Stardust Memorial – Thirty Years After the Tragedy

Survivors and – relatives and friends – of the Victims of the Stardust fire assemble to remember the dead and injured.
 

 

In the early hours of 14th February 1981 Forty Eight people died in the Stardust fire simply because the fire exits were chained. 215 people were injured in the fire.

 

The stardust is litany of injustice and needless suffering.  It is also the story of courageous struggle against this injustice.

In memory of:

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Letter to unelected council officials re; conduct of monthly meetings

To whom it may concern,

Re: Transparency, and the accountability which arises from transparency, in Local Government

We refer to the attendance of our representative, Mr Mark Fitzsimons, at the January meeting of Dundalk Town Council as an observer and wish to express our appreciation to the council for permitting his attendance.

Our principal reason for sending an observer to the meeting was to witness the conduct of the public’s affairs/finances by the Council. We had also raised concerns regarding a number of ethical issues with a Member of the Council, Councillor Morgan, but to which he had been unable to supply answers.

Our observer was shocked, as were we when he reported back to us, that Councillor Morgan’s questions were not only unanswered, but had not even been placed on the official agenda.

We attach a copy of Councillor Morgan’s request for answers to the questions and would appreciate an explanation for the Management’s failure/refusal to answer them, together with detailed written answers to the three questions, which go to the heart of transparency and accountability in local government, at your earliest possible convenience.

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People Before Profit Dundalk election statement

There has been much public interest of late regarding People Before Profit Dundalk’s intentions in the up coming election. The following is a statement outlining our intentions and highlighting the reasons for our decision.

People Before Profit Dundalk will not be running a candidate in the coming election (as an individual group or part of the United Left Alliance). We have made this decision for a number of reasons after intense debate at our public meetings. There were a number of key issues relating to an election campaign that convinced attendees at the meeting to vote against standing a candidate.

Firstly, it was acknowledged at the meeting that present democratic structures have failed the people of Dundalk and Ireland. Elections seem to be popularity contests with voters not truly understanding the issues that affect them on both a local and national level. Thus far People Before Profit Dundalk have made efforts to educate the local community on these issues, letting the people know that there are alternatives to the greed, corruption and incompetence that has tainted Irish politics since at least the nineteen sixties. People Before Profit intend to continue and intensify this work over the next year, educating people so that when they vote in future elections it will be informed and based on reason, ethics and the interest of the community. We are planning film nights and have established a local independent film production unit for this purpose. Having informed the public, giving them the information they need to vote in a mature manner, we will consider running candidates in future elections.

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How Dundalk People can fight for change right now; fighting council censorship

Regular readers may recall that recently we sent a letter to the town clerk, Frank Pentony, asking why he refused to place a question from Councilor Oliver Morgan on the agenda of the January town council meeting. The question asked about the legal position of the town council relating to a land zoning issue on the Lower Point road. Frank Pentony did not place the question or respond to our letter.

He did however, send an email to Councilor Morgan explaining his reasons for not allowing the questions. We have posted the email at the end of this article. In brief it states that the councilor’s question was dealt with at the December meeting, that the question would not be placed because it was hypothetical and that no hypothetical questions would ever be entertained in the counci meetings again.

People Before Profit Dundalk was shocked at the dictatorial tone of the response. We checked it out and have discovered that, according to the minutes of the December meeting, the question was not dealt with. Then we checked the Local Government Act 2001, the standing orders and and the code of conduct for councilors and nowhere could we find one sentence or clause giving Pentony the authority to stop a councilor placing a reasonable question on the agenda.

Frank Pentony’s excuse was that it was a hypothetical questions but this holds no water. Many questions, especially legal and planning questions, are hypothetical. A hypothetical question asks what if. Imagine a council not allowing questions like ‘ What if there is an accident, are the council liable?, or ‘ What if there is a high tide, will the land we are zoning flood?’ What if questions are the backbone of sensible and solid future planning and yet Frank Pentony has taken it upon himself to declare that from now on no elected officials shall be allowed to ask such questions at town council meetings.This is clearly unacceptable.

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Corruption at the top of the HSE

Saturday, December 11, 2010

Corruption at the top of the HSE

 

There is no doubt that the people of Louth and Dundalk in particular are angered at losing the A&E acute services in The Louth County hospital. This is not new news. Although the HSE claims that the closure was in the best, long term interests of the people most Louth citizens have no faith in the organisations ability to serve their interests. Usually people base this premise on the fact that acute A&E services were removed but the truth about whose interests the HSE serve is even worse than most can imagine.

This article will highlight three facts about the HSE that are shocking and reveal that the interests being served by the organisation are the interests of the rich and powerful. Over the next few paragraphs we will look at three people whose links with the HSE are to say the very least questionable.

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Eamonn Casey:  Hypocrisy And Rape

Revelations about Eamonn Casey point yet again to the gross hypocrisy of the Bishops.These are mostly elderly males who think they have every right to

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