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cover of Community Matters 23april2024
Community Matters 23april2024

Community Matters 23april2024

00:00-56:10

Tuesday evenings Community programme ‘Community Matters’ with Mary Faherty. Kindly sponsored by Connemara Credit Union. Broadcast Tuesday the 23rd Of April 2024 https://www.connemarafm.com/audio-page/

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The Chamber of Commerce in Clifton is conducting a local survey to address the issues of planning permission and the declining population in the area. The Chamber aims to provide opportunities for people to settle in the area and work remotely. They have met with local politicians and the county manager to discuss these concerns and have received support for a remote working hub. The council is also making efforts to speed up the planning process and provide more clarity. The Chamber is running an online survey to gather more information and plans to present the findings to the government. Community Matters is kindly sponsored by Cunnamara Credit Union Ltd, incorporating Clifton, Tully Cross and Carnda branches. Cunnamara Credit Union is here to serve the people of the Cunnamara area. Main office, Clifton and Tully Cross branch, 19521101. Good evening and you are very welcome to this evening's Community Matters, this Tuesday the 23rd of April. Just to give a quick line-up of the interviews ahead, at twenty past seven we're going to be talking to Eoin Clarke, Commercial Director of Switcher.ie with tips on saving money by switching providers, particularly in broadband and energy, and we all want to get tips on saving money, don't we? At half past seven, Chris Macy, Head of Advocacy and Patient Support from the Irish Heart Foundation and Maura Fanning will be on to talk to us about a new drive that is underway to bolster state funding for services which heart and stroke patients in County Galway describe as their lifeline. At seven forty five we have Maria Walsh, Midlands North West MEP, it's the European Parliament and Maria will be coming on talking to us about the impact of social media on the mental health of vulnerable teenagers. But before all that, now with me on the phone I have John Sweeney, President of the Chamber of Commerce. John, you're very, very welcome. Thank you very much, Mary, thank you. Now I know that you have come on to talk to us about a new local survey that has been undertaken or that is being undertaken by the Chamber. Can you tell us a little bit about that? This originated last year. The Chamber had a number of meetings with local politicians and with the newly appointed County Manager and was addressing some of the issues, the bigger issues that seem to be cropping up and one of the biggest issues is planning permission or probably the lack of planning, particularly for locals who want to build and settle down and live in the area and make a commitment to the area. So the Chamber is not, first of all should I say, its policy is not lobbying for planning and doesn't tend to become a lobbyist for planners or for any specific planning permissions but the biggest problem I suppose is the declining and the ageing population in the area. As you know, if you don't have the youth coming up and setting down and getting established the area is dying and we're trying to ensure that that doesn't happen. It has happened in too many towns all over rural Ireland already. So to provide for the people who want to settle here and make a life here and who are not originally from the area and have big connections to the area and planning is part of that. So why do you feel planning has become so difficult to get? I really don't know because we hear of issues, a number of issues and particular planning where you would imagine that planning should be a foregone conclusion and yet any youngster now or any young couple or anybody who is intending to build a house, they feel that they're not going to get the first goal and sometimes they have to have one or two goals and make a couple of applications and I think that's kind of acceptable now at this point and it's been a year, two years and sometimes up to three years looking for planning permission to build a house and I don't think that's fair or equitable and I don't think it's the way things should be. So we did meet with the local, last July we met with all the local politicians from the Ministerial of the Gardauchan to Iain McKeith and all the local politicians to highlight these issues because a number of issues have come up in Clifton and the area around Clifton where one person was turned down for four apartments in the environment of the town, right in the town centre on fairly spurious grounds and so we highlight these issues and that highlights to the planning population and the people getting older and who's going to be, where's the next generation going to come from and how are they going to be provided for and if people of my generation and of that age if we don't act now we will, I believe, we will have failed the next generation. Yeah because I mean, well I know speaking from a personal point of view it's 25 years since I got my planning permission and like that again even at that stage it took a few years to get it but at least at the end of that you would get it but it seems to have gotten much worse in recent times and it's nearly impossible to get these days. And you know, you shouldn't be making a compliment of a planning permission or somebody's desire or wish to build a house and to settle down. Look, I'm not going to get into planning laws but I think that we've stepped too far. The bigger issue here I suppose is in the eyes of, you know, the Chamber is interrupted but the business community and the wider community I suppose in many respects and if you travel all over Connaughton as I do for most weeks and towns inland and they're just, they're dying and some of them are totally dead and others are dying in death and the town centre is gone and businesses are closing down, you know, shops are for sale and to rent and there's nobody living in the town centre and it's just becoming a wasteland. We're very fortunate in Clifton that for at least five months a year there is activity and every door is open and, you know, from Rounstown, Rhymbyle and Leenan and Clifton, Caddisfalfe and all these areas we've got a tourist season and that's brilliant. But increasingly the winters are becoming probably quieter and every year we see more and more businesses becoming seasonal businesses and closing down for the winter and if we allow that to continue it'll just turn the whole area into a holiday area with no other future other than tourist season. So part of this is to stop the continuous and the continued decline into a seasonal area. So the company that the Chamber is trying to get into is to establish a remote working hub so that people can have somewhere to go and can log on and work remotely and, you know, they don't have to commute to Galway or to Dublin or they may do one or two days a week but they can live here and still work from here, which has become the norm now and pretty much, you know, most towns in Ireland now have a remote working hub. Galway has a number of them, Guinness, Tyne has one, you know, Towns and Clare, Westport has one and so on. So all we're looking for is a place to live and a place to work and I don't think that's too much to ask. Absolutely not. So hence the survey. So it's OK for, you know, so in fairness, you know, the politicians have all, you know, they've given a very good hearing. We met the newly appointed county manager and his entire team. He came out to visit us here last September and gave a very good hearing and all he's gone to council has probably been, I suppose, a bit behind the curve for a number of years because he didn't have a permanent appointment in the chief executive role. So the new chief executive, Mr Liam Connealy, you know, he gave a very good hearing. He certainly seems to be very well intentioned. He's appointed his new team, senior management team. So we were in their last fortnight and again, we had our own local councillors and I have to say, you know, Eileen Manion and Gerry King, you know, they are forever pushing the case for all things Cullamara and in particular all things West Cullamara. So they organised a meeting with the county manager again last Monday week and the county manager has made a very firm commitment that their councillors are fully committed to delivering a remote working hub in the area. So this is an accommodation, you know, 70 people to work in the town and to bring life there on a 12-month year. And then again, we raised the issue of housing and connectivity and accessibility rules and so on and so forth. So the meeting here in Clifton last night attended by some of the senior executives and fund co-executives which they dealt with a number of planning issues and they are making, I have to say, to their credit and to give everybody their due, they are certainly making heavy effort to speed up the process, to provide more information, to give more clarity and ease of planning and they have highlighted issues where maybe the people looking for planning may not all be going down the right track and maybe, you know, depending too much on consultants or on politicians, that kind of thing. So there is definitely a move within the council to bring more clarity and I suppose ease of understanding the planning system and what it entails. But we have to welcome that and I do welcome the support from our own councillors and from the new county manager and from Dean Hanlon and Michael Owens. So there is a real commitment there to expediting matters and to provide more clarity. Ultimately to securing more planning commissions. But on the back of all that, it's not just West Cullinvar, it's some of these issues in South Cullinvar and closer to Galway and Carrow and Carragherna and all the areas. And we have seen programmes on TV from Kerry about planning it. So planning comes from the Government, I suppose they are the legislators. At the end of the day, the local officials are just implementing what is a government policy. This is the year in which we have local elections, European elections and so at the time there, it might even look like we might have a general election. So we thought it would be in the Chamber and the Chamber is Charles O'Toole and Damien Joyce and myself and we have Coral Joyce and Anto Corsi. It's OK for us to be banging the drum about what's everybody else saying. So we decided to run with this online survey. It's out there now as part of the week. There has been a huge response to it. I think there have been over 700 responses to it already and people have completed the survey. We are going to run it for a couple of weeks. We are going to collate all the information and put all that together to the best of our ability and then we intend to bring it to the public and then bring it to the people, to the decision makers and our legislators and say this is what people are saying and this is what people are thinking and this is the frustration. Unless we solve this, areas like the west of Ireland are going to continue to decline and we will see nothing but population decline. How can people access the survey then John? The survey is on the Chamber website. Comeary Chamber blog on to that. It's been widely promoted on social media. If you go on to comearychamber.ie you will find it on the website. I think social media is pretty much out there. Anybody who is savvy on social media I think may have seen it or may have access to it. Through programs like this one tonight, Comeary Community Radio, we've been in touch with Greta McGinty for the response from the Irish speaking areas of Comeary as well. We hope to run with it. There will be an advert in this week's Colour Tribune asking people to complete the survey. We will go to all the mediums, print, radio and social media, to encourage people to log on and to complete the survey. It will only affect people who are maybe in the planning process or people who are recently affected by it. It would be nice to give some feedback to the Council, to the Council first and foremost, but to the legislators and the government, based on real data and real facts and not hearsay. Absolutely. If that makes any sense. Is there a closing date then for the survey? We expect to run at least another week. It's a vote to go on indefinitely. We'll bring it to probably another week towards the end of April. It will take another couple of weeks to put all the information together. And then we'd like to have some engagement with maybe officials and maybe politicians, prior to the local elections. I've gone on to the Chamber website while I was talking to you. The survey is very easily accessible. It's one of the first things you see when you scroll down. It only takes two minutes max. It's about housing and about roads. The Goyal by-pass is another issue. The Goyal by-pass doesn't just affect people living in Galway. It affects everybody living west of Galway, and who wants to get around the city or through the city. The waterway from Dublin to Galway has made a huge difference. At the end of the day, the west of Ireland and the west of Panama, tourism is our economy. It's really what the whole economy is based on. People have invested in holiday homes to make use of them, to make greater use of them now than 20 years ago, because it's much easier to get here. Often here, I hear people on the weekends, they've been stuck in Galway for an hour, it took them two hours to get through Galway. If people could get to Connemara, and to Clifton, and to Rimville, and to Ballycanine, and Rolmstead, and everywhere else, where they have their holiday homes, and not be stuck in Galway for an hour, would they make greater use of them on a year-round? I think they would. I know it's a big issue. It's been running there for more than 20 years, the Goyal by-pass. Absolutely, yes. If we don't push for it, and look for it, and just depend on the people of Galway City, it takes us just as much as it does residents of the city. Well, John, I'm afraid I'm going to have to leave it there. Filling out that survey, well, it's in everybody's best interest to get their voice heard, and it does only take one to two minutes to fill out. Thank you for coming on, John, and drawing our attention to it. Thanks to everybody for completing the survey, and we hope that we are touching a nerve, and we hope we are holding something that's close to people's hearts. And it's not just about housing, it's about our future and the next generation. If this generation doesn't look to providing for the next generation, then it will be a prophecy that will be self-fulfilling, and God forbid that will happen. Absolutely. John, thanks so much for joining us. Not at all. Thank you very much. Thank you. Thank you. Bye. John Sweeney there, President with the Connemara Chamber of Commerce. We're going to go with the ads now, and when we come back, we're going to talk to Uncle Arc, Commercial Director with Switcher.ie. Forum Connemara is currently seeking to fill two positions within the organisation, a Project Support Worker, three days per week, based in Clifton, and an Employer, Liaison and Outreach Officer, four days per week, based in Uchterwaard, and that's under the Working Together, the Gubber-le-Cayla programme. Both positions are subject to eligibility criteria, so please refer to the job descriptions and criteria information that you can get at the website www.forumconnemara.ie forward slash job opportunities. Please forward a CV with details of which position you are applying for and send with a cover note by 1 May at 12 noon to Karen Mangan, CEO, Forum Connemara, Letterfrack, County Galway via post, or you can email info at forumconnemara.ie. For any queries in relation to either position, please contact Forum on 09541116. Jobspot on Connemara Community Radio. Beat the April showers with some retail therapy at Brodericks Electrical Castlebar and Westport, or online at broderickselectrical.ie. We have offers on TVs, washing machines, dryers, fridge freezers, dishwashers, and much more throughout April. You'd be a fool not to come in and grab yourself a bargain. And remember, if you can't get to us, just call 09828130 or 0949044735, or buy online at broderickselectrical.ie and we will deliver direct to you. So make life easy on yourself and call in to Brodericks Electrical Castlebar and Westport this April for the best advice and the best price. 1,000 acres of history, beauty and serenity in the heart of Connemara await you this spring at Kylemore Abbey. Fall back in love with the history, enjoy a quiet stroll on the woodland paths, or stop for a moment's quiet reflection in the neo-gothic church. Travel on to feeding time with the Connemara ponies and try delicious homemade produce in the Kylemore kitchen, or shop for some of the best local and Irish designs in the Kylemore Abbey craft and design shop. Book your visit at Kylemoreabbey.com. Kylemore Abbey, a story so timeless it's still being written. We all know the importance of getting fresh fish into our diets. Check out what's on offer at John Joe's Fish Van, situated at the entrance to Connemara West Letter Frack, every Thursday and Friday from 9.30am to 2.30pm. Selling locally caught fish, much of it caught with our own boats. Salmon, hake, cod, sea trout, mackerel, haddock and much more. For more information, orders or requests, please call 0870 555 222 or email joejohn1923 at gmail.com. Joyce's Bar and Grocery recess. Services include grocery, post office, petrol and diesel, lottery agent, bar and live music at the weekends. Bar food daily until 6pm. Sunday lunch specials served from 12.30am until 6pm. Call Joyce's on 0870 555 222. Sunday lunch specials served from 12.30am until 6pm. Call Joyce's on 095 246 58 for more information. When I got up this morning, the house was really freezing. I checked the oil tank, it was empty, that must be the reason. So I called up Sweeney Oil, a truly local company, and took my order for some oil and delivered it straight to me. Sweeney Oil are at your service, friendly, helpful and they care. There are many easy ways to pay, now that's what I call fair. They deliver oil to homes all over Galway and Surround and Sweeney Oil's prices are the very best around. For the best value home heating oil in Galway, call Sweeney Oil today on 1800 555 999 or visit sweeneyoil.ie. Sweeney Oil, the warmer way to heat your home. Community Matters is kindly sponsored by Connemara Credit Union Ltd. Incorporating Clifton, Tully Cross and Carna Branches. 095 211 01 Well you're very, very welcome back to the programme this evening and now on the phone with me I have Eoin Clarke, Commercial Director with Switcher.ie. Eoin, you're very welcome to Connemara Community Radio. Good evening Mary. Well I know you've come on to tell us about tips on saving money by switching providers and I think everybody would appreciate tips on saving money in this day and age. Can you tell us a little bit about Switcher first and foremost? Yeah, Switcher has been helping Irish households save money on their household bills, things like gas, electricity, broadband, mobile phones, even mortgages, credit cards, home loans, etc. for around just over a decade now. Okay. So we're accredited by the CRU, which is the Energy Regulator. It means we're independent, accurate, impartial and we show the whole of market as well. So we show all the energy deals that are available in the market so a consumer can make an informed choice on what deal is the best for them. So yeah, I mean there's a wide range of products that you can save money on Switcher. The site is free to use and it's easy to use we would hope as well. So as I said, we're helping thousands of households save money each week and there is a lot of money to be saved. I think we've gone through a difficult time in particular in the energy markets where prices have over doubled. In the early part of this year we did see prices starting to reduce but they're nowhere near the levels that they were pre-COVID and pre-the energy crisis but they have come down and there is hope that there will be further reductions but there's still a lot of volatility in the wholesale markets. Some of that is down to market forces and things like if there's any sort of war, etc. that can impact on things that are happening in the Middle East for example. But one of the positive things that is happening in the energy market for households is that energy suppliers have started to offer bigger discounts. So I think during COVID and post-COVID our energy bills were going up but also there wasn't what we would call deep discounts or significant discounts on your standard rate. We are starting to see bigger discounts coming through now. So like a typical household if they're on typical standard plans for gas and electricity and they use the national average consumption say for example so be an average household probably three bedroom house, etc. they could possibly save up to about €780 by switching. So that didn't exist a year ago or a year and a half ago. So there is value to be had by switching. So the advice would be if you haven't switched in over a year you're most likely out of contract. Most of the energy tariffs that we sign up to they offer a 12-month contract and a 12-month discount. But once that discount has ended you're typically paying your energy supplier's standard rate which is the most expensive rate. Now you will get discounts for things like paying by direct debit or online billing but I suppose the quickest and most efficient way to save money is by comparing what the market has to offer using an accredited website like Switcher to do that and seeing what rates and tariffs are available to you and making that switch. As I said you can save over €700 a typical household but the switching process if you have everything in front of you it probably takes about five or six minutes. What you would need is a copy of your gas and electricity bill. So on your gas and electricity bill you're going to have reference numbers. So on your electricity bill it will be your NPRN that's a 10-digit number. And on your gas bill it's a GPRN and that's a metre reference number and that's a 7-digit number. So if you have both of them you'll need both of them for switching and you'll need your latest metre readings as well. So some people have metres within the house, they're under the stairs. Some people have boxes on the side of the house where they're outside so they might have to go out and do that. But if you have a mobile phone for example you can open the box, take a photograph and then write it down. And if you visit Switcher you'll need that with your GPRN, your NPRN. Sorry Owen but what about people as well that are on pay-as-you-go? Yes, pay-as-you-go customers can switch as well. It's just a different metre type, that's all it is. So for example if you have a prepayment metre in your house you will still have the option to go to a standard metre. So if you are a prepayment customer, which I can talk about in a little bit more detail in terms of the rates that you pay, but if you are a prepayment customer you can switch to what's called a standard metre. So that option is available. Just one thing with prepayment plans, again depending on the ones that you're on, typically they're some of the most expensive plans in the market. Yes, there's an advantage that you can control your money by topping up but the actual unit rate that you pay for your electricity for example is substantially more expensive depending on which energy supplier you're with. So again, even if you have a prepayment metre, it's definitely worth checking to see what the market has to offer. A prepayment might sue people and if it does they would stick with that payment model and it might sue them for example if they're a landlord. It makes life a lot simpler in terms of receiving no bills etc. Okay. So to make the change then for people who aren't pay-as-you-go, you need your NPRN number and you need your GPRN number. And if you're signing up to, typically the largest discounts are for customers who sign up to direct debit and online billing. You'll get increased discounts for that. So if you're prepared to pay by direct debit, you would need your bank details as well when you're switching, so your IBAN for example. And then for online billing you'd need your email address. So if you have kind of those four things, your reference numbers, your metre reference numbers, your bank details, your email address and then your metre readings because the metre readings are required. Your new energy supplier will send your metre readings to your old energy supplier so they know where to cut off your billing. So that's what they're required for. So as I say, that process can, I suppose if somebody gave you a job and said, listen, would you like to earn €700 in five minutes, you'd probably jump at the chance. Thank you very much. So this is, you know, it's well worth looking at it as well. Again, you know, obviously there's other household bills, you know, things like insurance and things like broadband as well. I think in the current climate where we're all feeling the pinch, I think it's advisable to stay on top of your bills, stay. And what I mean by that is when you receive a bill, you know, don't put it on top of the microwave and leave it there. Actually spend the time to look at it, you know, how much are you paying? Is the information on your bill correct? So is your billing correct? So question it a little bit and also make a note of when you sign up to a particular service. As I said, the majority of them are 12-month contracts or, you know, a 12-month policy for insurance, et cetera. You'll get reminders for certain products. So I think it's key to make sure that you know when your service is going to end so you're free to shop around and see what the market has to offer. And, again, I think we carried out some research just in January just past, where if we looked at things like broadband, your mobile phone, and gas and electricity, you know, a typical household could save €1,000 just by staying on top of them and switching regularly to the cheapest deals available in the market. So that's quite substantial, you know. It certainly is, absolutely. Especially when, as I say, we're feeling the pitch. 100%. Well, that is fantastic advice, Owen. So for anybody out there who is interested in, is out of their contract period and would like to shop around, switcher.ie is where you go to. Owen, we're very, very grateful to you for coming on. You're welcome. It's my pleasure. Thanks so much. Thank you. Okay, we're going to go with a little piece of music now, and when we come back we're going to be talking, hopefully, to Chris Macy and Maura Fanning. 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