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.
We’ll be talking about recent stories you may have read in Dublin Inquirer – and the stuff that we leave out that you won’t have! Book a free ticket.
Join us for a conversation about the EU’s policies at its southern borders with Sally Hayden, author of new book “My Fourth Time, We Drowned” and Ocean Outlaw Project OSI editor Joe Galvin. At Anseo, Camden Street, 9 June, from 7.30pm.
We’re organising a focus group of people who read Dublin Inquirer but don’t subscribe, so we can learn more about the reasons for that.
We understand that this can have a big impact on parents’ time, and the mode of travel they choose. We’d like to learn more from you.
We’re looking for a freelance reporter interested in writing one piece a week for us on arts and culture in the city.
It’s just it takes us some time after we get back to ramp up – to find, report, write and edit articles. We’ll return to our regular publishing schedule from next Wednesday.
We hope you’ll tell us, through focus groups and surveys in the coming weeks. And then we’ll try to work together with you to do it.
Have you moved homes since December 2016? We’re working on a story about changes in rent levels between tenancies, and – if you have a few minutes to spare – we’d really appreciate your help.
We’re looking for a full-time city reporter to join our team based in Crumlin, dedicated to original, quality coverage of the city – with a focus on transport in particular.
We asked our readers what new topic they’d like us to cover in each week’s edition of the paper. They chose the immigration system and how it impacts immigrants.
We’re looking for a reporter to write a story a week for us on the subject you chose. Applications are due by midnight on 16 June.
We’re halfway through our two-week push to ask readers what they’d like us to spend more time reporting on going forward. There’s still time to weigh in.
Get our latest headlines in one of them, and recommendations for things to do in Dublin in the other.