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Kilmihil’s little Leo is first to roar in 2013

IRELAND’S first baby of 2013 is acclimatising to life in Kilmihil this week following his birth at 12.01am on New Year’s Day at the Mid-Western Regional Maternity Hospital in Limerick. Leo Carl Maples wasn’t due until next Tuesday, January 8 but his parents, Carmel McNamara and Charlie Maples, realised on the afternoon of December 31 that their new baby was on his way. “I was at home and my waters just decided to break. I was about to get something to eat for myself. I was coming down the stairs and bang,” Carmel told The Clare Champion. “It happened at 2.45pm and I got to the hospital at about 4.15pm. I had no pain until 9.30pm on New Year’s Eve. I was only in labour for two and a half hours,” she added. Carmel hadn’t time to dwell on the fact that Leo was vying for the honour of being Ireland’s first baby of the new year. “I didn’t even …

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Number of UK visitors fell last year

CLARE will attract more American tourists in 2013 but will be lucky to hold 2012 numbers of British visitors, an industry expert here predicts.Figures published recently show the number of tourists visiting Ireland from the UK continued to fall last year.Britain is Ireland’s largest tourism market and in the past year nationally, there were 100,000 fewer arrivals from the UK than in 2011, a drop of 4%.The figures were contained in the Irish Tourist Industry Confederation (ITIC) End of Year Review 2012 published recently. It showed that while there were 6.5 million overseas arrivals in 2012, this showed little or no growth on 2011. Nationally there was a 2% increase in arrivals from mainland Europe and a similar level of increase from North America. This, however, did not make up for the drop in UK visitors, which remains a worry for tourism interests here with 2.8 million arrivals last year, way down on the 2007 high of more than four …

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Turf cutters claim Tullaher ban incorrect

TURF cutters in West Clare have received payments of €220,500 not to cut turf in a protected bog, despite claims from the Turf Cutters and Contractors’ Association (TCCA) that a ban should never have been imposed on the habitat.The Department of Arts, Heritage and the Gaeltacht has confirmed that 147 Clare turf cutters, who were previously operating on Tullaher Bog near Moyasta, received a €1,500 payment or a delivery of 15 tonnes of turf to their homes under the Turf Cutting Compensation Scheme (TCCS) this year.Tullaher Bog is one of the 53 Special Areas of Conservation in the country where all turf cutting is banned – a restriction that was observed by local turf cutters this year.TCCA chairman, Deputy Luke Ming Flanagan, has claimed that Tullaher Bog was wrongly classified as a raised bog and described it as “transition mire”, which had more similar characteristics to a blanket bog.In fact, Deputy Flanagan hopes local turf cutters can resume their turbary …

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With more than a wing and a prayer

AFTER being tied to the Dublin Airport Authority, Shannon formally separated from it on New Year’s Day.A statement on the airport’s website on Tuesday welcomed the split. “Separation officially took place at 11.59pm last night, with the first passengers to transit through the newly autonomous airport arriving on board the Aer Lingus EI-110 flight from JFK at 5.08am this morning. The airport will commence operations on a solid footing by way of a debt-free balance sheet and a business plan with an immediate focus on growing passenger numbers and route development.“The airport will also work towards the development of the International Aviation Services Centre at Shannon, which is targeting the creation of a significant number of primarily aviation-related jobs within a three to five-year period, building on the existing cluster of 40 aviation-related companies in Shannon currently.”Shannon Airport Authority chairman Rose Hynes said it was a ‘huge moment’ for the airport, “Today is ‘Independence Day’ for Shannon – this is …

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More inbound traffic – best thing for region

GETTING more inbound traffic into Shannon is probably the best thing that could happen to this region’s tourist industry and this week Lahinch hotelier Michael Vaughan, who is president of the Irish Hotels’ Federation, welcomed the separation from the Dublin Airport Authority (DAA).“From a business point of view, the positives are that it has a balance sheet free of all debt. It has what I believe is a very dynamic chairperson in Rose Hynes and I think there is a clear focus on where Shannon needs to go. I think there’s a huge amount of work to be done yet but the airport has the ability now to chart its own path for the future,” he said.Mr Vaughan also called for the region to get behind the airport. “It beholds all of us in business to support the airport as much as we can. I know Rose Hynes has already had discussions with Chambers of commerce and other business interests …

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161 deaths on Irish roads in 2012

PROVISIONAL road casualty figures for 2012 published this week show a total of 161 people lost their lives on Irish roads in 2012. This is 25 fewer fatalities compared to 186 deaths in 2011 and 51 fewer deaths compared to 2010, when 212 people lost their lives on the roads. Road deaths have now fallen every year since 2006. 2012 was the fifth year in-a-row that a new record low for fatalities in this country has been achieved. The third Road Safety Strategy 2007 to 2012, which will be replaced in early 2013 with a new eight-year strategy, set a target of reducing road deaths to no more than 252 deaths per annum by the end of 2012. Since the beginning of 2007, there has been a 56% decrease in road deaths. While the total number of serious injuries sustained in crashes in 2012 is not yet available, there has been a 51% reduction in these injuries up to the …

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Munster Technological University plans shelved

PLANS for the creation of a proposed new third-level campus in Ennis have been scuppered after Limerick Institute of Technology (LIT) abandoned its plans to establish the Munster Technological University (MTU).In January 2012, LIT announced a proposal by Cork Institute of Technology (CIT), Institute of Technology Tralee (IT Tralee) and LIT to establish MTU.This would form the largest higher education institution in the region, with campuses in Cork, Kerry, Limerick, Clare and Tipperary and an initial enrolment of over 24,000 students.However, LIT has reviewed its future position in the higher-education landscape and recently decided to prioritise collaboration with partners in the regional cluster of LIT, University of Limerick, Mary Immaculate College and IT Tralee and to pause further development of an earlier proposal to apply for designation for MTU.Last April, LIT assumed control of the Ennis Regional Learning Centre in a move that project administrator, Anne Griffin predicted would help to widen participation in higher education in Clare by providing …

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Carrigoran daycare centre ready to open its doors

CARRIGORAN will add a daycare centre to its facilities inside the next fortnight.Speaking to The Clare Champion last week, Valerie Vaughan, who will be the clinical nurse manager at the facility, said things are almost ready to go now.“We’re opening on January 15. The building is completed, there’s nothing further to be done on that and some clients have sent in their referrals for our three specific areas. We’re ready to rock.”The service will operate three days a week, with 25 people on each day.“It’s for age 65 and over and they need to have clearly identified needs to attend, so referrals are coming from GPs, the people themselves or from public health nurses,” Ms Vaughan added.She outlined the type of facilities that are being put in place. “There was a preservation order on the original Carrigoran House so what we’ve done is to renovate that and it’s absolutely beautiful. That’s half of it and the other half is a …

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