unnamed-2

‘Typebography’

Oh yes.

By William Doherty, a final year student at NCAD.

He sez:

“This cover explores a new form of land art I am using in my work, which I call ‘Typebography’. I’m not a big fan of the usual Paddy’s Day themed designs, I created an alternative Irish theme design using the land as my canvas. My work has recently been inspired by Seamus Heaney’s poems and his interest in Ireland’s bog. His poem Boglands and one line in-particular “Our unfenced country is bog” led me to explore using the bog in my work. This cover links two of my interests by using the bog, which holds 10,000 years of Ireland’s history and the typography of the Le Cool logo.”

This week’s Le Cool  Dublin Issue

William Doherty

final shamrock

A nano-sized shamrock whose stem is approximately 200,000 times smaller than a grain of salt – 500 of which could fit side by side on a single human hair –  etched on to a Trinity College Dublin silver lapel pin for the weekend that’s in it.

Witchcraft?

Yes No.

David Kinch writes:

I just wanted to send you this video of the AMBER [Advanced Materials and BioEngineering Research Centre] Helium Ion microscope in Trinity College The video shows the etching of a Shamrock with a stem that is 200,000 times smaller than a grain of salt on to a lapel pin.
The pin will be presented to the recipient of the SFI (Science Foundation Ireland) St Patrick’s Day Science Medal in Washington DC TODAY at The Wild Geese Network of Irish Scientists’ by Prof Michael Morris, AMBER Principal Investigator. AMBER’s Helium Ion Microscope which is the only one in Ireland and one of only a handful in Europe….

 

Amber

90333686summonses

[Robert Olson of the Garda Inspectorate and, above,  a screengrab from yesterday’s report]

When a motorist breaks the law and a Fixed Charge Notice (FCN) is issued, the offender has 28 days to pay the fine.

Failure to do so results in a 50% increase in the fine with another 28 days to pay it. If, after 56 days the offender still hasn’t paid, a summons to attend court is issued to the offender by a member of the Gardaí.

If the summons isn’t served, no fine is paid and no penalty points are incurred.

Yesterday’s Garda Inspectorate report looked at the issue of summonses not being served.

It found:

“In reviewing the level of non-payment of FCNs for 2011 and 2012, the C&AG found that approximately 238,000 fines were unpaid. Of these an estimated 56,000 FCNs were cancelled petition requests, company summonses and statute barred offences. Of the remaining unpaid FCNs, approximately 178,500 summonses were issued in 2011 and 2012. Of these summonses, 85,000 (48%) were served and 93,500 (52%) went unserved.

“As outlined in Table 2.2 [above], the Inspectorate, using C&AG figures, conservatively estimates the potential Exchequer revenue loss from the non-payment of the FCNs resulting in unserved summonses to be a minimum of €7.4 million.”

Following on from this, the Garda Inspectorate recommended:

“A review of the summons serving process be undertaken by the Garda Síochána to ascertain the reasons for the significant level of unserved summonses and to make recommendations to provide a more effective summons serving process.”

While the penalty point controversy has overshadowed the issue of summonses not being served, incidences in relation to this matter were investigated and highlighted by former Irish independent journalist Gemma O’Doherty, over the last year.

May 9, 2013: Ms O’Doherty, in the Irish Independent, reported that summonses for three different motoring offences were not served on Fianna Fáil’s Robert Tory, by gardaí. The three summonses related to alleged speeding in August 2011 and March 2012 and for parking on a footpath in June 2011.

May 10, 2013: Fianna Fail TD Robert Troy issued a statement in relation to the summonses that weren’t served, saying: “The Minister for Justice is currently awaiting a report from the Garda Commissioner into issues concerning the application of penalty points. I welcome this process and look forward to the publication of the report. I currently have six points on my licence and if the gardaí believe that there any further outstanding cases then I will of course co-operate fully in this regard.”

October 17, 2013: Phoenix magazine reported that the State Solicitor for Westmeath Peter Jones avoided incurring 8 penalty points to his driver’s licence because points were either terminated, court summonses were not served or, on one occasion, a case was struck out.
The points related to four separate times Mr Jones was allegedly caught speeding between 2011 and 2012. The magazine reported that Gemma O’Doherty was planning to write an article about Mr Jones and the non-serving of summonses and had put questions to Mr Jones in May 2013, at the time she was sacked.

January 23, 2014: At a meeting of the Public Accounts Committee, Waterford Fine Gael TD John Deasy asked Garda Commissioner Martin Callinan: “Has the Commissioner come across any evidence of deliberate non-serving of summonses by gardaí?” Mr Callinan replied: “No”.
Mr Deasy also asked Commissioner Callinan: “Has the Commissioner taken disciplinary action against any garda with regard to the non-serving of summonses? Again, Mr Callinan replied: “No.”
Mr Deasy then asked the Commissioner: “Has the Commissioner ever detected multiple non-serving of summonses by a particular garda?”. Mr Callinan replied: “To be fair, no. It is a volume issue. It is a difficult area for us and we accept it is a difficult area for us but we are working to try to reduce the level.”

Read the Garda Inspectorate report in full here.

(Sam Boal/Photocall Ireland)

-1

 

Dublin city centre’s music and arts festival Forbidden Fruit returns this June Bank Holiday weekend and yesterday revealed the first acts for the Saturday including Flaming Lips and Bell X1.

Sunday’s installment will be revealed at 11am TODAY.

WE have TWO Double passes to the first day to GIVEAWAY to the first two readers who can correctly answer this question..

When was the last The Flaming Lips concert in Ireland?

Lines MUST close at 11am.

Forbidden Fruit

Thanks Elaine Byrne

UPDATE: ‘Dave’ and ‘therealkevinwhitty’ win the tickets. Thanks all.

Enda+Kenny+New+York+St+Patricks+Day+Parade

photo 2-24

[Enda Kenny at the New York St Patrick’s Day parade, and a LGBT pin]

We the undersigned wish to express our strong concerns regarding your proposed participation in the St Patrick’s Day Parade in New York City. By singling out openly LGBT (Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender) groups for exclusion from the parade, the organisers are sending out a message of discrimination and intolerance towards a section of the community and diaspora who deserve to have their contribution to the global Irish family celebrated and recognised on the same basis as everyone else.

It has been claimed, disingenuously, that because no group is allowed to display overtly political banners, the prohibition on LGBT people depicting any sign or symbol that would identify them as openly lesbian or gay is not discriminatory.

This is a claim that our identities are inherently political, which is false. Our organisations are first and foremost about community and visibility, not any political beliefs. The many other groups who make up the Irish-American community are all allowed to march under banners identifying who they are so we are clearly being subjected to a discriminatory double standard.

You gave a very welcome personal vow last November to actively campaign for what you describe as the ‘equality issue of gay marriage’ in next year’s referendum. You are also on record as stating that you are “proud to stand here as a public representative, a Taoiseach who happens to be a Catholic but not a Catholic Taoiseach. A Taoiseach for all of the people, that’s my job”. These were crucially important statements about the kind of Ireland you envision. You have an opportunity to serve as an ambassador for these same modern and inclusive values, ones which are shared by the vast majority of Irish people, at home and abroad.

Therefore, we strongly urge you to decline to march in the St Patrick’s Day Parade in New York next week – an honourable stance adopted by the city’s Mayor, Bill De Blasio, and the New York City Council. The exclusionary policies of the organisers are completely at odds with the statements you have made around these issues.  If, however, withdrawal at this stage is problematic, we ask that you wear the rainbow-flag lapel-pin [above] as a sign of solidarity with the Irish and Irish-American LGBT communities.

Where we are banned from marching and representing ourselves, our organisations and our community, you can act as our representative, our “Taoiseach for all of the people”, and show New York, Ireland and the world the values of our proud, inclusive and modern Ireland, that draws strength from our traditions but has dispensed with the damaging prejudices of the past.

LGBT Noise
National LGBT Federation (NXF)
Marriage Equality
Gay Switchboard Ireland
INTO LGBT Teachers Group
Atheist Ireland
Dundalk Outcomers
Union Of Students In Ireland (USI)
SIPTU LGBTQ
BeLonG To Youth Services
ShoutOut
LGBT Lawyers Association of Ireland
Trans Student Network Alliance
Action For Russia
Senator Katherine Zappone and Dr Ann Louise Gilligan
Senator David Norris
Senator Averil Power
Panti Bliss – Rory O’Neill
John Halligan TD
Clare Daly TD
Ailbhe Smyth, Feminist campaigner

Add yours below if you wish.

FIGHT!

Previously: He Reigns Over Our Parade

New York St Patrick’s Day Guidelines

Pic: James Higgins

Thanks Max Krzyzanowsk

WilsonTV3
[Former Garda John Wilson on TV3’s Tonight With Vincent Browne last night]

“I just want to say, in relation to Sgt [Maurice] McCabe that I believe that Commissioner [Martin] Callinan should be proud to have a member of the calibre of Maurice McCabe as a member of our police service and I am demanding now, in the public interest, on behalf of the Irish people, that Commissioner Callinan restores Sgt McCabe’s full access to the Garda PULSE system with immediate effect. And I am making that demand in the public interest.”

Former garda John Wilson on the Tonight with Vincent Browne Show last night.

Garda whistleblower Sgt Maurice McCabe has been banned from using PULSE since mid-December 2012.

Watch back in full here

Previously: The Thin Blue Timeline

Broadsheet.ie