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Businessmen to receive Killarney’s highest honour

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Two very prominent and successful businessmen are to be honoured in Killarney with the prestigious Order of Innisfallen Award.

The award is in recognition of the enormous contribution they and their families have made to the economic and social fabric of the community.

Brothers-in-law Donal Ring and Michael O’Donoghue will be honoured at a ceremony to be held in Muckross House, Killarney on Wednesday, December 14 at 4pm.

The Order of Inisfallen is the highest honour Killarney can bestow and the awards scheme is administered by Killarney Chamber of Tourism and Commerce and Kerry County Council.

Entrepreneur Donal Ring is the founder of Munster Joinery and the O'Donoghue Ring Collection. He and his brother, Patrick, established Munster Joinery in 1973 with a small operation at their family home in Ballydesmond, on the Kerry-Cork border.

The company has grown to become one of the largest manufacturers of windows and doors in Europe and next year Munster Joinery will celebrate a landmark 50 years in business.

The family-run company employs 1,800 people with a further 900 on the payroll in the UK.

With operations in Ireland, north and south, and the United Kingdom, the hugely progressive company has a 960,000sq ft production facility on an 80-acre site in Ballydesmond with another 280,000sq ft plant on a 28-acre site in Wellesbourne in the UK. Both plants serve the Irish, European and international markets.

Close on 50 years after setting up the business, Donal Ring is still at the helm and continues to oversee all aspects of the business.

In 1978, Donal and his wife, Noreen, purchased the property then known as the East Avenue Hotel – now the 66-bedroom Killarney Avenue Hotel.

Noreen’s brother, Michael O’Donoghue, joined his sister and brother-in-law in the hospitality business and became one of its most successful and respected operators for over 40 years.

In 1986 Michael launched Revelles nightclub in the East Avenue and attracted many top acts, from Johnny Logan to Sinitta, to perform there while countless marriages and relationships can be traced back to a chance first encounter in Revelles.

The company expanded in 1989 with the purchase of the former Imperial Hotel which is now known as the Killarney Towers Hotel with 182 bedrooms.

Also in 1989, Michael developed a hugely successful business in his birthplace of Castleisland with the building of the 52-bedroom River Island Hotel.

The flagship town centre Killarney Plaza Hotel and Spa opened in 2002 with 198 bedrooms.

Michael was at the helm as managing director of the O'Donoghue Ring Collection until his recent retirement and the O'Donoghue Ring Collection is now one of the largest employers in Kerry.

He is and always has been a stalwart supporter of hospitality and all things Killarney.

Michael also led the town’s relationship with tour companies who have brought a vast amount of business to Killarney and Kerry.

Donal and Michael also expanded into the UK hospitality market with Centre Island Hotels which now has hotel properties based in Liverpool, Manchester and Birmingham.

PRAISE

Mayor of Killarney, Cllr Niall Kelleher, said both Donal Ring and Michael O’Donoghue are prime examples of what can be achieved in life through hard work, sheer determination and a solid business plan and they have set a great example for future generations to follow.

“The employment they have created in Kerry over five decades has been incredible and, given the ongoing success and growth of both Munster Joinery and the O'Donoghue Ring Collection, it shows no sign of abating,” he said.

“Through their hotels they have certainly helped to put Killarney and Kerry on the map, both nationally and internationally, and it is wonderful to see that, even with the enormous success they have enjoyed, they both have their feet very much on the ground,” the mayor added.

Cairde Chill Áirne Chairman, Conor Hennigan, said he is looking forward to Donal and Michael being inducted into the Order of Inisfallen as they are both very worthy and popular recipients.

“Collectively, Killarney Municipal District Authority and Killarney Chamber of Tourism and Commerce are delighted to bestow Killarney’s highest honour on these two fine gentlemen and to recognise them for the tremendous contribution they have made,” he said.

The Cairde Chill Áirne Order of Inisfallen awards scheme was established in 2005 to recognise outstanding contributions by people to the economic development of the town and its tourism industry.
Previous recipients include actor Michael Fassbender, former Taoiseach Enda Kenny, industrialist Isolde Liebherr, Charles, the former Prince of Wales and now King of England, entertainer Daniel O’Donnell, tour operators Brian Stack, Linda Roberts and Brian McColgan, travel writer Susan Poole, former ministers John O’Donoghue and Jimmy Deenihan and tourism official Margaret Cahill.

Inisfallen Island is one of Killarney’s best-known and most historic heritage sites. It began as a place of healing and became a major centre of learning where the Annals of Inisfallen, the oldest contemporary source of the history of Munster, were scripted.

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Council to write to Minister over hospital opening delay

Kerry County Council members are to write to the Minister for Health and the Health Service Executive (HSE) to express frustration over the continued delays in opening the new Killarney […]

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Kerry County Council members are to write to the Minister for Health and the Health Service Executive (HSE) to express frustration over the continued delays in opening the new Killarney Community Nursing Unit.

The decision follows a motion brought forward by Councillor Maura Healy-Rae at Monday’s full council meeting in Tralee.
In her motion, Councillor Healy-Rae highlighted that despite the urgent need for the facility, recent information revealed that the Health Service Executive has not discussed additional staffing requirements with the Irish Nurses and Midwives Organisation (INMO) since May 2025.
Members of the council supported the call, expressing disappointment that the opening of the unit remains stalled. The letter to the Minister for Health and the Health Service Executive will formally outline the local authority’s concerns regarding the lack of progress and the apparent breakdown in communication over the staffing levels necessary to make the unit operational.

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JOE GAFFEY RIP A PERSONAL TRIBUTE

  By Eamonn Fitzgerald It was always uplifting to see and greet Joe Gaffey enjoying his work in Killarney. He kept the windows so clean, saying clean windows make a […]

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By Eamonn Fitzgerald

It was always uplifting to see and greet Joe Gaffey enjoying his work in Killarney.

He kept the windows so clean, saying clean windows make a great first impression, allowing natural light to enter, and helping to reduce energy costs.
He took such pride in his window cleaning business. I said, “Joe, even the humble flies are afraid to land on your cleaned windows”. Quick as a wink, he responded, “they’re afraid of skidding on my spic and span windows, like a jet crash-landing in these downpours”. With the trademark cloth whipped from his back pocket, he was back at work.
He loved the craic and the banter, but when it came to soccer, he was deadly serious, a brilliant player with Fossa FC (now extinct) where I first got to know the star player from Athlone and Jock (Alex Rintoul), his great teammate.
Teak tough, but a scrupulously fair defender, Joe was a godsend for the Fossa’s keeper. Not even the speediest inside forwards could get past him. He was a believer and practitioner of the Biblical and Lord of the Rings dictum ‘thou shalt not pass’. Not a blunt stopper, but you just could not get by such was his defensive skill and perfect timing, the sine qua non for brilliant players in any sports code. That lethal left leg, that trusted ciotóg never failed. He had the same sense of timing playing golf.
In previewing the 1976 All-Ireland final versus Dublin, I asked several members of the general public and GAA enthusiasts to predict the outcome for the Killarney Advertiser. All predicted a definite win for Kerry. A repeat of ‘75 was a dead cert. Joe was the only one to get it correct: a surprise win for the Dubs. He got a lot of mileage out of that episode.
How he would have loved Westmeath’s fairytale win over fancied Meath on Sunday last, his final day. Ach bhí an t-am istigh. The ref called for the ball. Game of life over, but our fond memories of Joe will endure. We’ll miss his professional expertise and his endearing and unfailing good humour. Slán abhaile Joe.
To his wife Julie, sons Darren and Jonathan, his extended family and his many friends and admirers, comhbhrón ó chroí.

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