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Arts Festival worth more than €21m to Galway

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Ireland’s biggest and best yearly fortnight celebration of the arts got underway last night as stars of the acting and theatre worlds convened on Galway for the official opening of the international arts festival.

The artistic director of the Galway International Arts Festival, Paul Fahy, yesterday said the 2014 event would be worth more than €21 million to the local economy. Enda Walsh, writer and director of this year’s major attraction, Ballyturk, officially opened the festival at the Veranda Lounge in the Radisson Blu Hotel last evening.

Among the hundreds who attended the glittering event were actors Brendan Gleeson, Martin and John McDonagh, Pauline McGlynn, Michael Murphy, Cillian Murphy, Christian O’Reilly and Fiach MacConghail, director of Abbey Theatre.

They were guests at the opening night of Ballyturk, a co-production between the festival and Landmark Productions, starring Cillian Murphy, which promises to be the festival’s hit show.

The co-production between the festival and Northlight Theatre, Chapatti, by Christian O’Reilly, starring John Mahoney and Penny Slusher, will open at Town Hall Theatre on Wednesday evening and Mr Fahy is confident it will also wow local audiences.

Overall ticket sales are brisk, and up on last year, according to Mr Fahy. “The festival was worth €21 million last year and I’m confident that, based on the early ticket sales and the interest generated in this year’s festival, that we will surpass that figure,” said Mr Fahy.

He said the Garth Brooks concerts hadn’t taken away from ticket sales and if they didn’t go ahead might even benefit Galway Arts Festival as people sought alternative entertainment and might head to the city for the week.

There is no Macnas street parade again during this year’s festival but Mr Fahy said there was a huge programme of free street events planned that will bring the city to life.

He said people should watch out for the RedBall Galway, a visual arts spectacle on the streets of the city. French company Malabar presents Dragonus on Saturday and Sunday, with “heart-stopping acrobatic stilt-walkers, an electric rock-opera score with live musicians, pyrotechnics and a monumental moving dragon” from Eyre Square to Spanish Arch.

Another French company, Les Philébulistes, will perform a free circus acrobatic show, Hallali in Eyre Square at 6pm on Wednesday and Thursday this week. Meanwhile, the Galway Fringe Festival was launched on Saturday and will run until Monday, July 28.

Read more in this week’s Connacht Sentinel

Connacht Tribune

Heartless thieves steal shrubs from garden honouring organ donors

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The Circle of Life Garden....targeted by thieves.

THIEVES have stooped to a new low over recent weeks in Galway city – stealing plants and shrubs from a public garden set up to remember organ donors and to help support their families.

The Circle of Life Garden in Quincentennial Park, Salthill, was developed in 2014, and has since attracted thousands of visitors – many of them remembering loved ones in a tranquil setting.

However, the garden – established by the Strange Boat Donor Foundation – has, over recent weeks, been the target of systematic thefts of plants and shrubs.

“It is with regret that the Charity now reports the recent systematic theft of newly planted shrubs and plants, some of which were planted by members of the organ donation community in memory of loved ones.

“Apart from the expense in buying and replacing plants and shrubs, this theft is so disheartening and demoralising, particularly for the many local volunteers who give of their time each week to maintain the garden and who lovingly care for its many features,” the Foundation said in a statement issued this week.

Get the full story in this week’s Connacht Tribune, on sale in shops now, or you can download the digital edition from www.connachttribune.ie. You can also download our Connacht Tribune App from Apple’s App Store or get the Android Version from Google Play.

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Galway grandparents who cared for 60 kids – as well as six of their own

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Deirdre and Michael Burke.

A Galway grandmother who – in addition to her own six children and six grandchildren – has also cared 60 youngsters over 35 years was among dozens of foster carers honoured for their commitment and generosity at City Hall last week.

Deirdre Burke, from Milltown, is one of those is long-serving foster carers in the county, caring, with her husband Michael, for 60 children and young people – from four days old up to 17.

“It’s mainly girls we’ve fostered, so there are lots of girly things. The house looks like a florist sometimes with all the cards and flowers,” laughs Deirdre.

Indeed, given that she also supports people in aftercare, that upper age limit even stretches beyond 17.

“I was pregnant with my fifth child when I was first approved [to foster]. We started off with pre-adoption babies, who would come for a few days and then go for adoption,” she says.

“I loved the whole idea of taking a child into your home and making a difference.”

For a lot of people, the thought of bonding with a baby and then having to hand it back would probably make them think twice about fostering.

“It was difficult initially,” concedes Deirdre.

“I had to accept that they’re not my own and that I won’t be keeping them forever. I can just love them while I have them. At the end of the day, it’s all about the child, so you have to get over it.”

Deirdre and Michael were among dozens of foster carers honoured at an event hosted by the Mayor of the City of Galway, Councillor Clodagh Higgins, paying tribute to those who have given more than 20 years of their lives to help children and young people.

Get the full story in this week’s Connacht Tribune, on sale in shops now, or you can download the digital edition from www.connachttribune.ie. You can also download our Connacht Tribune App from Apple’s App Store or get the Android Version from Google Play.

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Connacht Tribune

Jobs blow for Galway as multi-national relocates to Dublin

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The Poly Galway office at Crown Square.

A major multinational employer supported by IDA Ireland has closed its European headquarters in Galway City – ending hopes of creating 200 high-skilled jobs.

Poly has confirmed to the Connacht Tribune that it has closed its offices at Crown Square in Mervue.

The communications software and hardware provider announced a new research and development base at Crown Square in September 2021. Recruitment commenced immediately.

It had plans to create more than 200 high-skilled jobs over five years and embarked on a further recruitment campaign in May 2022.

But a spokesperson confirmed it has shut its Galway base, and moved to Dublin, after it was subsumed by another company.

A spokesperson said: “Poly is now legally a part of the HP organisation and Poly employees, who were employed by Poly in Ireland, have joined HP’s trading entity in Ireland (HP Technology Ireland Limited).

“The Poly Galway office at Crown Square in Mervue is now closed. The focus of our operations continues to be located at HP Ireland’s main office in Dublin, where HP and Poly continue to build on synergy and collaboration.”

Get the full story in this week’s Connacht Tribune, on sale in shops now, or you can download the digital edition from www.connachttribune.ie. You can also download our Connacht Tribune App from Apple’s App Store or get the Android Version from Google Play.

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