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Local political groundwork helped secure ETB campus

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By Sean Moriarty

Plans announced this week that the Kerry Education and Training Board will take over the vacant Pretty Polly site and convert it into a third level education centre were first revealed by the Killarney Advertiser in May last year.

Cllr Niall ‘Botty’ O’Callaghan

Cllr Maura Healy Rae

Killarney Municipal District officials and senior ETB managers examined the former factory on Friday, May 7, 2021 to assess its suitability as a campus.

The visit came about after local councillors Marie Moloney and Niall ‘Botty’ O’Callaghan used their influence as political members of the ETB’s board of management. Maura Healy-Rae also played a huge role in securing that first visit.

Earlier in 2021, a Killarney Municipal District meeting was told that all interested parties had withdrawn from a tender process regarding the takeover of the former factory.

Moloney, Healy-Rae and O’Callaghan were aware that the ETB was actively looking for a site or a building for a dedicated Killarney campus and that sparked the first interest in the former factory.

Once the project became viable it was taken over by the senior Department of Education and Department of Further and Higher Education.

“During all my time in politics, I feel I have really done something to benefit the whole community,” Moloney told the Killarney Advertiser.

“Our job is to help the people of Killarney and what better benefit is this?”

PROJECT

The project proposal involves the repurposing of the existing buildings of the former Sara Lee and Pretty Polly factories in Killarney.

The site is approximately 4.94 acres with the existing building's footprint of circa 11,000 square meters, primarily comprised of the original single-storey factory building which was constructed in the late 1960s. It will be at least four years before construction is complete.

“We have been driving it, and I mean driving it, from day one,” Cllr O’Callaghan told the Killarney Advertiser.

“This is going to be iconic for Killarney, this is huge news and has the makings of the town. I will make sure that the Polly is high on the agenda for every ETB meeting going forward.”

The site is located just off the N22 National Primary Road offering ease of access from all major road routes into Killarney. The site also provides ample onsite parking with less than 2 kilometres access to the Killarney town centre and bus/rail stations.

“It is an ideal location,” Healy-Rae said. “Without three councillors from Killarney this would never have happened. We pushed that it would be an ideal site. ETB officials were very good too, they made a strong and convincing application. There was a lot of effort in the process and I acknowledge them too.”

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Concerns over future of St Mary of the Angels

Two Kerry TDs have voiced concerns over the future of St Mary of the Angels and St Francis Special School in Beaufort, highlighting the urgent need for respite services for […]

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Two Kerry TDs have voiced concerns over the future of St Mary of the Angels and St Francis Special School in Beaufort, highlighting the urgent need for respite services for children and adults with profound disabilities and special needs.

The campus, set on lands generously donated by the Doyle family, offers 30 acres of grounds, existing buildings, and services, making it a valuable asset for the provision of respite care in Kerry. TD Michael Cahill emphasized that the Doyle family’s wishes should be respected, and that the grounds should be made accessible immediately.
“The special needs community in Kerry has a major respite crisis and families don’t have time to wait. Families need help — they are not asking for full-time residential care but respite care, a break, a helping hand,” Deputy Cahill said.
He added that a bespoke approach is needed to meet the individual needs of children attending St Francis Special School. “Many of the children in the county with profound needs need a safe haven where they can roam the grounds freely, and St Mary of the Angels offers this.”
Deputy Cahill has accompanied several Ministers to the Beaufort campus to highlight its value to Disability Health Service providers. A working group has been formed including St John of Gods, the HSE, representatives of residents at St Mary of the Angels, and St Francis Special School, to explore options for maintaining and expanding respite services.
“Parents are worn out and at the end of their tether. This needs to be dealt with expeditiously, in an environment of cooperation between the relevant Government Departments of Health, Disability, and Education. We need to get this across the line urgently and put it permanently in place,” he said.
Deputy Cahill pointed to the current shortfall of respite services in Kerry. “As of now, Cunamh Iveragh respite in Cahersiveen is only open Friday to Sunday, running at half capacity — two adults per night instead of four. The issue is staffing, and the HSE will not release funding to open full-time. The Beaufort campus is available and should be utilised as parents are crying out for overnight respite. Cooperation and compassion could see this done quickly.”
TD Danny Healy Rae echoed these concerns during a Dáil speech this week. “We are still short of respite beds on the southern side of the constituency. Families caring for people with disabilities just want a break, but there is nowhere available locally. Places are being offered only in Tipperary or Meath for those needing new residential care. It makes no sense. St Mary of the Angels in Beaufort has 40 or 50 acres of grounds that could be expanded, with facilities already in place such as swimming pools. It could be developed as a model for the rest of the country.”
Both TDs are urging the Government and the HSE to take immediate action to utilise the Beaufort campus for respite care, in line with the intentions of the Doyle family and the needs of Kerry families.

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Cardiac Response Unit’s ‘Restart a Heart’ training event

Killarney Cardiac Response Unit (KCRU) is set to run a range of events as part of the global initiative Restart A Heart, which aims to increase awareness and actual rates […]

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Killarney Cardiac Response Unit (KCRU) is set to run a range of events as part of the global initiative Restart A Heart, which aims to increase awareness and actual rates of bystander CPR worldwide.

The main event, titled RAH 2025, invites the public to learn life-saving skills and the basic steps in the chain of survival. This will take place on Saturday, October 18, at the Killarney Outlet Centre.
Members of the public are encouraged to join KCRU at the centre between 10:00 am and 5pm.
Key feature of the day will be the CPR Competition, offering “fantastic prizes to be won.”
For further information, visit www.killarneycru.ie/rah25

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