NUI Galway seek participants for autism in healthcare research study
Thu, Oct 11, 2018
The School of Medicine at NUI Galway is conducting the H-FIT study, which aims to improve access to healthcare for people on the autism spectrum. The research team are currently recruiting people on the autism spectrum and their caregivers. Participants who take part in the study will be asked to complete anonymous questionnaires and/or interviews about their experiences in healthcare.
Read more ...Baboro Ambassador – Emma Craughwell
Thu, Oct 11, 2018
Galway is truly a year-round festival city but come October it’s all about the kids. The 22nd Baboró International Arts Festival for Children is just around the corner and kicks off on Monday October 15 and runs for seven days. This year’s programme is bursting with 51 extraordinary events from Ireland and around the world so there’s plenty for children and families to enjoy. We’re kicking off this year’s Baboró Ambassador series with 12-year old Emma Craughwell from Inverin.
Read more ...Everest mountaineer Stelfox to enthral audiences at Connemara Sea Week
Thu, Oct 11, 2018
The first Irishman to climb Mount Everest Dawson Stelfox is among the amazing adventurers set to enthral audiences as the biggest celebration of Ireland’s coastal communities’ is set to kick off next month in Connemara.
Read more ...Catch a show after school at Baboro
Thu, Oct 11, 2018
Excitement is building ahead of this year’s Baboró International Arts Festival for Children, which kicks off in Galway this Monday October 15 for seven days. The programme is bursting with theatre, dance, music, exhibitions, film, and literature as well as talks and workshops for children and adults. There are also opportunities for children and adults to get creative while spending quality time together.
Artists from Ireland, Australia, Denmark, Germany, Netherlands, Belgium, France, Scotland and England will present a feast of 51 events across seven days designed especially for children and families. Baboró enables children and families to experience first hand the transformative power of the creative arts.
Read more ...Ahead of big Galway Races fundraiser, professor stresses importance of early detection in beating breast cancer
Thu, Oct 11, 2018
The incidence of breast cancer is expected to double by 2040. This is attributable to increased detection, women living longer, and the fact that our western lifestyle predisposes us to this condition which affects 3,000 women and 20 men in Ireland annually.
Read more ...Galway city gardens shine in spite of summer drought
Thu, Oct 11, 2018
The annual Galway City Tidy Towns Garden Competition results were announced this week. The competition is organised by Galway City Council on annual basis to recognise the efforts of residents, commercial organisations and public buildings to maintain and enhance the appearance of their gardens, estates, and public areas. The overall winner of the Front Garden Competition was Patrick O’Connell, St James Crescent, Mervue. The Best First Time entrant was Bernie Molloy, Castle Park, Ballybane, with Betty O’Flaherty, Forster Court taking the prize for the Best Floral Display category. Brendan Moran, Blackthorn Park won the Best Front Lawn category.
St Pat’s Boys N.S. continued their run of awards for their garden, scooping the overall winner in the schools category. St John the Apostle, Knocknacarra won the Eco School Garden category, and Scoil Roís won the Best Floral Display.
Read more ...Claregalway 2020 to hold cross-culture Halloween event
Thu, Oct 11, 2018
The innovative team behind Claregalway 2020 is hosting an event at Halloween that looks at the legends of the season in the many cultures that now live in the city and county.
Organisers are inviting people to join them on a trail through the world looking at the legends, traditions, and delicacies in different countries around the time of Samhain or Halloween.
Read more ...A stadium to admire and inspire
Thu, Oct 11, 2018
In times of old, our ancestors built places of worship, soaring churches, round towers pointing at the skies. Around the world, most civilisations did likewise, digging amphitheatres into undulating hills; surrounding places of conquest with walls to form an arena for entertainment or persecution, to where the hordes thronged to fill their thoughts with admiration and revulsion at gladiators and beleaguered prophets.
Read more ...Fantasy Football October review
Wed, Oct 10, 2018
Round eight of the Premier League ended with a whimper as Liverpool and Man City played out a dour 0-0 draw at Anfield on Sunday evening.
Read more ...Connacht Rugby reveals plans for €30-million redevelopment of the Sportsground
Mon, Oct 08, 2018
Connacht Rugby has revealed plans for a €30-million redevelopment of the Sportsground, which will transform its home into a top-class 12,000-capacity stadium and high-performance training centre.
Read more ...Druid cites budget and time as reason for 2020 pullout
Thu, Oct 04, 2018
Galway 2020's troubled gestation was dealt a further - and very significant - blow this week, with Galway's leading international theatre company, Druid, announcing it was withdrawing its major international production from the Galway 2020 European Capital of Culture programme.
Read more ...City ring road not 'silver bullet' to solve traffic crisis, but still 'significant step forward' says Kyne
Thu, Oct 04, 2018
The Galway City Ring road is not the "silver bullet" that will solve the transport challenges facing Galway, but it will "take traffic out of the city", enable public transport improvements, and "reduce the time" workers and visitors spend getting around the city.
Read more ...Former mayor calls for ‘full inspection’ of mature trees in city ahead of the storm season
Thu, Oct 04, 2018
A former Mayor of Galway city has called for a “full inspection of all mature trees located in public areas” to ensure they pose “no threat to people’s safety”, following the recent Storm Ali, which resulted in several trees around the city being uprooted or damaged.
Read more ...Ó Cuív demands Minister Bruton reverse 'mean changes' to rural school pupil-teacher numbers
Thu, Oct 04, 2018
Over the past seven years, small schools across County Galway, and in rural Ireland generally, have seen their teacher numbers "reduced significantly" under the two Fine Gael led Governments.
Read more ...Can Sharon Nolan become the Soc Dem's first Galway councillor?
Thu, Oct 04, 2018
“I'm not from a political family of candidates of yesteryear. I'm not what people expect a politician to look like - but the personal is political. Politics affects all of us and I believe we should have candidates that look like what modern Ireland looks like.”
Read more ...'We’re a more modern society than even seven years ago at the last presidential election'
Thu, Oct 04, 2018
Sinn Féin’s presidential candidate Liadh Ní Riada was in Galway last Friday as her campaign kicked off in earnest and she took time to sit down with me and chat about the race for the Áras and the issues that drive her political vision.
Read more ...Mayor urges students to apply for O'Carroll Bursary
Thu, Oct 04, 2018
Galway students are being encouraged to apply for the Labour Party's Richard O'Carroll Empowerment Bursary, especially as the deadline for applications is tomorrow. The successful applicant will receive €2,000 in the first term of the 2018-2019 academic year.
Read more ...NUI Galway publishes study on economic impact of childhood autism spectrum disorders
Thu, Oct 04, 2018
A new study published by NUI Galway researchers provides original insights into the economic impact of childhood autism spectrum disorders in Ireland. The study highlights the extent to which families pay for services relative to state funded services and provides a compelling case for significant additional state funded investment. The study was published this week in the international journal, Autism – The International Journal of Research and Practice.
Findings from the study showed that on average, the annual cost per child for families amounted to over €28,000 as a result of paying for private autism spectrum disorders (ASD) services, lost income and informal care, while over €14,000 of state funded services were consumed. Families whose children were more severely affected and those with more than one child affected faced significantly higher costs. While 15 per cent of children with autism spectrum disorders in the survey were from lone parent families who faced particular challenges in meeting needs.
Read more ...Canney highlights issue of wastewater treatment plants
Thu, Oct 04, 2018
Galway East deputy Seán Canney has this week highlighted the need for Irish Water to take charge of private group wastewater treatment plants throughout the country as the current impasse in terms of such plants is blocking the building of housing in towns all across the country.
Read more ...Funding boosts for Cancer Care West and FORUM Connemara
Thu, Oct 04, 2018
Organisations providing cancer-care and mobility transport in Galway are set to benefit from more than €150,000 in funding from the Department of Rural and Community Development under a scheme to support voluntary organisations in rural areas.
The funding will be used to purchase a 25-seat passenger bus worth €100,000 for Cancer Care West, while €54,000 will be spent on a 15-seat wheelchair-accessible vehicle for FORUM Connemara. Cancer Care West and FORUM Connemara are among 27 such organisations nationwide to share funding of €1.4 million under the scheme this year. The funding has been welcomed by Fine Gael Galway West TD Hildegarde Naughton.
Read more ...