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Environment Minister Alan Kelly (above) delivering government Irish Water charge concessions in the Dáil while outside protests (top) continued this afternoon. 

Mr Kelly said the €100 grant would be a cheque or transfer and customers would pay the charges upfront and receive the grant later. He admitted the first year would entail a time lag with the payment expected in September. The minister has said those who pledge to never pay water charges are in a different category to those who cannot pay and will be dealt with differently.

The capped charges will be in place until 1 January 2019 with legislation to allow for capped charges to continue after 2019. Households with either water or sewage only will pay 50% of the charges.

Those with meters who use less will get a once off rebate. The starting date for the charges is 1 January and bills will be charged from April next year. If a householder fails to register they will receive a default bill for €260 a year.

They will also not be entitled to the €100 Water Conservation Grant. People now have until 2 February to register. Households in group water schemes who register will also be eligible for the conservation grant.

PPS Numbers will not be required for registration and Irish Water will delete any numbers it has already received. There will be penalties for those who do not pay after a year or enter into a payment plan.

A single adult household will face a €30 penalty and €60 will apply to other households. Legislation will be introduced allowing landlords to deduct unpaid water charges from tenants’ deposits if necessary.

Govt outlines new capped water charges (RTÉ)

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Kerrang!

Some of the Edge Only collection.

Irish-made jewellery for the gnarly leather-clad headbanger within us all.

Canada-born DJ and designer Jenny Huston writes:

The impetus to start Edge Only came about in February of this year when I was designing a ring that I wanted my Mother [Jane Huston – a designer goldsmith and gemmologist] to make for me. I was describing it and sketching it badly (I don’t have her gift for drawing) and then started talking excitedly about all of the other things I thought would be cool to make down the line. Mum gave me an amused look and said “Jenny you seem to know what you want so why don’t you design a collection? Seriously – it’s not like you don’t know any goldsmiths!”

She had a good point. Mum moved back to Ireland in 1993 to set up and run the Crafts Council of Ireland’s Jewellery Skills Course, so she had been training goldsmiths in Ireland for over 17 years before finishing up to focus on her own work. I had a pool of skilled talent that I could work with here.

Before long I had enough designs to start with and the idea became real. I signed up for the Start Your Own Business course with the Dublin City Local Enterprise Office and the Enterprise Start2 course though the Dublin Business Innovation Centre . I took various other one-day and half day courses throughout March and April and crammed in as much knowledge as possible while designing and working on prototype designs with Mum.

I worked with AAD design studio on the visual identity over the summer as the master models were finalized and then the website went live on September 15. Rock & Roll and Geometric were my first collections (there had to be a nod to music in there somewhere!). I waited to formally launch the company 6 weeks later on October 29 with a further two collections Everyday Icons and Bugs (as well as further additions to the Rock & Roll and Geometric collections (All available at link below)…

Edge Only

 Edge Only (Facebook)

Irish-made stocking fillers to broadsheet@broadsheet.ie marked ‘Irish-Made Stocking Fillers’. No fee just some friendly hair-tousling.

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TomClonan

From top: Protests in Sligo on Monday night; outside the Mansion House on Saturday; and Tom Clonan 

 

Dramatically-haired security analyst Tom Clonan went on RTÉ Radio One’s Today with Sean O’Rourke presented by Keelin Shanley this morning to discuss the Irish Water protests with an emphasis on the conduct of some of the protesters and the response by the Gardai.

Keelin Shanley: “You’re very welcome back to the programme. Now over the last few days anti-water protests have turned from peaceful demonstrations into much more tense, violent, even dangerous encounters between politicians, protestors and Gardai. I’m joined now by security analyst Tom Clonan. Tom, thank you for coming into us this morning. You are, you’ve a background in this area, you’ve done training in this area, you’ve been analysing hours of footage on YouTube as to what has been happening. What is your take on how it has been managed so far?”

Tom Clonan: “Well, just so the listeners know, as an army officer, as a captain in the defence forces prior to the ceasefires, we provided aid to the civil powers, of support to An Garda Siochana. So we did what we called riot control or public order training exactly the same as An Garda Siochana, because when we were in the same place, whether it be a prison riot, like say in Portlaoise for example, or whether we were supporting the guards in extradition cases, which were very, very nasty, very confrontational, we had exactly the same reference points as our colleagues in An Gardai with regard to the use of force, justification and minimum force. So I‘ve been watching the water protests with great interest and particularly after the event at the weekend, where I have to say Ministers of Cabinet have been using language which is very, very inappropriate, they have been using hyperbole to describe what have been relatively minor although unacceptable incidents but they need to be clear…”

Shanley: “What do you mean, Tom?”

Clonan: “I saw the footage, what had happened to Minister Burton and I saw the pictures of, you know, water balloons hitting her head, and, you know that’s absolutely unacceptable, Paul Murphy and others who are involved in those protests, they need to make sure they are properly stewarded and conducted responsibly, and in fairness to Minister Burton…”

Shanley: “Paul Murphy would say he didn’t…”

Clonan: “I understand that, but he was there with a megaphone. Please use it. But anyway, but the government response has been, you know, one of a confrontational, adversarial use of language, they constantly use the term ‘sinister elements’ to refer to protestors who are out on the streets. There were 150,000 out on the streets, we’ll probably have similar numbers, in fact we’ll probably have more than that on the 10th December, when I heard Brendan Howlin say this morning that we could be proud of Irish Water, they’re really missing the point there, you know, people are angry…”

Shanley: “But it remains to be seen, Tom, we haven’t heard the full proposals yet..”

Clonan: “They may try to arrange the deckchairs on the deck of the Titanic but people aren’t, the government are correct when they say people aren’t necessarily protesting against water, but the installation of water meters gives people the opportunity to protest…”

Shanley: “Let’s get back to the security. If you talk about a violent confrontation or if you find yourself in a position where there is, you know, public disorder or unrest or riot or whatever you going to call it, what are the basic requirements, the legal requirements, what are you going to do?”Continue reading →

life

Life in the Womb, an iOS app developed by Dublin-based firms The Science Picture Company and Broadsheet favourites Redwind Software, has won a 2014 World Summit Award for innovation in learning and education.

They’ll receive the award at the wi-fi friendly World Summit Global Congress, which will be hosted in Abu Dhabi.

It’s no Realex Web Award though. in fairness.

Life in the Womb

Previously: Womb It Concerns

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