Pages

Showing posts with label businesses. Show all posts
Showing posts with label businesses. Show all posts

Thursday, November 20, 2014

Donie's Ireland daily news BLOG update

Irish Water will still need some  drop’s’s of State funding

 

PUBLIC UTILITY’S EARNING ABILITY TO BE SEVERELY LIMITED

Water protesters shout at Minister for Education Jan O’Sullivan as she crosses the street outside Leinster House this evening.
The original concept for Irish Water was as a public utility which would eventually have the financial strength to borrow money from the markets, thus removing much of the burden for investment in the water network from the general exchequer.
At best, with its earnings ability now limited, Irish Water will now emerge as a kind of hybrid creature, depending on a mix of exchequer funding, charges from homes and businesses and some borrowing to fund its investment.
It starts with one big financial handicap. It is spending up to €500 million installing water meters, but with charges now effectively at a flat rate for a prolonged period, it has no way of getting a return on this investment. Households who use less will pay less – so there may be some small benefit in saving water. But higher water use will not mean higher charges.
And as the original PwC report on water services pointed out, water meters, to remain effective, need to be maintained, recalibrated and eventually replaced.
At a basic level, the lower level of charges means that more of the investment will be funded from general taxation and less via direct levies on consumers and businesses.
The Irish Water’s borrowing power in future will also depend on its income and earnings, the idea of turning the company into a stand-alone utility – like the ESB – looks remote. Irish Water will need the drip- drip of direct exchequer subvention to support its operations and investments for the foreseeable future.
In the short term, work still has to be done.
One the face of it, the figures suggest that the company may squeeze through the so-called market corporation test – used to determine whether it is an independent entity and that the money spent on it stays off the State balance sheet.
The rules here are open to some interpretation, so no-one can say for sure whether Irish Water will pass the test, likely to be undertaken next Spring. If it does not, the Government will face a problem with its 2015 budget figures, as most of the cash spent on Irish Water will move back into the exchequer figures.
The basic rule for the test is that the company gets more from charges than from the government. This will just about be the case in 2015 and 2016 – in the later year the sums are tight with €514 million in expected revenue from charges and €479 million from the Government’s subvention.
There may be some leeway granted in the figures for EU purposes. But the level of income is well below the cost of providing water services to houses and is also much less than assumed in the original report by PwC on how Irish Water might develop enough earnings to eventually emerge as a stand-alone company.
There are other questions, too. Despite the cut in charges, the expected revenue from household charges has only been cut from €300 million to €270 million. It remains to be seen if this is achievable.
If bad debts build up due to non payment by households, then the finances could come under pressure. Remarkably the historical compliance rate for non domestic charges has been just over 50 per cent. If this is repeated in the domestic sector, it will be bad news for Irish Water and for the Government’s attempt to keep it all off balance sheet in the years ahead.

MORE DIRECT COST IS ALSO FALLING BACK ON THE EXCHEQUER.

Giving €100 back to each household will cost around €130 million next year – twice what was budgeted for originally. The net amount to be collected is now just €140 million, a fairly trivial amount in the overall budget sums. Part of the rationale of water charges – to move some of the burden of taxation away from income – will not be achieved in any meaningful way.
It now remains to be seen how much Irish Water can afford to invest. The original plan had been to invest €550 million per annum or more, to start addressing the historical under-investment which meant that over 40 per cent of water leaks away.
With such a low charging structure now in place, the financial rationale for establishing Irish Water remains in question – we will now have to seen whether the promised operational benefits of having one organisation in charge can yield some benefit.

Revealed today: No charge to Irish households for use of new Eircode postcodes

 

NEW SYSTEM WILL COST SMALL BUSINESSES ABOUT €10 PER MONTH, TDS TOLD

Then minister for Communications Pat Rabbitte with Liam Duggan, business development director of Capita Ireland, announcing details of Eircode, Ireland’s new national postcode system, earlier this year.
Households will not have to change their address or face mandatory charges when the new postcode system is introduced next May, TDs and Senators have been told.
Eircode, the Republic’s new postcode system, will cost the Government about €27million, but households will not have to pay additional charges and small businesses can have access to the Eircode database for as little as about €10 per month.
In some cases use of the Eircode will be free – for example when a person inputs a postcode they already know into a vehicle’s satellite navigation system.
Freight forwarders are to be charged for access to the Eircode database, but costs to the industry would not be anything like a reported €80 million, backers of the system have told the Oireachtas Committee on Transport and Communications.
Public servant Eamonn Molloy, who was tasked with procuring the new postcodes, told committee chairman John O’Mahoney that claims by freight handlers that participation in the Eircode system could cost them up to €80 million were wrong.
“It is not going to be of that order, he said.
Mr Molloy, an assistant secretary general of the Department of Communications, said the lack of a postcode was affecting on the State’s competitiveness, adding to the cost of doing business here.

‘FULLY COMMITTED’

Liam O’Sullivan, mails operations director with An Post, said the postal service was fully committed to the new system, but that it would not be mandatory for people to add the post code to letters.

AN POST WILL CONTINUE TO DELIVER LETTERS WITHOUT THE CODES.

Liam Duggan of technology firm Capita, which was awarded the contract to roll out the new code, said charges for freight companies to have access to the Eircode database would be significantly lower than had been reported.
He said the advice for many small businesses with clients numbering less than 100 was to ask the clients directly for their new postcode. The code would work in a vehicles GPS system and therefore result in no payments to Capita, he said.
For many small businesses with larger numbers of clients, he said access to the database may be had in two ways – either payment by the number of users of the database in a company, or by payment of “a few cents” every time a postcode was required.
This latter method would typically cost such companies with about 100 clients “about €10 per month”, he said.
Mr Duggan said there were a number of ways to pay for regional access or for access to the entire database of 2.2 million addresses, which he said would be only required by very large companies.
These companies would have to work out their own cost benefit analysis to see if access to the data bases was of value to them.

Most shoppers think the country-of-origin on the labels on food is unclear

 

Survey finds vast majority of Irish would like to see more information on food product labels

Research has found that 95% of consumers would like to see the country-of-origin” labelling on all grocery food and drink products.
Only 11% of shoppers believe the country-of-origin labelling on food produce in Irish shops is clear, according to a survey by lobby group Love Irish Food.
Apart from a small number of food products like beef and fish, there is no legal requirement to show country-of-origin information on processed grocery food products.
In practice, this means chicken imported from abroad and coated with bread crumbs here can be labelled as made in Ireland.
“As a result Irish shoppers are confronted by mis-directed information as they try to be confident in the food that they feed to their families,” the Love Irish Food group said.
Research carried out by the group found 95% of consumers would like to see country-of-origin labelling on all grocery food and drink products.
The group said brands that sound like they are produced in Ireland using for example Irish family names or old Irish brands that were once produced here but are now imported are causing confusion to Irish shoppers in their search to know where these products are produced.
“Lyons Tea, Cully & Sully soups and HB Ice Cream are examples of products that some people believe are Irish made,” it said.
Executive director of Love Irish Food Kieran Rumley said: “At a time when confidence in what you are buying and knowing where everyday grocery products are produced is critial to Irish households, Irish shoppers feel greater clarity on labelling is required.”
“Made at an Irish or even English, French or Polish address would give shoppers the information that they need to decide if they want to continue buying from that source.”

Humans finally figure out how to climb buildings using the artificial gecko feet

  
Scientists discovered a number of years ago that the modest gecko makes use of a fascinating trick of physics to remain stuck to surfaces. A gecko’s foot is covered in ridges that exploit van der Waals forces to adhere to anything that’s sufficiently smooth.
Now researchers at Stanford working with the US Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) have created a functional human-scale version of the gecko’s foot. Just strap these pads to your hands, and get climbing… slowly.
Physicists have known about the van der Waals force for decades, but its effects are rarely seen beyond the microscopic scale. The van der Waals force is simply an attractive force between two molecules that is not due to covalent or ionic bonding (i.e. molecule forming). It has to do with the way electrons are shared within molecules.
As these negative particles shift around in the cloud surrounding a positively charged nucleus, they can occasionally cluster on one side, which gives the molecule a temporary charge differential or “dipole.” Other molecules have a permanent dipole, but the effect is the same–there’s a weak attraction between them.
The hand-sized pads designed by Stanford and DARPA are operating entirely on van der Waals force, just like a gecko. There are 24 small panels on each pad the size of a postage stamp, which are arranged in slanted rows. None of the panels would feel particularly sticky if you were to touch them, but pressing the pad to a glass surface and pulling down makes it instantly stick. The large surface area of the pads ensures that it remains in place until the user lifts it. Unlike past attempts, researchers believe this design can be used for long periods of time, not just for short demos.
On a microscopic level, this silicone material works much like a real gecko’s feet. A gecko has ridges called setae on its feet, each of which is covered in microscopic hair-like projections called spatulae. This gives the gecko’s foot a much larger effective surface area than you’d think just looking at it.
The artificial material developed by researchers is similar, made from a type of silicon material called polydimethylsiloxane. Each of the 24 pads is covered with microscopic slanted wedges that increase effective surface area. Arranging the gripping surface into separate pads helps the device cling to irregularities in the surface, but it still requires a mostly smooth surface to work.
Even before developing this material, researchers knew sticky gloves wouldn’t be good enough. One problem with the “Spider-Man” model of climbing walls is that most people have considerably more strength in their legs than their arms. That makes the climbing gloves insufficient to scale walls no matter how well they stick. To get around this, the researchers have attached a series of cables to each hand pad that transfers the load to the feet. There’s a rigid platform for each foot to rest on, so the climber can shift their weight back and forth, re-positioning one pad at a time then stepping up onto the now higher platform.
You can see this method at work in the video above, and it isn’t much more strenuous than climbing a ladder. However, it’s pretty slow–the video is sped up by 2 times. The team hopes future designs will make the gecko climbing system easier and faster. There’s also still work to do optimizing the micro-wedge material for less smooth surfaces and finding a way to keep it clean. This is still a big achievement as the first technology that can support a human climber using van der Waals forces.

These natural selenium based antioxidant foods may boost female fertility

  

Here’s another reason why women should stock up on protein-rich foods. According to a new study published in the journal Metallomics, foods rich in protein contain a certain antioxidant that can boost fertility in women.

Red meat, seafood and nuts like Brazil nuts are valuable sources of selenium which has been seen to be beneficial for female fertility. Melanie Ceko from University of Adelaide, Australia explains, “We have known for some time that selenium boosts fertility in men, but until now no one has researched about how this element could be involved in healthy reproduction in women.”
Not only does selenium play a vital role in influencing female fertility, but it is also significant in maintaining proper biological functions. “Selenium is important for many biological functions, such as immune response, thyroid hormone production, and acts as an antioxidant, helping to detoxify damaging chemicals in the body,” Ceko added. Simply put, this antioxidant plays a key role in the development of healthy ovarian follicles. Ovarian follicles are responsible for the production of eggs.
Through their research, experts tried to find out where selenium is generally located in the ovary. It was found that gene expression of GPX1 was significantly higher – in some cases double – in egg cells that culminated into a pregnancy.
“Our findings are important, because they show that selenium and selenoproteins are at elevated levels in large, healthy ovarian follicles. We suspect they play a critical role as an antioxidant during the late stages of follicle development, helping to lead to a healthy environment for the egg,” Ceko concludes.
However, they also cautioned against the adverse effects of excessive selenium intake stating that too much of it can be toxic. The team is hopeful that the current research will help in devising new ways to treat female infertility.

DANGEROUS VIEWING next? 

NOT FOR THE FEINT HEAR-TED.

Why are Antarctic seals trying to have sex with penguins?

  

FUR SEALS AND PUPS SIT ON A BEACH ON ST. PAUL ISLAND, ALASKA, IN THIS 2006 HANDOUT PHOTO

A group of researchers say they have observed three new incidents of fur seals trying to have sex with king penguins on an island located in the sub-Antarctic Indian Ocean.
In a study published last week in the journal Polar Biology, researchers from the University of Pretoria said they have observed three different occurrences of Antarctic fur seals sexually coercing king penguins on Marion Island.
Marion Island Marine Mammal Programme. 
The researchers captured the three incidents on video. Dr. P.J. Nico De Bruyn, one of the study’s main authors, had previously observed a similar case in 2006.
According to the study, all four incidents followed a similar pattern, where a male fur seal chased, captured and then mounted a king penguin.
“The seal then attempts copulation several times with periods of rest in between,” the study said.
In three of the four cases, the fur seals released the penguins after forcing themselves on them. But in one interaction, the seal killed the penguin after sex and then ate parts of its neck and chest.
While the hunting of king penguins has been observed on the island in the past, the researchers say these four incidents may be part of an “emerging” sexual behaviour among the seals.
The researchers hypothesize that two drivers may be prompting the “unusual behaviour.”
The first hypothesis is that it may be an extreme case of reproductive interference (interspecies sex), caused by a lack of available female seals.
The authors say the seals may be specifically engaging in “heterospecific mating attempts,” which involve attempts to mate without any preceding courtship.
“With the continued growth of the (fur seal) population at Marion Island, the population might be reaching levels where there exists increasing competition for access to females,” the researchers say.
The second hypothesis is that the fur seals may be learning the behaviour from each other and may be associating it with some sort of reward.
The authors note that past research has shown that seals have demonstrated an ability to learn.
“The group is considered highly adaptable to novel circumstances and display behavioural plasticity when faced with environmental pressures,” they write.
“Learning behaviour is usually associated with a reward or threat – what would the value of this learned behaviour be to the seal?”    

Thursday, May 16, 2013

Donie's Ireland daily news BLOG Wednesday


Dunne’s Stores victory as judge chops rent by a third

 

THE DECISION TO SLASH DUNNES STORES RENTAL PRICE BY 35PC HAS BEEN WELCOMED BY THE BUSINESS GROUPS AS A POSITIVE MOVE TO “CURTAIL THE MADNESS”.

The retail giant led by Margaret Heffernan (pic above) secured a cut in rental prices for its George’s Street property from a Circuit Civil Court yesterday.
Judge Jacqueline Linnane said that the supermarket chain was entitled to its own reduction and slashed the amount of rent Dunnes was paying.
Decline: ”The economy is in recession, there is a high rate of unemployment and there has been a fall in retail sales and a decline in consumer spending,” Judge Linnane said.
Dunnes Stores Dublin will now pay 35pc less to Layden Properties George’s Street Ltd for 10,500 square feet of retail floor space in the 125-year-old listed building it also uses as a head office.
ISME chief Mark Fielding said that it is a positive step in the battle to renegotiate rent prices for businesses.
“It seems as if the courts are at long last copping on to the fact that businesses cannot afford the Celtic Tiger rents that have been foisted on them,
“Any move to curtail the madness in the rental prices is welcomed. Landlords themselves are under the pressure from the banks and insurance companies but we would welcome it, obviously, if it is setting a precedent.”
However, the representative for small and medium businesses lashed out at Government bodies who have failed to step up and take action on this issue.
“There is still a long way to go,” he said.
Tackle: “I would have numerous cases of smaller businesses – that would be nothing like the likes of Dunnes Stores – and are unable to meet the rent. They don’t have the wherewithal to take a High Court case.
“With the Government chickening out on their promise to tackle upward only rent reviews – which they promised to do in their programme for Government – it is good that the courts are taking charge.
“The Government has instead scurried into the corner and said that they can’t tackle upward-only rent reviews.”
The review reduces the pre-existing rate for the retail area of €50 per square foot by 35pc to €32.50 per square foot.

Irish Government reviewing tax on oil, & gas exploration

  

Minister for Communications Pat Rabbitte has said an examination of tax rates for oil and gas exploration was being done to try to attract more investment offshore to increase the level of prospectivity.

Mr Rabbitte said he did not think Ireland was very much out of line with other countries in terms of rates and he said very high rates would deter exploration.
Speaking on RTÉ’s Morning Ireland programme, Mr Rabbitte said the alternative of setting up a State exploration company was not possible as Ireland did not have the money.
Mr Rabbitte’s comments came as Sinn Féin proposed new legislation seeking up to 80% tax on major Irish oil and gas discoveries.
Sinn Féin spokesperson for Communications, Energy and Natural Resources Michael Colreavy said the party favoured a new tax regime which collected a graduated range of higher taxes from companies involved in oil and gas production but which did not discourage other companies which specialised in exploration.Under Sinn Féin’s plan, taxes on petroleum finds would rise depending on the size of the energy discovery.
Ireland currently applies a 25% corporation tax levy on petroleum firms while oil and gas field profits are hit with a graduated series of tax bands from 0-15%.
Mr Colreavy said that the party had not fixed a specific value for a major discovery. The proposed tax increase would not be retrospective and would only apply to future petroleum finds, he said.

Why don’t our GPs prescribe generic drugs more?

        
Moves by generic medicines maker Teva Pharmaceuticals to encourage greater awareness of post-patent drugs is very welcome. The company announced that it is using broadcaster Gay Byrne to front a new campaign to broaden awareness of generic medicines.
The state has been trying to save money by changing its purchasing policies in relation to medicines, with some success. One of the state’s biggest expenses in relation to medicine is through the medical card system.
Surveys have found that one third of medical card holders in Ireland are not using generic medicines. Ireland lags other EU countries in its usage of generic medicines.
The latest campaign is being supported by around 400 pharmacies. The only occasions I have ever been encouraged to use a generic drug were when offered it as an option by a pharmacist.
Ordinary consumers like me are not aware that a generic version of something even exists. We need our pharmacist to tell us there is an alternative, cheaper option. In the last 12 months pharmacists have suggested to me that I could consider trying a generic alternative to something that I asked for at the counter. Prior to that I don’t think I was ever offered a generic option.
I have never had a doctor prescribe a generic drug to me. At least, I am not aware of having been prescribed a generic drug. Promoting the generic option has all kinds of benefits. It is often cheaper for paying customers like me. If used by medical card holders, it should reduce the state’s medicines bill.
But surely, a public awareness campaign has to examine the role of the GPs. Why are GPs not prescribing or at least recommending enough generics? Consumers and pharmacists can heighten awareness, but GPs also have a big part to play.
Research has indicated that pharmacists are three times more likely to recommend generic medicines than doctors, according to Teva. New legislation makes it obligatory for pharmacists to offer patients generic medicines rather than the more expensive branded alternatives.
If the use of generics in Ireland is so much lower than our EU counterparts, then doctors have a role in helping to turn that around.
Why would doctors not prescribe more generics? Do they believe the generics are inferior in some way? If so, that is a worrying issue for all of us and we should know about it. Is it habit?
Perhaps doctors are used to recommending particular branded products they know will work and they need an awareness campaign for themselves.
Are they too close to certain pharmaceutical companies? What kinds of freebies, junkets or paid for conference trips are going on within the industry? Ordinarily, these kinds of things are simply part of commercial life. Insurance reps take clients on golf outings. Lots of companies pay for journalists to go on trips. It is very hard to ban and there is a case that perhaps it couldn’t or shouldn’t really be banned. That would mark a very direct state interference in the workings of industry.
But one would have to ask what role or influence such commercial relationships could play in the area of generic medicines, which affects us all in different ways.

NEW IRISH LAW WILL ALLOW GOVERNMENT TO SHUT DOWN PHONE NETWORKS

   

Legislation is to be introduced to allow the Justice Minister order mobile phone companies to shut down networks to prevent terrorist attacks. 

The laws are to be introduced in the coming week by the Justice Minister ahead of next month’s G8 summit in the North.
Justice Minister Alan Shatter said that the reason for amending the laws is the fear mobile phones could be used to trigger bomb attacks at the summit of world leaders in Fermanagh.
“The upcoming G8 summit in Co Fermanagh has brought a particular reality for the necessity for this legislation,” he said.
“It’s possible that terrorist groups may try to use the occasion of the summit, to the very least, garner publicity for themselves.
“This is not to ignore the very real danger of the loss of life is such a device was successfully detonated.”
Eight world leaders will jet in for next month’s G8 summit in Co Fermanagh, including US president Barack Obama, who will also use the trip to make his first visit to Belfast.
Details of First Lady Michelle Obama’s travel will be announced at a later date but she is widely expected to return to the Republic and visit her husband’s ancestral homeland in Moneygall, Co Offaly.
Other politicians to attend the G8 conference will include German chancellor Angela Merkel and UK Prime Minister David Cameron.
It is believed the meeting on June 17 and 18 will generate up to £40m (€47m) for the local economy.
Mr Shatter said the summit, at the Lough Erne golf resort on the outskirts of Enniskillen, created a real necessity for legislation to give the Government the power to ask phone companies to cut or limit signals.
He revealed the plan as he announced changes to the new Money Laundering and Terrorist Financing Bill.
“The purpose of these amendments will be to allow for direction to issue to mobile phone service providers to cease service provision in a limited area in order to prevent death or damage to property,” the Minister said.
“The provision will contain safeguards to ensure that any interference to services is limited to the extent necessary to deal with the threat.”
Elsewhere, a major public march and rally will be held in Belfast the weekend before the G8 summit.
Trade unions and campaign groups like Amnesty International and Friends of the Earth are organising a Fairer World Festival to coincide with the event.
Mr Shatter announced the amendments to the new legislation – which is yet to be passed into law – at a parliamentary committee meeting.

Scientists seek the secret of comfort eating in NUIG

 

GALWAY RESEARCHERS BELIEVE NEED FOR FOOD MAY STEM FOR CHILDHOOD

Researchers at NUI Galway say ice cream is a favourite for comfort eaters. 
Researchers are finally hoping to unlock the secret of why we turn to comfort eating.
A team at NUI Galway is now looking for volunteers to give them an insight into the real need for late night snacks or why we binge or our favourite food at other times.
The researchers reckon that our need for comfort eating – chocolate, ice cream or ready to eat, convenience foods are favourites with most people – may stem from childhood. And it has less to do with satisfying hunger than meeting a need for stress relief or a reward.
The Galway study aims to examine the influence of emotional factors in childhood on comfort eating and weight. They have devised a questionnaire which investigates these issues, and will also be conducting individual interviews.
“We’re hoping to explore the relationship between a range of factors, such as how people learned to cope with their emotions in childhood, or how people relate to others, and how this influences eating patterns and BMI in adulthood”, said Roisín Finnegan, a trainee clinical psychologist who is carrying out this research under the supervision of Dr Jonathan Egan, lecturer in psychology at NUI Galway.
While the wide availability of convenience foods and an increasingly sedentary lifestyle are recognised as significant contributing factors to the spike in obesity rates, research to date has revealed that psychosocial factors in childhood, such as abuse, lack of parental support, and depression, may also play a role.
“We believe that children growing up in an environment where they feel unable to express their emotions may turn to food as a source of comfort,” said Dr Egan.
“This pattern of coping with emotion through food continues into adulthood, and may well contribute to weight problems. These are just some of the factors we’re interested in investigating further as part of this research.
“We’re also interested in the concept of mindfulness, and how the ability to attend to how one is feeling in the present moment may act as an antidote to emotional eating.”
Volunteers taking part in the project have to be over 18 and interviews will take place in Laois, Offaly, Longford and Westmeath. The research is being funded by the Millennium Research Fund at NUI Galway and further detail are available athttps://www.surveymonkey.com/s/comforteating

Wednesday, August 8, 2012

Donie's news Ireland update Blog


AIB Apologises for incorrect information about 12,000 customers to credit bureau over 6 years

Irish Credit Bureau corrects records misreported by AIB

   
The Irish Credit Bureau has said it has fully corrected all relevant customer records, following AIB’s admission that it misreported missed customer loan repayments to it over a six-year period.
Allied Irish Banks (AIB) sent incorrect information about 12,000 customers to the Irish Credit Bureau over six years, thebank admitted today.
The data was part of the mass of information that the Irish Credit Bureau (ICB) collects about the loan repayment track records of millions of borrowers.
It is used by banks as a key factor in deciding whether or not to lend to prospective customers.
AIB said it had provided incorrect information to the ICB between 2006 and 2012. The error relates to customers who were in arrears on loans to AIB,
The error occurred when customers whose loan repayments were due weekly or fortnightly missed a payment.
When the ICB was told of the missed payment, AIB recorded each case as being a month in arrears, not a week or two weeks.
It resulted in incorrect statements to the ICB of the affected customer’s repayment history.
The error came to light after a customer queried a report of their credit history recorded by the ICB.

Ireland’s Katie Taylor through to a shot at a historic gold medal boxing final  ‘after a 17-9 Semi-final win’

Katie Taylor - London 2012 Olympics: Ireland's Katie Taylor through to gold medal bout  

Katie Taylor (in red) during her comfortable semi-final win over Mavzuna Chorieva of Tajikistan & right after the fight happy with  father Peter (right) and technical coach Zaur Anita.

They crowded around Katie Taylor in the mixed zone as if she were Ireland’s greatest sporting treasure after the world’s stand-out female boxer had dominated Tajikistan’s Mavzuna Chorieva 17-9 to reach the Olympic lightweight boxing final. The relief is that Taylor has finally brought Ireland to the party.

The fleet-footed 26-year-old Bray girl has emerged as Ireland’s most realistic gold medal hope at these Games. A phalanx of cameras and reporters — and even political sketch writers — are here scrutinising every move the fledgling Olympian is making.
Taylor, from the coastal town of Bray in County Wicklow, revealed she expected to sleep for only two hours prior to the final. She admitted that a day’s rest would be perfect, but her career, already decorated with four world titles, reaches its pinnacle today.
This is no brash or brazen woman. Taylor is deeply religious. Her father is her coach, her mother was a boxing judge. She speaks so quietly it seems inconceivable that she fights with such venom. She said: “It’s amazing to box for the gold medal tomorrow. I wouldn’t mind the day off, but that’s just because I’m lazy. I have trouble getting sleep before a big fight but I’ll still manage to get a couple of hours in.
“The support has been amazing. It’s like fighting at home. Hopefully there will be a lot of young girls sitting at home watching this, and they’ll realise that this is something they can work towards. It is amazing for women’s boxing.”
Taylor continued to show impressive hand speed and technical know-how at this first Olympic women’s boxing event. She delivered a fulsome, brutal victory over the game boxer from Central Asia. There is never any letting up from Taylor as she bounces from ball to ball of her feet, poised for attack.
The Irish fighter looks untouchable, and her performance brought the house down.
Chorieva came out with great confidence and landed the first punches but Taylor then landed against the Tajik with a couple of combinations and one excellent left, to go to the corner 3-1 up. The teenage Tajik dropped her hands, pushed her tongue out, and tried to forced the Irishwoman off her gameplan.
Thereafter, though, Taylor had the bout her way. The fans were rejoicing. They were in rapture. It might have been Munster’s Thomond Park as they sang the Fields of Athenry. Taylor took the second 4-2 and there was a sense of her easing away from Chorieva. From then on, Taylor took complete control, moving ahead 13-6 after the third, and then showing all her class in the fourth round, to finish the contest as winner of all four rounds.
Taylor now faces the Russian and world No 2 Sofya Ochigava in a repeat of May’s World Championship final in China. Taylor won a record fourth world title there, and has not been beaten in a major competition for six years. Ochigava came through a tough battle with Adriana Araujo of Brazil

The Irish Government should not make any more mistake’s with property tax

  

The Labour Party chairman Colm Keaveney says the government should wait and make sure it gets the property tax right, rather than make any mistakes, if it becomes a complicated process.

Colm Keaveney was responding to proposals from one tax expert, that the introduction of the new tax should be put off for a year.
At the moment, it’s due to be rolled out next year, to replace the current flat-rate household charge.
Galway East Deputy Colm Keaveney outlined the kind of system he’d like to see introduced: “It would pick up the size of the house, the location of the home and the level of amentities.
“It would develop a matrix, a sliding scale of a fair system based on an ability to pay. If it’s complicated to construct this system, then I would much prefer if we wait and get it right than make any mistakes at the outset.”

‘Ming Flanagan in’ Jeans banned in new Dáil dress code

     

Shabby TDs will have to look smart if they want to be heard and get their speak in when the Dáil returns next month.

A new dress code being finalised by the committee on procedures and privileges hopes to do away with deputies parading around the chamber in jeans and T-shirts.
New rules would see speaking rights withheld from TDs who do not abide by the stricter dress code, which will demand that male deputies wear formal trousers, a collared shirt, and a jacket while in the chamber or at committee meetings, while women members will be barred from wearing jeans.
A member of the committee said the issue was discussed at the watchdog’s last session and the new restrictions would come into force when the Dáil resumes in late September.
The rules would be enforced via the Ceann Comhairle, who has the power to call, or not to call, members to speak.
The move could provoke another clash between the Ceann Comhairle Seán Barrett and Independent TD Luke “Ming” Flanagan.
Mr Flanagan has so far refused to apologise to the Ceann Comhairle for an ugly altercation in a Leinster House corridor last month.
The committee on procedures and privileges wrote to Mr Flanagan insisting he make a public apology to the Ceann Comhairle for what it called a “vicious, unprovoked verbal assault”.
This was on foot of Mr Flanagan and fellow Independent TD John Halligan confronting Mr Barrett in a corridor to complain about the way the Personal Insolvency Bill was handled.
The TDs deny they verbally assaulted Mr Barrett and have refused to apologise to him.
Flanagan has also used his Facebook page to make highly personal remarks about the Ceann Comhairle.
In one entry, Mr Flanagan claimed he had been told it was against the rules to approach the Ceann Comhairle in the corridor, adding: “That rule must not count in the Dáil bar where I understand he regularly freely associates with TDs while guzzling pints. He can’t have it both ways.”
Mr Flanagan has accused Mr Barrett of being biased in his conduct and a “miserable failure in carrying out his responsibility”.
Currently, the Leinster House dress code merely instructs members to “dress in a manner that reflects the dignity of the House”.