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Town councils could be restored

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Almost 400 submissions have been received on a review of local electoral areas currently underway, and a good deal of them from Kerry in what will be the third review of local government since 2008.

The radical reforms of 2014, introduced by Fine Gael Minister Phil Hogan, in the Local Government Reform Act 2014, the biggest in over 100 years, abolished 80 town councils and their powers and with them hundreds of council seats.

Towns were subsumed into new, often huge, geographical areas called Municipal Districts and with them went the urbane tradition of 115 years of town halls, town clerks, town mayors and chairmen, and most importantly revenue-raising powers.

Most of the rates struck and raised locally were spent within the town boundaries with towns fighting against the handover of too much of what they raise to the county council.

But right from the start, the reforms attracted criticism. At a time of cuts in local authority funding, main towns had to share out their crews and finance among smaller towns and villages miles away.

And not least in Killarney.

There was a need to re-imagine town councils. They were too big. There were too many men. Killarney was a case in point. The last town council had all men.

The new reforms won’t bring back the old structures. However, there is a move by Brendan Howlin in the Labour Party which might see to that. If it gets support.

The terms of reference drawn up by Minister for Local Government and Reform John Paul Phelan are to reduce the size of territorially large local electoral areas, limiting councillor numbers to a maximum of seven.

And, in an apparent reversal of the previous policy, there is a specific focus on local areas focusing around towns.

But Labour’s Brendan Howlin says the review, which is to report back this May/June, and implemented in time for the 2019 local elections will not bring back town councils and will not repair the damage of 2014.

And Mr Howlin says what the minister is creating are “notional” new areas for the town.

Phil Hogan’s reforms damaged his own town, Wexford (where Mr Howlin was a former mayor) and left towns at the mercy of rural councillors. Allowing his cabinet colleague to abolish town councils was one of his great regrets as a Labour Minister in government.

“It was one of our significant mistakes. Phil Hogan’s reforms dealt a significant blow against democracy,” he told me.

The Labour leader is introducing a new piece of legislation in a matter of weeks which, if supported, will see the full restoration of town councils as legal entities before the 2019 local elections.

“The Restoration of Town Councils Bill” currently being finalised will seek to repeal sections of Phil Hogan’s 2014 Act so all the main powers of the old town councils would be restored.

Towns are the primary economic drivers and the legislation will restore their rate collecting powers, Mr Howlin says.

Town mayors would also be restored. In Wexford, the last three chairmen were from rural areas, he points out.

A previous bill by Fianna Fáil to appoint a commission to pave the way towards working towards the restoration was passed narrowly last October. But it did not go far enough. Mr Howlin says and hopes Fianna Fáil will support his full restoration bill. He has already met with cross-party deputation of councillors on the issue and he would hope to get support, too, from Sinn Féin.

Will he get support? If he does, it will help resurrect Labour. The abolition of the town councils diminished a means for people to go into politics.

Finally, had there been more women on the town council in Killarney, or even in the county council, or even in the Dáil or Senate (all eight are men), I am certain we would have more pedestrian crossings into our National Park. We still haven’t a crossing from Beech to Mission Road in by the Monsignor O’Flaherty monument. We still have no pedestrian crossing at the new entrance.  We still have no crossing on Beech Road to access the car parks from the supermarket. Women with trolleys, prams and out walking have long ago seen the need for these.

At this stage, it seems we will have an outer ring road before we can achieve a few basic road crossings!

 

 

 

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Chamber pays tribute to late Dick Henggeler

Killarney Chamber of Tourism and Commerce has expressed condolences following the death of Dick Henggeler, the well-known owner of The Rose Hotel in Tralee. Mr Henggeler passed away peacefully at […]

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Killarney Chamber of Tourism and Commerce has expressed condolences following the death of Dick Henggeler, the well-known owner of The Rose Hotel in Tralee.

Mr Henggeler passed away peacefully at his home in Baltimore, USA surrounded by his Aghadoe-born wife Eibhlin (née Moriarty), their son Franz, and other family members.
Dick and Eibhlin purchased The Rose Hotel in 2015 in tribute to their late daughter Dorothy, who represented Washington DC in the 2011 Rose of Tralee Festival.
The Chamber said Mr Henggeler would be remembered for his warmth, good nature and positive approach, as well as for being a forward-thinking and knowledgeable businessman.
“He knew how to run a good hotel and that was and still is very obvious at The Rose Hotel, which is a great success story,” the Chamber said.
It added that continuity of ownership will remain in place, with Eibhlin, Franz, daughter-in-law Amber, and grandchildren Conrad and Rowan continuing to honour Dick’s legacy and vision for the hotel.
“Dick took enormous personal pride in Tralee and all of Kerry and he was always available to generously support any community initiative or endeavour undertaken in Killarney,” the Chamber said.
“He will be greatly missed by all that knew him but he leaves a wonderful legacy.”

He will repose at O’Shea’s Funeral Home, Killarney, on Friday (October 17), from 4:00pm to 6:00pm. The funeral will arrive at St Mary’s Cathedral on Saturday morning at 10:00am for Requiem Mass at 10:30am, with burial afterwards in Aghadoe Cemetery. The Requiem Mass will be live streamed at https://www.churchservices.tv/killarneycathedral.

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Beaufort Film Night returns with French drama-comedy

Beaufort Film Night will return on Friday (October 17) at Cullina National School, with a screening of the French drama-comedy The Marching Band. The film tells the story of Thibaut, […]

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Beaufort Film Night will return on Friday (October 17) at Cullina National School, with a screening of the French drama-comedy The Marching Band.

The film tells the story of Thibaut, a successful conductor recently diagnosed with leukaemia. A search for a bone marrow donor reveals that he was adopted and has a brother, Jimmy, a cafeteria worker.
The two meet, discover a shared love of music, and form a strong bond through an unexpected collaboration with Jimmy’s workplace band.
The Marching Band (French title En Fanfare) will screen at 8.30pm. Admission is €7, cash only, and will cover the motion picture licence fee.
The film has a 12A rating and is in French with English subtitles.
Beaufort Film Night is a non-profit community group that screens cultural English and international films that usually do not receive general release in Kerry.
The event is supported by Kerry County Council Arts Office and Access Cinema. Cullina National School is providing the venue.
Further details are available on Beaufort Film Night’s Facebook page @BeaufortFilmNight.

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