This afternoon.

Donabate beach. Donabate, county Dublin.

Jade Connolly, daughter of Bernadette Connolly, makes an appeal to find her mother, who has been missing from the Swords area since Friday, January 7. In the last confirmed sighting of Bernadette, she was seen walking towards the entrance to Donabate Beach.

Sasko Lazarov/RollingNews

Summer 1993.

Middle Abbey Street, Dublin 1

Name those jammers, anyone?

Via Photos of Dublin

Meanwhile…

Ah here.

Robert Watt, Secretary General at the Department of Health

This afternoon.

Via Independent.ie:

Under-fire Department of Health secretary-general Robert Watt this week jetted out to Dubai to attend a health and wellness expo, as controversy continues to rage over his €81,000 salary increase.

Mr Watt and Health Minister Stephen Donnelly are attending a massive international showcase in the heart of the United Arab Emirates.

It is understood they flew to the event in economy-class seats and are not staying in one of the more expensive hotels in Dubai.

Meanwhile..

“Robert Watt can’t turn up to a committee but can head off to Dubai,” Fianna Fail TD John McGuinnness said, in reference to Mr Watt’s decision on whether to appear before a joint Finance and Public Account Committee hearing on his controversial top-up.

Robert Watt jets out to Dubai for wellness conference amid €295k wage storm (RTE)

RollingNews

This afternoon.

Via Margery Smelkinson, Leslie Bienen, and Jeanne Noble in The Atlantic:

To justify mask requirements in school at this point, health officials should be able to muster solid evidence from randomized trials of masking in children. To date, however, only two randomized trials have measured the impact of masks on COVID transmission.

The first was conducted in Denmark in the spring of 2020 and found no significant effect of masks on reducing COVID-19 transmission. The second is a much-covered study conducted in Bangladesh that reported that surgical masks (but not cloth) were modestly effective at reducing rates of symptomatic infection. However, neither of these studies included children, let alone vaccinated children.

Other studies—not randomized trials—have looked at the effects of masks in schools, and their results do not support pervasive, endless masking at school. A study from Brown University, analyzing 2020–21 data from schools in New York, Massachusetts, and Florida, found no correlation between student cases and mask mandates, but did see decreased cases associated with teacher vaccination.

A study published in Science looking at individual mitigation measures in schools last winter found that, although teacher masking reduced COVID-19 positivity, student masking did not have a significant effect.

Even though the first half of this school year was dominated by the highly transmissible Delta variant, the picture in more recent studies looks similar. In Tennessee, two neighboring counties with similar vaccination rates, Davidson and Williamson, have virtually overlapping case-rate trends in their school-age populations, despite one having a mask mandate and one having a mask opt-out rate of about 23 percent.

One would expect a quarter of the students opting out of masking to affect transmission rates if masks played any significant role in controlling COVID-19 spread, but that was not the case.

Another recent analysis of data from Cass County, North Dakota, comparing school districts with and without mask mandates, concluded that mask-optional districts had lower prevalence of COVID-19 cases among students this fall. Analyses of COVID-19 cases in Alachua County, Florida, also suggest no differences in mask-required versus mask-optional schools.

Similarly, the U.K. recently reported finding no statistically significant difference in absences traced to COVID-19 between secondary schools with mask mandates and those without mandates.

Meanwhile…

Recent prospective studies from Greece and Italy found evidence that masking is a barrier to speech recognition, hearing, and communication, and that masks impede children’s ability to decode facial expressions, dampening children’s perceived trustworthiness of faces.

Research has also suggested that hearing-impaired children have difficulty discerning individual sounds; opaque masks, of course, prevent lip-reading. Some teachers, parents, and speech pathologists have reported that masks can make learning difficult for some of America’s most vulnerable children, including those with cognitive delays, speech and hearing issues, and autism.

Masks may also hinder language and speech development—especially important for students who do not speak English at home. Masks may impede emotion recognition, even in adults, but particularly in children.

The Case Against Masks At School (The Atlantic)

Getty

Mike Scott

This morning

Meanwhile…

Over to you, Spotify.

More as we get it.

Previously: Heart Of Gold

Clockwise from top: Cork, Dublin and Limerick

The results are in.

Last week, with a free Rob Stears Big City Bot Limited Edition Giclée Print in A2 size from Jam Art Prints on offer, we asked you to name Rob’s three city bots (above).

Nicorigo‘s entry won him the ‘rob bot’ print of his choice:

Dublin: ‘Bigschmocktron’
Limerick: ‘Shannonside Masterforce’
Cork: ‘Corkius Prime’

Well done Nicorigo and thanks all.

Last week: I Like Big Bots And I Can Not Lie

Jam Art Factory

Jam Art Prints

The Jam Art Print competition appears here every second Thursday.

Save Poolbeg

This morning.

Via Independent.ie:

A huge deficit has emerged in the pension fund covering thousands of credit union staff.

The €78m deficit is so large it has the potential to financially destabilise the sector, according to credit union sources.

The shortfall has ballooned from just €6m in 2017. It hit €20m in 2020, but it has jumped to €78m for this year, due to the impact of low interest rates on the scheme.

The scheme is overseen by the Irish League of Credit Unions and covers staff in that organisation along with employees in affiliated credit unions.

The shortfall will have to be made up by individual credit unions that are members of the league, it states in a memo from pension advisers to the league marked “confidential” and seen by the Irish Independent.

Vanessa!

€78m deficit in credit union pension fund has potential to destabilise sector (Independent.ie)

RollingNews

Taoiseach Micheál Martin (Centre) and Minister for Agriculture, Food and the Marine Charlie McConalogue (right)  arrive at yesterday’s 67th Annual General Meeting of the Irish Farmers Association in the Mansion House  hosted by IFA President Tim Cullinan (left)

Yesterday.

“We are a country that is coming from behind to be honest. We have done the talk on climate change but the milestones of achievement are not as impressive as the talk is.

Farming is not a soft target. You are not a soft target.

“We are at a crossroads for Irish farming and for forestry. Threats and opportunities abound but our choice now is to either honestly address the challenge that climate change poses for the sector, and together harness the opportunities that this changing context presents. Or, as some voices counsel, to resist what I see is quickly becoming irresistible.”

Taoiseach at the IFA annual conference yesterday.

Martin denies suggestion farmers ‘soft target’ for climate action (Irish Times)

Sam Boal/RollingNews

Broadsheet.ie