What’s the best way to tell area residents about plans for a new asylum shelter nearby?
The government should tell communities directly about plans for new asylum shelters, some activists and politicians say.
One councillor called the decision embarrassing. Another said it was “an utter failure to deliver for people”.
The school’s expanding, and wants the site so its kids will have space outside during the construction process.
These were a few of the issues Fingal county councillors discussed at their November monthly meeting on Monday.
Until then, the council won’t maintain and improve the public areas, fixing roads, cutting the grass on the greens, and all that.
They bring a relaxed vibe, and sing-a-long-able renditions of “Country Roads”, “Sunny Afternoon” and more.
The plan now is to apply for planning permission in the second quarter of 2025, councillors learnt recently.
The grand Victorian hall at St Ita’s used to host show bands, Christmas dances, and more, says Paschal Henchy, who worked at the hospital for 44 years.
Aidan Whelan plans to put out orange bins, ask people to put in bottles and cans, return them, and use the money to buy defibrillators and train first responders.
Here’s what Fingal councillors have been debating at their recent meetings.
Ciarán Ó Baoighealláin has tried to get Fingal County Council to intervene, he says. But to no effect.
Figures suggest that Luxembourg fund LRC RE-1 has been issuing eviction notices at a much higher rate than peers – and at a greater rate than in the sector overall.
“It’s totally unacceptable. Can you see that it’s unacceptable?”
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