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The Republic of Ireland

Posted: Wed Jun 12, 2024 10:21 pm
by Suranis
Henry Wonkler of "The Fonz" fame praises Dublin's Fire Brigade for handling a fire where he was staying.~
US actor Henry Winkler, best known as The Fonz from sitcom Happy Days, has praised Dublin firefighters involved in this morning's evacuation of the historic Shelbourne Hotel.

Winkler, who is staying at the hotel while he is in Dublin to promote his memoir 'Being Henry', was also seen thanking fire officers for their work.

Dublin Fire Brigade said a fire, which appeared to have started in the roof space above a bedroom in the hotel, had been contained and everyone was safe.

The Republic of Ireland

Posted: Tue Jul 16, 2024 8:47 am
by Suranis


https://www.irishtimes.com/crime-law/20 ... m-seekers/
Gardaí have arrested 19 people during clashes with anti-immigration protesters at a site earmarked for asylum seekers in Coolock, north Dublin.

Thirteen men and two women appeared before a special sitting of the Criminal Courts of Justice in Dublin on Monday night charged with public order offences.

The clashes follow an incident on Monday morning during which a number of fires broke out at a makeshift camp established by protesters objecting to a disused warehouse being used to house migrants.

Speaking outside the court, Garda Commissioner Drew Harris said it “has been a difficult policing day for us in terms of dealing with serious public disorder, what we saw today was really unacceptable”.

He said more people will be charged overnight and gardaí are seeking a number of people. He said CCTV footage would be analysed in a bid to identify suspects. Mr Harris said some gardaí were wearing body cams, which will be “very useful” in terms of evidence gathering.

He said there were no reports of serious injuries to any gardaí but two Garda vehicles were badly damaged.

He said the Garda responded well in dealing with “a very volatile and difficult situation over almost 12 hours” and Coolock Garda station remains operational.

A Garda car was set alight on Monday evening and two Dublin Bus vehicles were surrounded as protesters moved from the original site towards Coolock Garda station. A second Garda operation was put in place at the Garda station before the protesters were dispersed by members of the public order unit.

The Malahide Road at Coolock has been reopened and the Crown Paints site has been secured.

Just after 6pm, hundreds more people joined an already large crowd of mostly males in their teens and 20s, who had gathered at the site near the old Crown Paints warehouse on the Malahide Road from lunchtime. About 200 gardaí had been deployed to Coolock throughout the day, including about 30 members of the Garda public order unit with riot shields.

Some 30 Garda vehicles were lining the road, which was closed between its junction with Oscar Traynor Road and the Darndale roundabout, a distance of about 1km, after the fires broke out.

Over the course of several hours, gardaí came under sustained attack from protesters hurling rocks and other missiles as they dispersed the crowd using pepper spray.

At around 6pm, hundreds of people arrived at the site in Coolock, including a number of far right agitators from outside the county. The crowd became so big and unruly at the cordon between the Malahide Road and Greencastle Road that a small group of protesters broke off and walked to Coolock Garda Station, where they began jumping on Garda cars.

Two Dublin buses were surrounded by the crowd, but gardaí managed to disperse the group across a larger area. By evening, they had cordoned off an entire section of the industrial area – which includes the Odeon cinema, Power City and Burger King.

A protest camp, which is on private grounds outside the warehouse, was established several months ago to block workers from renovating the property. It is understood there were efforts on Monday morning to dismantle the camp, leading to clashes between protesters and gardaí.

The fire at the site destroyed a mechanical digger, which was being used to prepare the site for development, before spreading to other areas. The cause of the fire, which was brought under control by members of Dublin Fire Brigade, is being investigated.

At least one person, believed to be a security guard on the site, was injured.

Video from the scene shows a man in a tracksuit hitting another man wearing a high vis jacket with an object. In another video, paramedics can be seen taking someone to an ambulance on a stretcher.

The Republic of Ireland

Posted: Thu Aug 29, 2024 12:59 pm
by RTH10260
The 50 year cover up that POISONED the largest lake in Ireland

Stephen J Reid
28 Aug 2024

In summer 2023 a huge blue green algae bloom appeared on Lough Neagh and turned 392 square kilometres of water into a toxic green soup. The question is, why did it happen? The truth goes right back to the 1950s.

The Republic of Ireland

Posted: Thu Aug 29, 2024 2:16 pm
by Foggy
I watched a[n American] football game in Aviva Stadium in Dublin last Saturday, and it was a gorgeous, modern stadium with very nice surrounding neighborhoods. Many thousands of Americano peoples flew across the pond to cheer for the teams, and they were all looking very comfortable, with no complaints at all about the stadium. Very impressive. One of the teams (Florida State) stayed in Dublin all day Sunday before flying back to the States.

The Republic of Ireland

Posted: Fri Aug 30, 2024 3:26 am
by Sam the Centipede
Off Topic
The Aviva replaced the creaky old Lansdowne Road rugby football stadium. I recall (probably incorrectly) an old quip about an adjacent district of south Dublin:

"Oh, that Dierdre is a snooty one! Where do she and her man live now?"
"Ah, she says they live in Ballsbridge, but her neighbours say they live in Sandymount."
"And?"
"They live in Irishtown."

The Republic of Ireland

Posted: Sat Sep 28, 2024 9:27 am
by RTH10260
your tax €€€ at work
€336k Leinster House bike shelter 'not acceptable' value for taxpayer, says OPW boss
The OPW will face a grilling regarding the spending on the bike shelter, amongst other things, at the Oireachtas Finance Committee this afternoon

Wed, 25 Sep, 2024 - 11:00
Cianan Brennan

The Office of Public Works (OPW) must “seriously reflect on” the circumstances which saw it pay an “extraordinary” €336,000 for a bike shelter on the grounds of Leinster House, the body’s chair has said.

In a report into the tendering and construction of the covered bike shed, John Conlon said that the cost of delivering the bike rack, which provides just 18 bicycle spaces, “is completely not acceptable” in the context of value for money for the taxpayer.

He said that on foot of the OPW’s probe into the shed’s construction, which was signed off by just one principal officer within the body, the threshold for such expenditure governance has been reduced to €200,000 from €500,000.

He added that henceforth the costs of all such infrastructure projects within the confines of Leinster House and Government Buildings will be laid before the Houses of the Oireachtas Commission — the body charged with the running of the Dáil — at its monthly meetings.


https://www.irishexaminer.com/news/poli ... 82990.html

The Republic of Ireland

Posted: Sat Sep 28, 2024 11:28 am
by Sam the Centipede
Isn't this a refutation of one of Parkinson's laws? Its a long time since I read (ok, skimmed) his book, but I think he suggested that a committee would spend little time considering a huge investment in something complex, such as a nuclear reactor, because few members would understand the technology and financing and those few would keep quiet because they would know the others would only comment non-constructively, if be at all. However, Parkinson thought a simple bicycle shed would get a lot of attention because everybody would feel they could understand the concept and the details.

Perhaps this bike shed did get a lot of attention and that was not a good thing?

The Republic of Ireland

Posted: Sat Sep 28, 2024 2:01 pm
by RTH10260
Sam the Centipede wrote: Sat Sep 28, 2024 11:28 am Isn't this a refutation of one of Parkinson's laws? Its a long time since I read (ok, skimmed) his book, but I think he suggested that a committee would spend little time considering a huge investment in something complex, such as a nuclear reactor, because few members would understand the technology and financing and those few would keep quiet because they would know the others would only comment non-constructively, if be at all. However, Parkinson thought a simple bicycle shed would get a lot of attention because everybody would feel they could understand the concept and the details.

Perhaps this bike shed did get a lot of attention and that was not a good thing?
someone just slid the papers for the signature into a big pile destined for this one committee member signing off for up to a half of a million bucks just on his own:
was signed off by just one principal officer within the body, the threshold for such expenditure governance has been reduced to €200,000 from €500,000.

The Republic of Ireland

Posted: Sat Sep 28, 2024 2:13 pm
by bill_g
I would say that John Conlon was trying to spin wool from straw. The actual structure itself involved half that which seems reasonable. The remainder involved other features like resurfacing the road and pedestrian path, safety bollards, drainage, and buried service relocation. It had to conform to the historic features of the building. As such, it had to be 50 year or longer structure.