Monthly Archives: December 2009

Budget 2010

It’s difficult to comment open on yesterday’s budget. Yep, huge re-adjustments needed to happen. As someone who works for myself, I work hard to bring in a wage (like many other people). As someone who is freelance, I am always on the lookout for the next project and opportunity. During the last number of years,  I found it difficult to find a job that encompasses my own love of heritage and history and so on. Becoming a councillor this year was also part of that but also my interest in heritage, arts, community life, the life of the city, led me to this point in time. I enjoy my life as much as I can and get involved in many things and plough forward and try to keep learning new stuff – new talents and skills.

I live at home. I am unable to buy a house. I was horrified in the last number of years to see the price of houses soar and how no one in power stove to stabilise the property boom and the associated greed. I empatise with my friends who now have mortages in negative equity. I strongly believe that Ireland Fianna Fail and Green Party partnership has led to huge mismanagement of the country’s finances. In particular, in yesterday’s budget, my heart went out to parents and carers in particular who strive to make the world of who they care for a better place. I’m also annoyed at what seems like a lack of a national job stimulus package. My heart goes out to decent people on the dole who just can’t find a job.

It’s clear that Ireland needs to re-invent itself. We need a better plan. We need to create enterprising citizens and give them incentives for start-ups. This year coincides with the 25th anniversary of the closure of Fords and Dunlops and mass unemployment. Is there anything, we can learn from those years to move forward with…

I also don’t see an alternative one party government. Certainly the next government won’t be the current one. Whoever the leaders are I would like to see fighters, business people with business savy, inspirers and doers, people who will stand and bring us forward, Ireland I feel now needs a new type of modern politics. One that will lead us forward and not keep us at the village pump. Otherwise, this country will be left behind.

Kieran and Santa, Recent Cosmic Christmas Launch, Blackrock Castle

Kieran’s Flooding Queries

Cork City Council Meeting, 7 December 2009:

City manager’s report, click on http://corkpolitics.ie/wp/?p=3731#more-3731

 

Lord Mayor, I wish to raise a number of questions, the first in relation to the dams.

I am asking this based on my own publication on the history and future of the two Lee stations last year.

 

From my own research, a flood can be halved passing through Inniscarra dam.

 

 In the event of flood control and subsequently initiated safety measures, all alarms are relayed to Lee Stations staff. Alarms are also relayed to an outside security company.  The Lee plant controllers, technical officers and plant manager all have home laptops and can view any ongoing developments.

 

In addition since 2004 a hydro control centre operates from Turlough Hill in Wicklow with after-hour control of all hydro stations. I would call on them as well for a report.

 

There is also a system of rain gauges at both dams plus lake levels can relay information and give historic breakdowns over the previous twenty-four hours. There is also knowledge of how much rains falls and that gives the station staff a six-hour gap to make decisions on the reservoir levels and river flow.

 

Just with that in mind, surely someone saw those levels rising over a number of hours, what was the response?

 

My second series of related queries relates to the flood damaged businesses in the western section of this section.

I see in the city council’s distant legislation that we have made provisions for businesses and rate reductions at certain times.

 

I would like to also to acknowledge the kind offer of Mahon Community Centre offering councilling support for those that have had their houses seriously damaged

Kieran’s Motions, Cork City Council Meeting, 7 December 2009

Kieran’s Motions, 7 December 2009

That a direction sign showing the way to the Lee Tunnel be placed at the junction of Skehard Road and the Central Statistics Office Road, Mahon (Cllr Kieran McCarthy)

 

That a moratorium on rates be enacted for the affected traders who are dealing with extensive flood damage on the western side of Cork City for a minimum of three months or until such time as their insurance claims have been resolved (Cllr K McCarthy)

 

Question:

Can I ask the Manager to comment on what the City Council is doing in terms of tackling unemployment in Cork City? (Cllr Kieran McCarthy)

 

Cork City Hall at night

McCarthy’s History in Action, 6 December 2009

‘McCarthy’s History in Action’ in association with RSVP (Red Sandstone Varied Productions) took place in Our Lady of Lourdes National School on Sunday 6 December. This event, supported by Cllr. Kieran McCarthy, brought history alive for all the family, with the participation of re-enactment groups, storytellers and more.

The vision for the day was one of encouraging community participation, by inviting the local community to be involved in its creation, either in performance or as helpers. Join re-enactors to honour the past, where there is much to learn, as one helps build the future; the organisers are encouraging people to actively engage with life around them, as well as examine the history that brought us here. The organisers believe that growth and transformation in society is affected positively by respecting our heritage in this way.

Cllr Kieran McCarthy noted: “This project is aimed at all spectrums of the community. It is a living history project with a key focus on education, identity and civic awareness. It also complements the work of the Discover Cork: Schools Heritage Project”. 

Many many thanks for their time and energies to Legion Ireland, Medieval and Renaissance Society, UCC, Olivia Riordan and of course the producer and director Yvonne Coughlan

 

 

McCarthy's History in Action, Dec 09

McCarthy's History in Action, Dec 09

McCarthy's History in Action, Dec 09

McCarthy's History in Action, Dec 09

McCarthy's History in Action, Dec 09

 

McCarthy's History in Action, Dec 09

 

McCarthy's History in Action, Dec 09

 

McCarthy's History in Action, Dec 09

McCarthy's History in Action, Dec 09

Cosmic Christmas at Blackrock

Enjoy a Cosmic Christmas at Blackrock Castle Observatory! Well done to Clair McSweeney and best of luck! Also best wishes to my very good friend Yvonne Coughlan of Red Sandstone Varied Productions who is co-ordinating the event. She has been for a long number of years involved in putting on promenade productions in Cork and is well worth chatting to in terms of running any type of community and dramatic event (www.rsvpireland.com).

Click here for more information http://www.bco.ie/christmas/

 Blackrock Castle, Launch of Cosmic Christmas, 12 09

 Blackrock Castle, Launch of Cosmic Christmas, 12 09

 Blackrock Castle, Launch of Cosmic Christmas, 12 09  Kieran and Santa

Nicki, of Civic Trust House at Blackrock Castle, Cosmic Christmas

Blackrock Castle, Launch of Cosmic Christmas, 12 09

New Book-Sunday’s Well Boating and Tennis Club

Front cover of Sundays Well book

 

 

I had the pleasure in the last two years of researching the history of the Sunday’s Well Boating and Tennis Club. This book was published last week. Sifting through over 100 years of documents, minute books, photographs and other material, as well as a substantial collection of artefacts, is a time-consuming business requiring almost infinite patience and judgment.

 

The history of any club is essentially the story of a community coming together to enjoy a favoured pastime, and Sunday’s Well Boating and Tennis Club on the Mardyke in Cork is no different. Inscribed beneath the club’s ornate weather vane, the dates 1899-1999 are an instant reminder of the deep history that surround the club and its place in the social and cultural history on Leeside. The club has faced a myriad of challenges over the years. The knock-on effects of a failing economy in the 1950s, the unlikely role squash played in dragging the club out of financial trouble and the contentious issues of female membership are perhaps the most memorable, but they are by no means exclusive.

 

Beautifully situated just west of Cork city centre on the banks of the Lee, the club emerged as a by-product of annual boating regattas at the Mardyke. Boating, with a high society classification in the 19th century, was a popular pastime on the river adjacent to Sunday’s Well. Due to limited revenue, boating events such as mini regattas were not organised every year, but the races are remembered for the Chinese lanterns and bunting that illuminated the gardens at the riverbank, as well as the balloon and firework displays at sundown. In 1899, inspired by a successful Sunday’s Well Regatta and Water Carnival held that July, the Sunday’s Well Boating and Tennis Club was founded. It was formed by a number of organisers of the regatta, several of whom were residents in Sunday’s Well.

 

Very little is known about the construction of the first clubhouse or the first building used. The first edition of its rules and bylaws illustrate that learned legal gentlemen were involved in its formative years. Their vision of high standards in all aspects of the club has been retained through the years, and Sunday’s Well continues to strive towards excellence.

 

Tennis continues to be the mainstay of the club, but boating, billiards, squash, cricket, bowls, card-playing and fishing, among others, have all had halcyon years throughout the club’s history. Within the premises, each successful sporting season is immortalised in the club’s minute books, perpetual tournament trophies and on the numerous photos that adorn the clubhouse walls. The minute books also give an insight into the significant voluntary input that continues to be a hallmark of the club, detailing the work of the committees that have been key strands in the club’s development. In addition, the reading room’s Rolls of Honour remembers the contribution of the various chairmen and sporting captains. As with any social history, there are countless characters that do not feature on a roll of honour. The early decades of the 20th century saw the club put down roots and consolidate its aims. In this vein, its rules were brought into conformity with the Registration of Clubs (Ireland) Act in 1904.

 

The upkeep of the grounds was important to the club’s image, and monies from members were pumped into improving the infrastructure of the club, be it purchasing billiard balls, providing electricity or trying to solve the ever-present problem of a collapsing river bank. But while improvements were being made around the clock, time was also ticking for an ageing all-male membership.

 

 

During this time, running the club proved a constant struggle; its financial situation gradually worsened while a bank overdraft steadily increased. The Munster and Leinster Bank pressed for a reduction in the overdraft, a request the club couldn’t accommodate while many members were failing to pay their subscriptions on time. Conscious of the unstable state of the Irish economy and its effects at local level, various committees endeavoured to keep subscription fees low. However, these still trebled between 1949 and 1967, and membership predictably nose-dived as a result. The club lost almost a third of its membership in 1963 alone, dropping from 200 to 144.

 

The club’s very existence was in jeopardy during this uncertain period. But the sanctioning of limited junior and female memberships in the 1960s – the latter proving an extremely thorny issue until it was finally resolved with the advent of full female membership in 1994 – helped stem the financial tide, while new blood galvanised the club socially. However, it was the introduction of squash in the 1970s that set the club back on the path to

success.

 

Recent years have seen the club take giant strides in improving and modernising its facilities, with a number of keynote developments during the 1990s and 2000s. While the old-age charm of the clubhouse and billiard room remain, they are now complemented by a gym, a conservatory overlooking the river, a refurbished kitchen, a new administration office and committee room, an extended car park and a new roadway entrance.

 

 Launch of Book

Lord Mayor of Cork, Cllr Dara Murphy with the book’s creative team, Alan Kelly, Alymer Barrett, Chairman of the Club Michael Buckley, Matt Murphy, Cllr Kieran McCarthy & Leila Cotter