonight (Friday, January 2nd), with a Status Yellow snow and ice warning for Donegal in place until 11:00am on Saturday, January 3rd, as wintry showers bring the risk of snow accumulations. Further snow/ice warnings are due to extend across northern and western areas from Saturday evening into Sunday morning, while Tipperary and much of the rest of the country will be covered by low temperature and ice warnings over the same period.
Extract from a publication by L. M. McCraith, [Mrs Laura Mary McCraith-Blakeney (born 1870)], originally published in 1912. (See Part One HERE)
“The first, the gentle Shure (Suir) that making way By sweet Clonmell (Clonmel), adornes (adorns) rich Waterford; …” (Excerpt from poem Edmund Spenser’s ‘Irish rivers’.)
Holy Cross. Beyond Thurles, the Suir, now a broad and shallow stream, flows lazily, through sedge and reeds and fringes of flowering water-weeds, between some of the finest pasture lands in Munster.
About three miles south-west of Thurles, on the right bank, low down by the river-side, stands the lovely ruin of the once far-famed Abbey of Holy Cross. [ Note: This building has since been extensively restored to its former beauty and serenity.]
The once ruin of Holycross Abbey. [Artist James Stark Fleming (1834-1922)]
This Abbey was founded in 1168, for Benedictines, by that indefatigable church-builder, Donal Mór O’Brien, King of Munster. The original charter is still in existence, by which it appears that, about 1182, the Abbey was transferred from the Black Monks to the White, that is, from the Benedictines to the Cistercians.
Early in the twelfth century the Pope, Paschal II, gave to the grandson of Brian Boru, Donough O’Brien, a bit of the True Cross. It was magnificently enshrined and set about with precious stones, and confided to the care of the Cistercians. In 1214 this Abbey was re-built, and about that time the sacred relic, which gave its name to Holy Cross, came to its resting-place on the banks of the Suir.
This relic, being amongst the most revered in Christendom, the Abbey was, for over three and a half centuries, one of the most frequented places of pilgrimage in Ireland. In the reign of Queen Elizabeth the English described the relic as “the idol which the Irish more superstitiously reverence than all the idolatries in Ireland.”
In 1600, the great Hugh O’Neill came in state to Holy Cross to visit the holy relic, for reasons no less political than pious. He marched through the centre of the island at the head of his troops, a kind of royal progress, which he thought fit to call a pilgrimage to Holy Cross. He held princely state there, concerted measures with the southern lords, and distributed a manifesto announcing himself as the accredited Defender of the Faith.
In 1603, Red Hugh O’Donnell came to Holy Cross, on his way to the disastrous battle of Kinsale, and demanded that the fragment of the True Cross should be borne out to him at the west door, to bless him on his way.
The Abbey of Holy Cross was suppressed in 1536, at the break-up of the monastic orders in Ireland. In 1563, Elizabeth conferred the Abbey lands upon Gerald, Earl of Ormonde. The Butlers remained friendly, if not faithful, to the old faith, and the line of Abbots continued at Holy Cross until as late as 1700. The relic also passed eventually into Butler hands. It was exposed for public veneration for the last time in Holy Cross Abbey about the year 1632. In that year, Walter, eleventh Earl of Ormonde, seeing his grandson, the first Duke, had become a Protestant, confided the relic to Catholic keeping until such time as the House of Ormonde should return to the old faith.
Subsequently, it passed through various hands, until in 1809 it was given to the Catholic Bishop of Cork, who deposited the relic in the Ursuline Convent in Cork. It continues in the Ursulines’ keeping, having moved with them to Blackrock.
Perhaps the most interesting thing which remains in ruined Holy Cross Abbey is the lovely little pillared shrine between the two side chapels in the north transept. This arcade is a fine example of thirteenth-century carving. Its pointed arches spring from a double row of beautifully twisted pillars. Its roof is a marvel of graceful groining. Every variety of delightful detail has been lavished upon this little sanctuary. Its sides are elaborately adorned with fine carving.
The design of two doves and two owls, kissing, is repeated upon the panels, and the beautiful Gothic details show a French influence. The elaborate wealth of detail and the loving workmanship point to some special, and important, purpose for this unique feature. It has been suggested that here the dead Cistercians lay before burial. But surely not a dead brother, but rather the Relic, the True Cross itself, occupied such a shrine. Was it within this greatly ornamented little arcade that the Relic was preserved when not exposed upon the Gospel side of the High Altar? This is, however, a matter of controversy.
Another matter of keen controversy is “the Tomb of the Good Woman’s Son.” Who was the “Good Woman”? Why are the Royal Arms of England carved on the shields between the arches of the canopy of the tomb, together with those of Ormonde and Desmond? Was the “Good Woman” an English Queen, her son a Plantagenet Prince? Was he “Pierce the Fair,” son of Isabella of Angoulême, the widow of King John, by her second husband, Le Brun, Count of La Marche, and half-brother of King Henry III? His death is recorded by the Four Masters as having occurred in Ireland in 1233.
Many maintain that this canopied monument is nothing more than a beautifully elaborate three-seated sedilia for the priests. Others suggest that it is the tomb of one who re-built the Abbey of Holy Cross in a far finer style than that of King Donald, at the close of the fourteenth century. The position, at the north side of the High Altar, is that usually assigned to founders.
Legend and tradition tell a more mysterious and interesting tale. The personality of “the Good Woman’s Son” is sufficiently interesting to make it worthwhile to quote the local story, as told by the custodian of the ruins, in her own words:
“The King of England’s son he was, and he was sent over to Ireland to collect the Peter’s Pence for the Pope. Now, there was a family in these parts in those times by name Fogerty, and they knew of all the money the young Prince had with him. So they followed him to a lonely place, and set upon him and killed him there, and stole the money. Then they buried the body in the soft ground in the wood, without waiting to know was the life gone out of it altogether or not.
Now, in the Abbey of Holy Cross at this time there was an old monk, and he was blind. One night he dreamed a dream. He dreamed that the Good Woman, his mother, had placed upon the young prince’s stone here, (set in the corner of the High Altar, of course, it is only set up by the Board of Works to show where the High Altar stood, for the dear knows where the real stones were thrown to by the soldiers when they were quartered in the ruins a hundred years ago), and there is a little round hole right through that stone. That hole was bored through the stone by the dropping of a tear. For seven generations they repented, and as the tear wore the hole through the slab of stone the curse wore away from the Fogertys.“
So some say, anyway, and a priest wrote it all down in a book lately, so I’m told, and sure isn’t it as likely as not it is true, after all?
The chief beauty of Holy Cross Abbey which remains are its windows. Their tracery is perhaps unmatched in perfection in Ireland, and its elaboration points to the fourteenth, rather than the twelfth, century. No doubt they belong to the period of the Abbey’s splendid restoration, whenever exactly that took place. The reticulated (or “honeycomb”) east window is notably fine. It is particularly beautiful when observed from the opposite bank of the Suir, from which the most picturesque view of Holy Cross Abbey may be obtained.
The plan of the Church of the Holy Cross is cruciform, with double side chapels. Quaint bits of carving here and there have escaped the hand of the spoiler and the ignorant. But for many years the Abbey passed from one to another, and fell into a lamentable condition. About thirty years ago the Board of Works took over the ruin, restored it to some decency and order, and ensured its preservation. The cloisters, however, are in private hands, and the cloister garth is used as a croquet ground.
The site of Holy Cross is unimpressive. Thick groves of trees now surround the ruins, which are of great extent, and in remarkably good preservation, all things considered. Little houses cluster round the approaches to the Abbey, as they may have done in the monastic days. It is not easy to picture the stately processions which must have crossed the old bridge and wound their way to the west door.
Holy Cross has still about it a peaceful, graceful, scholastic charm hard to describe or define, not easy to account for. Perhaps the aura of calm, holy, austere lives still lingers, like the perfume in dead rose-leaves. There is a homeliness about Holy Cross, for all that its rule was Cistercian and its Abbots Lords of Parliament and Vicars-General of the Order, as well as “Earls of Holy Cross.”
The Suir at Holy Cross is spanned by an ancient bridge, which was built in 1626 by James Butler, Baron Dunboyne, and his wife Margaret O’Brien, a descendant, doubtless, of King Donald, the Abbey’s founder. Their pious act is recorded in Latin on a carved stone set in the wall facing the ruins. It bears the Butler and O’Brien arms, with the initials of James and Margaret, and a Latin inscription which ends and bids the traveller to say a short prayer that both the builders may escape the Stygian Lake.
It was only natural, in medieval days, that bridge-building should be accounted a blessed and meritorious deed. Women, to whom the difficulties of medieval travelling no doubt came home with special force, were ever foremost in this work in Ireland. The famous and beautiful Margaret O’Carroll, “Áinéigh”(The Bountiful), was long remembered as a builder of bridges, as well as a giver of feasts, in the fifteenth century. In this case, another Margaret evidently followed her example a century later.
END.
Today January 2026 Visiting Tourists Please Note:
Holycross Abbey painstakingly restored in the early 1970s after centuries of ruin.
Still set on the banks of the River Suir, Holycross Abbey today is one of Tipperary’s great places of quiet grandeur; a medieval Cistercian foundation whose clean lines, cloistered calm and finely worked stone immediately draw you in. Painstakingly restored in the early 1970s after centuries of ruin, it has regained the sense of harmony and purpose that shaped it in the first place, still serving today as a living place of worship as well as a welcoming stop for visitors.
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