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CITY TRIBUNE

All-rounder Brassil aims for Tokyo after European team silver medal

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Talking Sport with Stephen Glennon

After securing a silver medal with the Irish women’s pentathlon team at the European Senior Championships in Hungary recently, Sive Brassil’s dream of representing Ireland at the 2020 Olympic Games in Tokyo is increasingly looking like it can become a reality.
Since winning the Spanish Open in 2015, the Ballinasloe native has steadily been climbing the world rankings but she says the silver medal at the recent European Championships, which she claimed alongside team-mates Natalya Coyle and Eilidh Prise, is one of her finest achievements yet.
“It was really good. The three of us were delighted,” recounts Irish modern pentathlete Brassil, who is home in her native town on a well-earned summer break.
“What was even better was the next day we saw Michael D. Higgins had tweeted about us. That just put the cherry on the top of the cake. We were over the moon with that.”
Overall, Coyle had finished fifth in the individual standings with Prise 11th and Brassil 21st. For all three, it was their highest-ever finish at senior European level, resulting in Ireland finishing just behind team gold medallists Hungary and ahead of third-placed France.
For Brassil, it was the perfect tonic in a year disrupted by injuries. “I could tell my fitness was fully back after the injuries. I qualified really easily for the final, which I was delighted with, and then in the final, the first half of my fencing went really well and I was really excited.
“However, then the second half (of the fencing), I lost almost every single hit so I ended up with a very average fence which put me out of the place I would have liked to have been in. But, my swim was very strong, I had a good ride and then I had a really good run-shoot at the end. So, I finished 21st overall which wasn’t what I was hoping for but considering how poorly the day started, it was okay.”
In any event, the competition will surely stand to her ahead of her next challenge, the World Championships in Mexico in September. On the back of her European silver medal, Brassil will be hoping she can drive on from this and replicate – and maybe even surpass – her results in World Cup events earlier this year.
In February, she finished 14th at the first of four World Cup qualifiers in Los Angeles before securing the exact same placing – 14th – in the second qualifier in Cairo, Egypt the following month.
“Both of those were my first top 15 finishes (at senior elite level). So, I was delighted,” she continues. “It meant I had now qualified for the World Cup final after doing just two rounds, which was great, because it gave me a chance to take a breather.
“I was planning on going to the fourth event but I then had a couple of injury problems. I ended up getting a calf tear and then just when it was better I sprained by ankle so I didn’t end up going to the fourth.”
She returned to full health though just before the World Cup final in Kazakhstan in June but without the stable diet of full-on training behind her, it proved difficult. “It was a bit of a disappointment even though, obviously, I had been injured and I hadn’t a good block of training done before it.

For more, read this week’s Connacht Tribune.

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CITY TRIBUNE

Galway ‘masterplan’ needed to tackle housing and transport crises

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From the Galway City Tribune – An impassioned plea for a ‘masterplan’ that would guide Galway City into the future has been made in the Dáil. Galway West TD Catherine Connolly stated this week that there needed to be an all-inclusive approach with “vision and leadership” in order to build a sustainable city.

Deputy Connolly spoke at length at the crisis surrounding traffic and housing in Galway city and said that not all of the blame could be laid at the door of the local authority.

She said that her preference would be the provision of light rail as the main form of public transport, but that this would have to be driven by the government.

“I sat on the local council for 17 years and despaired at all of the solutions going down one road, metaphorically and literally. In 2005 we put Park & Ride into the development plan, but that has not been rolled out. A 2016 transport strategy was outdated at the time and still has not been updated.

“Due to the housing crisis in the city, a task force was set up in 2019. Not a single report or analysis has been published on the cause of the crisis,” added Deputy Connolly.

She then referred to a report from the Land Development Agency (LDA) that identified lands suitable for the provision of housing. But she said that two-thirds of these had significant problems and a large portion was in Merlin Park University Hospital which, she said, would never have housing built on it.

In response, Minister Simon Harris spoke of the continuing job investment in the city and also in higher education, which is his portfolio.

But turning his attention to traffic congestion, he accepted that there were “real issues” when it came to transport, mobility and accessibility around Galway.

“We share the view that we need a Park & Ride facility and I understand there are also Bus Connects plans.

“I also suggest that the City Council reflect on her comments. I am proud to be in a Government that is providing unparalleled levels of investment to local authorities and unparalleled opportunities for local authorities to draw down,” he said.

Then Minister Harris referred to the controversial Galway City Outer Ring Road which he said was “struck down by An Bord Pleanála”, despite a lot of energy having been put into that project.

However, Deputy Connolly picked up on this and pointed out that An Bord Pleanála did not say ‘No’ to the ring road.

“The High Court said ‘No’ to the ring road because An Bord Pleanála acknowledged it failed utterly to consider climate change and our climate change obligations.

“That tells us something about An Bord Pleanála and the management that submitted such a plan.”

In the end, Minister Harris agreed that there needed to be a masterplan for Galway City.

“I suggest it is for the local authority to come up with a vision and then work with the Government to try to fund and implement that.”

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CITY TRIBUNE

Official opening of Galway’s new pedestrian and cycle bridge

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The new Salmon Weir pedestrian and cycle bridge will be officially opened to the public next Friday, May 26.

Work on the €10 million bridge got underway in April 2022, before the main structure was hoisted into place in early December.

A lunchtime tape-cutting ceremony will take place on Friday, as the first pedestrians and cyclists traverse the as-yet-unnamed bridge.

The Chief Executive of Galway City Council, Brendan McGrath, previously said the bridge, once opened, would remove existing conflicts between pedestrians, cyclists and traffic “as well as facilitating the Cross-City Link public transport corridor over the existing 200-year-old bridge”.

The naming of the new bridge has been under discussion by the Council’s Civic Commemorations Committee since late last year.

One name that has been in the mix for some time is that of the first woman in Europe to graduate with an engineering degree – Alice Perry.

Ms Perry, who was from Wellpark, graduated from Queen’s College Galway (now University of Galway) in 1906. The university’s engineering building is named in her honour.

The bridge was built by Jons Civil Engineering firm in County Meath and was assembled off-site before being transported to Galway. Funding for the project was provided in full by the National Transport Authority and the European Regional Development Fund.

(Photo: Sheila Gallagher captured the city’s new pedestrian footbridge being raised on the south side of the Salmon Weir Bridge in December. It will officially open next Friday, May 26).

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CITY TRIBUNE

Minister branded ‘a disgrace’ for reversing land rezoning in Galway City

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From the Galway City Tribune – Minister of State for Local Government and Planning, Kieran O’Donnell was labelled a “disgrace” for overturning councillors’ decisions to rezone land in the new City Development Plan.

Minister O’Donnell (pictured) confirmed in a letter to Council Chief Executive Brendan McGrath last week that he was reversing 25 material alternations made by councillors to the CDP 2023-29. He made the decision on the advice of Office of Planning Regulator (OPR).

Minister O’Donnell directed that 14 land parcels that were subject to land-use zoning changes by councillors as part of the Material Alterations to the Draft CDP should be reversed.

He directed that a further 11 land parcels in the city should become “unzoned”.

The Minister found that the CDP had not been made in a manner consistent with recommendations of the OPR, which required specific changes to the plan to ensure consistency with the national planning laws and guidelines.

At last week’s Council meeting Cllr Eddie Hoare (FG) asked for clarity on the process by which councillors could rezone the lands that had been changed by the Minister’s direction.

Cllr Declan McDonnell said, “What he [Minister O’Donnell] has done is an absolute disgrace”.

And he asked: “Do we have to have another development plan meeting to deal with it?”

Both Cllrs Hoare and McDonnell wondered what would become of the lands that were rezoned or unzoned by the ministerial direction.

Mr McGrath said the Council had put forward an argument in favour of retaining the material alterations in the plan, but ultimately the Minister sided with OPR.

He said if councillors want to make alterations to the new plan, they could go through the process of making a material alteration but this was lengthy.

The Save Roscam Peninsula campaign welcomed the Minister’s decision.

In a statement to the Galway City Tribune, it said the direction would mean the Roscam village area on the Roscam Peninsula will be unzoned and a number of land parcels would revert back to agriculture/high amenity.

A spokesperson for the campaign said: “the material alterations made by city councillors following lobbying by developers continued the long-standing practice of councillors facilitating a developer-led plan rather than an evidence- and policy-based plan that meets the needs of the city.

“The Minister’s direction is an important step in restoring confidence in the planning system. It is clear from the City Council’s own evidence on future housing projections that there was no requirement to zone these lands for residential purposes in order to meet the needs of the targeted population increase up to 2029,” the spokesperson added.

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