CITY TRIBUNE
Baroque meets trad in Culture Night performance

The young musicians of Galway’s Athenry Music School Sinfonietta and four outstanding soloists from traditional and classical backgrounds will perform Raymond Deane’s A Baroque Session (with Carolan & Friends) for Culture Night on Friday, September 17.
It’s their debut performance of the piece and will be presented online at 7pm that evening. The young musicians will be joined by Séamus McGuire and Niamh Crowley on violin and violist Kenneth Rice, all from the West Ocean String Quartet. Cellist Adrian Mantu from Galway’s ConTempo String Quartet is also taking part.
The concert will be conducted by Claregalway conductor and musician Sinéad Hayes, who has been leading weekly Zoom rehearsals with the Athenry performers in recent months.
“This performance is a testament to the amazing resilience and talent of these young musicians,” she says.
Crossing time and musical styles, A Baroque Session (with Carolan & Friends) brings the worlds of Irish traditional and European classical music together through the lens of contemporary composer Raymond Deane, who was born in Tuam and reared in Achill.
He was originally commissioned to compose the music in 2009 by the Young European Strings, Dublin, and is delighted to see it reaching a whole new audience.
“It’s very encouraging to see so many performers from the West of Ireland having an opportunity to be part of the project,” he feels.
“This is a unique project,” adds renowned traditional musician Séamus McGuire, the leader of the West Ocean String Quartet, “Much of our work as a quartet brings Irish and classical music together, so we are delighted to join Sinead and the young musicians as soloists for this.”
For more, read this week’s Connacht Tribune.
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CITY TRIBUNE
Sting on Galway City taxi drivers refusing card payment

From this week’s Galway City Tribune – More than 20 taxi drivers in the city were issued on-the-spot fines last week during an operation to nab those not accepting card payments.
The ‘sting’ was conducted by the National Transport Authority (NTA), the Taxi Regulation Office and the Gardaí over the course of several days last week.
It stemmed from complaints that several taxis in Galway City were not accepting card payments – legislation was introduced last September obliging taxi drivers to accept credit and debit cards.
Many drivers sought cash payments while telling customers that their card machines were either not working or that the terminal could not get a signal.
A senior source close to the Taxi Regulation Office told the Galway City Tribune that they had received “quite a number of complaints” from customers stating that drivers were not accepting payments by card.
The source said that members of the public were engaged to use the taxi services as part of the operation and some of them reported that the drivers had indicated from the outset that they would only accept cash payment.
“Since the beginning of the year, the taxi fares in Galway City have received an increase and the drivers are required to provide an in-car system of payment for customers.”
This is a shortened preview version of this story. To read the rest of the article, see the June 2 edition of the Galway City Tribune. You can support our journalism and buy a digital edition HERE.
CITY TRIBUNE
Activist wants ‘reasoned discussion’ on asylum seeker plans

From this week’s Galway City Tribune – A well-known community activist in the east of the city has appealed for reasoned discussions about plans to accommodate over 300 male asylum seekers in Ballybrit.
Former local election candidate Michael Tully, who is based in Ballybane, said the debate around the proposal to house 302 people in empty office blocks in Ballybrit Business Park was happening at two extremes, while many people living locally were “somewhere in the middle”.
“There were protests organised up there this week by radicals,” said Mr Tully of demonstrations which have been orchestrated by known members of the far right.
“But there are people that think it is unsuitable because they’re putting 300 men in basically a warehouse that’s surrounded by high fences with CCTV cameras all around it. It’s like a prison or an army barracks – where’s the humanity in that? These are people we are talking about.
“There are genuine concerns about it being 300 men, because that’s unhealthy, in the same way it would be unhealthy if it was 300 women. There will be people in there that have families and would be better off mixed with them,” he said.
Media debates about the centres rarely featured nuanced opinions that were based in genuine concern, he said, and tended to favour more radical voices.
“Listen to any of the radio debates or TV discussions and it’s always the two sides shouting each other down. On one side, they’re calling people terrorists and on the other, everyone who has any concern is labelled right wing.”
Mr Tully, who is involved with several community projects locally including the Merlin Allotments and setting up an orienteering group, said there should be a more concerted effort to integrate asylum seekers in the community ahead of moving them into an area.
This is a shortened preview version of this story. To read the rest of the article, see the June 2 edition of the Galway City Tribune. You can support our journalism and buy a digital edition HERE.
CITY TRIBUNE
Galway City Council talks fail to avert water strike action

From this week’s Galway City Tribune – City-wide water outages are expected next week as local authority staff down tools in a dispute over allowances.
Water Services staff in Galway City Council and Galway County Council are due to strike on Wednesday.
Trade union SIPTU predicted the industrial action will cause widespread outages and disruption to the water supply to businesses and homes across Galway. A boil water notice may also be issued.
It’s understood emergency cover and supply to hospitals may be maintained but secondary schools could be impacted on the day the Leaving Cert starts.
Union representatives met with management yesterday (Thursday) but no deal was reached. Pickets are planned for Terryland Waterworks, City Hall on College Road and the Council depot at Sandy Road.
“The City Council has no contingency plan,” said David Samuels, Assistant Industrial Organiser with SIPTU.
(Photo: Terryland waterworks)
This is a shortened preview version of this story. To read the rest of the article, see the June 2 edition of the Galway City Tribune. You can support our journalism and buy a digital edition HERE.