Somewhere Small – a series of sculptural miniature treehouses constructed around houseplants and bonsai trees by artist and propmaster Jedediah Corwyn Voltz.
On view this month at Virgil Normal in LA if you’re passing.
Somewhere Small – a series of sculptural miniature treehouses constructed around houseplants and bonsai trees by artist and propmaster Jedediah Corwyn Voltz.
On view this month at Virgil Normal in LA if you’re passing.
The autograph book of Jammet’s restaurant which is up for auction
Foodie writes:
Jammet’s autograph book is up for auction for €1,500 – €2,500 on April 26 in Sheppard’s of Durrow. The collection includes the signatories of WB Yeats , Countess Markievicz and Sir William Orpen, KBE, RA, RHA, including a self portrait (in pencil!) of Sir Orpen.
The collection of autographs, drawings, and paintings were collected in the first quarter of the 20th century by Mary Margaret (Polly) Moore (1884-1924) while employed at Jammet’s Restaurant, Dublin.
From top: A signed statement released this afternoon by 14 Independent TDs; and Dáil proceedings starting with a prayer this afternoon
A statement released by 14 Independent TDs this afternoon states they will not vote for either acting Taoiseach Enda Kenny or Fianna Fáil leader Micheál Martin later today when the Dáil votes – for a third time – on the nomination of a Taoiseach.
More to follow.
Watch Dáil proceedings live here
Pic: Shane Beatty
Fine Gael’s Noel Rock (top) nominates Enda Kenny for Taoiseach, for the third time, as Fianna Fáil’s Lisa Chambers (above) nominates Micheál Martin, also for the third time.
Environment Minister Alan Kelly
Was the introduction of new apartment size guidelines in breach of EU law?
Grab a crying chair.
Bonkers writes:
Back in December [Environment Minister] Alan Kelly did the bidding for Tom Parlon, former PD Minister and now head of the Construction Industry Federation, i.e along with IBEC one of the property developers lobby groups.
Kelly rammed through guidelines for even smaller shoebox apartments than we already have.
Apart from allowing 40sqm apartments (which is well below average sizes on the continent with perhaps the exception of Paris and French ski resorts) he also abolished the rule that apartments must be dual aspect.
Under the new guidelines new units can be single aspect only which means some poor suckers are going to end up with only north facing windows and a complete lack of natural light.
Then the architects came out and said his minimum sizes weren’t actually workable because you need corridors of a specific width for fire safety purposes.
So it seems that neither the CIF or Kellys Dept of Environment ever bothered to ask architects or engineers to come up with a minimum size that meets fire regulations. They just steamed ahead.
So recently I found out about a little-known piece of EU legislation called the Aarhus Convention.
This says that EU members cannot make major changes to environment policy (of which housing is a key heading) without first putting the plans out to public consultation.
Now I might be wrong on this but I’ve searched everywhere online for the public consultation on Kelly’s plans and I can’t find it anywhere.
I have emailed the Dept of Environment twice now to ask them and haven’t even received a ‘We’ll get back to you’ email in return which is making me suspicious that Kelly rushed this through in December when he knew Labour were likely to sustain big losses in the election.
I think this might be one for Legal Coffee Drinker to investigate. If there was no public consultation on permitting Irish apartments becoming children’s shoe boxes then AK47 has pulled a massive stroke here and is in breach of EU law.
Also I noticed members of the public who report compliance issues to the Aarhus Compliance Committee *might* get summoned to Brussels to present their case, all flights and hotel paid. Time for the Broadsheet commentariat to sample those 7% beers maybe?!
Anyone?
Rollingnews
Animator Adam Brown brings everyone’s favourite boy and tiger to life using key frames from the original cartoon strip.
Fisherman Lance Burgos, kayak fishing at Lake Fausse Point State Park in Louisiana, snags something unusual with his hand line.
Wait for it.
From top: Health Minister Leo Varadkar with the proposed site of the Children’s Hospital with Nathan Evans (left) and his sister Olivia; Dr Rory Hearne
Ours is a deeply unequal health system where sick children who are reliant on the public system are left waiting for months and even years while children whose families can afford it are avoiding the waiting lists and accessing care through the private system.
Dr Rory Hearne writes:
The numbers of people on hospital waiting lists in this country are truly shocking. There are now almost half a million (that’s ten per cent of our entire population!) waiting for various forms of treatment or assessment in our public hospital system.
If we look at children specifically we can see that the numbers of children waiting to be seen in hospital day cases has risen by a third (33.7%) in just over a year (from December 2014 to March 2016).
Meanwhile the number of children on inpatient (often surgery) waiting lists has increased by 18% in the same period.
This shows just how far away we are from putting in place the aspirations of the 1916 Proclamation that aimed to cherish “all children of the nation equally”.
So while the state splashed out on the recent celebrations and commemorations over ten thousand sick children (11, 145 to be exact) are waiting to be seen for an appointment in our public hospitals.
What a Republic to be proud of!
While most of the media coverage so far has looked at the overall waiting lists numbers, including both adults and children, I have analysed the waiting list figures released by the National Treatment Purchase Fund to look specifically at the numbers of children who are waiting to be seen in our hospitals. I also looked back at the figures for 2014 to see how the waiting lists have changed.
The graph below shows that things have worsened considerably in quite a short space of time. We can see that the numbers of children waiting over six months on day case lists has increased by three quarters (75%) from 1675 to 2944. While there was an increase by 40% of children waiting longer than six months for inpatient care.
Just stop and think about this for a moment. Six months is a substantial length of time in a child’s life. As a parent I know about the reality of waiting for health care (in particular for dental treatment) but fortunately my children have not required to be on a waiting list for something very serious.
I can only imagine the stress and worry on those parents and the needless suffering of children waiting month after month and in some cases, over a year, to be seen in a hospital for illnesses relating to Ear Nose and Throat, Respiratory illnesses, Cardiology, Surgery, Orthopaedics and even Radiology.
The waiting lists differ from hospital to hospital. In the graph below I show the hospitals with the highest waiting lists in 2016. We can see that for hospitals like Our Lady’s Hospital Crumlin the numbers of children waiting for day cases increased by 43%.
Some of our regional hospitals like Galway and Waterford are also notable for their high waiting lists and significant increases over the last year.
The reasons for waiting lists are complex but there is no doubt that the austerity cuts and the failure to provide sufficient funding to our public health system is a large part of it.
There has been some debate in the media recently about the “high” level of spending on our health services and the resultant claim that the system is the problem.
But the system is in chaos – with underpaid staff, closed beds, inadequate facilities – not because of the lack of effort or capabilities from the people working in the health system but due to its chronic under resourcing.
If we look at the actual numbers we can see from the graph below that Ireland’s spending on health as a % of GDP at 8.1% is below the OECD average of 8.9%.
And most importantlyy only 68.5% of health spending in Ireland is public (i.e. 31.5% is private) versus the OECD average of 72.7% and countries such as the Denmark where it is 84.3% and the UK where public spending is 86.6%.
This means that only 5.5% of GDP is spent on public health care in Ireland versus 7.3% in the UK.
We can see that a relatively high proportion of spending on health in Ireland is private. This means that access to health care in Ireland is strongly influenced by private individuals’ and families’ ability to pay for it privately.
The public health system in Ireland does not provide universal comprehensive accessible healthcare like the National Health Service in the UK. So those who can afford it are clearly buying a greater access to healthcare than lower income households in Ireland through the private hospitals and clinics (who highlight this point in their advertising).
Also people who don’t have a medical care or health insurance are charged for use of the public system as well.
This is a deeply unequal health system which results in these massive waiting lists and the inequality whereby sick children who are reliant on the public system are left waiting for months and even years while children whose families can afford it are avoiding the waiting lists and accessing care through the private system.
This can be classed as nothing other than an apartheid health system. This is grossly unfair and unequal. It is reinforcing an already unequal society for tens of thousands of children.
The waiting lists show that we need a properly funded universal public health system that can provide equal and timely access to high quality treatment for all our citizens.
The public demonstrated in the recent election that would rather forego tax reductions such as the USC in order to see a properly funded universal health system.
So whatever never government is formed has the public support to do it – it just has to have the political will to implement it.
Dr Rory Hearne is a policy analyst, academc, social justice campaigner and independent candidate for the Seanad NUI Colleges Panel. He writes here in a personal capacity. Follow Rory on Twitter: @roryhearne