Over 16s encouraged to get Covid booster

People aged 16 years and over are being reminded to get their Covid booster vaccine.

Anyone who has had their primary course of the vaccine is now eligible for a booster.

In a statement Damien McCallion, HSE Lead Vaccination Programme, said: “Nearly one million people have had a COVID-19 booster in the last 4 weeks. This is helping us to get through the current surge in COVID-19 cases and to prevent severe illness.”

“Current research shows that 2 weeks after your booster, your protection against severe illness from COVID should go back up to 90%. We appeal to people to get their booster, to protect themselves, their families and communities against COVID-19.”

“The huge level of infection in recent weeks means some people can’t come for their boosters immediately – but more than 600,000 are now eligible and should get their booster dose for their best protection.”

“We also want to invite people with weak immune systems, people who are immunocompromised, to come forward for a booster. Their vaccine course is different – people in this group have been offered an extended primary course of vaccines, usually three doses of vaccine (or two if they first received Janssen), and now we recommend they come for a booster at least three months after their last dose, for their best protection.”

If it is time for your vaccination, and you are 16 or older, you can get your booster dose:

• At a GP – check with your GP, many have supplies available this week
• At a participating pharmacy – check the list of pharmacies for further details and to book an appointment.
• Book a booster appointment online at a HSE vaccination clinic.
• Go to a walk-in booster clinic for your age group.
The HSE is encouraging everyone to avail of the booster dose when offered as it gives the best protection from serious illness caused by COVID-19.

What to bring?

Please bring a photo ID with you. ID can include one of the following: passport, driver’s licence, Garda age card, student/school ID, etc, but if your ID doesn’t include your date of birth, please bring proof of your DOB (e.g. your Birth Cert).

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Minister doesn’t foresee restrictions lifted by this weekend

A Donegal Minister doesn’t foresee restrictions being lifted in time for this weekend.

It comes as the hospitality sector has been calling for clarity about the lifting of the 8pm curfew.

NPHET meets tomorrow against a backdrop of falling Covid case numbers and calls for a fast reopening of society.

Speaking on the Nine Till Noon Show, Minister Charlie McConalogue has acknowledged that it has been an incredibly difficult time for affected businesses and that it is the Government intention to lift restrictions as soon and as safe as possible:


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Second man arrested in connection with Ashling murder

A second man has been arrested in connection with the investigation into the murder of Ashling Murphy.

The 23 year old teacher from Offaly was laid to rest yesterday.

Gardaí have arrested a man in his 30s for potentially withholding information relating to the investigation into the murder of Ashling Murphy.

He is being questioned at a garda station in the Eastern Region.

Another man who was arrested yesterday on suspicion of murdering the school teacher remains in garda custody at Tullamore garda station.

Today marks a week to the day since the 23 year old went for a run along the canal bank in tullamore and was violently assaulted.

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Go ahead for extra Bank Holiday & bonus for healthcare workers

 

Cabinet has given the go-ahead for an extra Bank Holiday on March 18th this year.

It will move to St Brigid’s Day from 2023.

Ministers also approved a once off, tax free € 1,000 bonus for frontline healthcare workers who were in Covid exposed clinical settings.

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Ní Chuinneagáin stars as Coláiste Ailigh win National Basketball title

Photo Basketball Ireland

Coláiste Ailigh defeated Laurel Hill 48-27 in the U19B Girls final of the Pinergy All-Ireland Schools Cup at the National Basketball Arena.

The MVP went to Shannon Ní Chuinneagáin, who scored 33 points. Ní Chuinneagáin was recently named December’s MissQuote.ie Division 1 player of month playing for LYIT Donegal and she again showcased why she’s making waves in the National League.

Coláiste Ailigh led 16-6 at the end of the first quarter and 26-8 by half-time and appeared to be coasting to victory. But Laurel Hill came roaring back into the contest with an excellent third quarter. Holly O’Neill and Jana Zundel inspired an eight point run, to close the deficit to 28-20 by the end of the third.

A Shannon Cunningham fastbreak and layup made it 34-20 in the third minute of the fourth quarter. But again Laurel Hill responded, a big three from O’Neill followed by a Zundel layup made it 36-25 at midway point in quarter. It was to be Coláiste Ailigh’s day, a neat layup under the basket from Ní Chuinneagáin moved the score to 46-27 and their win was wrapped up by a fastbreak layup from Shauna Ní Uiginn in the final seconds, as it finished 48-27.

Top scorers:

Coláiste Ailigh: Shannon Ní Chuinneagáin (33), Shauna Ní Uiginn (9)

Coláiste Ailigh: Aoife Ní Mhurchadha, Shauna Ní Uiginn, Megan Ní Chearnacháin, Annie Nic Giolla Iontóg, Sinead Nic A’tSaoir, Shannon Ní Chuinneagáin, Clodagh Ní Shíoráin, Kayleigh Nic Aonghusa, Michaela Ní Gallachoir

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Hall of Fame honour for Eamonn Giles

Cranford Athletic Club stalwart Eamonn Giles will become the 46th inductee into the Donegal Sports Star Hall of Fame when the Virtual Awards take place on Friday the 28th of January. It is fitting that in the year that he turns 80 Giles is being honoured for six decades of dedication to the sport of athletics. His name is already written into the history books of Donegal athletics as a founding member of the first club in the county in the winter of 1961.

That was a remarkable achievement for a 19-year-old who drove the project and overcame a series of obstacles on that journey. Eamon didn’t do it on his own and he is anxious to emphasise that. The late Jim Hunter is one man who certainly comes into that category. It was a two-man committee of Giles and Hunter when the club was officially affiliated to the Ulster Athletics Board in December 1961. “To be receiving this Hall of Fame is really a great honour for me. I never expected to get it. I know the likes of Patsy McGonagle a great friend of mine got the Sports Star Hall of Fame before so I am really pleased to get this award.”

By the time Cranford AC was officially affiliated to the Ulster Athletics Board, Giles had already been building teams to compete. Milford men Paddy Marley and the late Hugo Duggan were key signings. Patsy McGonagle who went on to found Finn Valley joined up along with the McDaid brothers Danny and Neily and the Hunters Bill and Jim. A lot of local young men bought into the Giles dream and it led to a string of success in the 1960s and 70s first at junior and then senior level in Ulster. The ladies became a big part of the Cranford AC story and they hit the headlines big time in the early 1980s with a couple of provincial team titles while Rose Gavaghan won the Ulster senior individual cross-country race a remarkable three years in a row (1981-83). Another woman Bridie Trearty went on to represent her country in the Masters category.

Rose Gavaghan has been a stalwart of the club ever since and is a key member of the Cranford coaching team along with Ernie McElhinney. The club has for many years now focused almost exclusively on juvenile athletes and that has brought some great days in competition at county, provincial and national level. Oisin Kelly (Kilmacrennan) and Caolan McFadden (Creeslough) are two of the current bunch of young athletes who have excelled.

It was remarkable that Eamon Giles, a man in his early 20s could combine competing with coaching and managing an athletic club. He was a very good sprinter excelling in the 100m and 200m distances. Eamonn won a number of Ulster 200m titles and was runner-up in a handful of 100m finals. He was a member of the Defence Forces and that saw Eamon enjoy success in the 110m hurdles at the All-Army National Championships. Indeed if Giles had the luxury in the 1960s of focusing exclusively on competing he feels he could have got much closer to achieving more national success.

When his running days were over he devoted much of his free time to coaching at Cranford and that hard work has paid off with Ulster, Irish and international success as hundreds of athletes reaped the benefits of being involved with a unique rural club. Every week of the season Cranford AC is out competing at events in the county and across the country. Eamon got his love of sports and training from his father, a former Kilkenny hurler and army officer.

Jim Giles moved north when he was posted to the Rockhill Barracks in Letterkenny. He settled locally after marrying Madge McClafferty. His dad had a grounding in fitness and stamina training that he had learned from his hurling days and also in the army. That had a huge influence on Eamon even as a small boy. He began competing at all the local sports days and it was well worth it if you were able to win with money being a prize rather than trophies.

Hugo Duggan, Paddy Marley, Jim and Bill Hunter, and Pat Marley were young men also competing at the time. Eamon was thinking about the club formation and knew that those lads would be the cornerstone of turning that dream into a reality. However there were many challenges ahead but Giles was not going to be sidetracked in following his dream. Cranford was a rural area and it was a long journey to the north for competitions. Money was needed to run a club but raising finance was going to be tough in a bleak economic environment.

Eamon Giles was also seen as too young and inexperienced to be running an athletics club. That meant very little local support to back the ambition of the 19-year-old. Eamon was undeterred by the negativity although with the benefit of hindsight he does acknowledge that the older more experienced people at the time had made some valid points about the potential pitfalls. The Derry Journal had been carrying reports about the Oak Leaf Club who were ranked the best in Ulster at the time. That prompted Eamon to write to the editor of the Derry Journal and he got an address for the secretary of Oak Leaf Hubert Logue. He was very helpful in providing the right information to form a club. The final step was to make the application to the Ulster Athletics Board and it was successful.

Club training was going well and in 1963 Eamon felt it was time to give his men their first big test. An Oak Leaf team was invited to take part in a road race in Cranford on St. Patrick’s. The visitors were too good but it was a yardstick as to where the new club was in their development and there was a confidence that the potential was there to improve a lot. Cranford’s first success was in Belfast in November 1963 in the seven and half mile “Black Mountain Climb.

In January in 1964, Cranford made the trip to Strabane and took the Ulster Junior ‘War Memorial’ title. More Ulster and National successes followed for the men in the red striped vest of Cranford AC. Every title was so special to Eamon Giles and he’s as passionate today as he was 60 years ago about developing athletes and seeing them reach their true potential. He’s down coaching youngsters a couple of nights a week at their training ground in Rosapenna courtesy of hotel owner Frankie Casey while Creeslough businessman Danny Lafferty has been the club’s main sponsor for 25 years.

As he heads towards his 80th birthday Eamon Giles retains that enthusiasm for the sport and thinks nothing of getting on the road with teams every weekend during the season. Eamonn was a founding member of the Donegal Athletics Board. He is an Honorary Life Vice-President of Athletics Ireland and was inducted into Ulster Athletics Hall of Fame joining other household names like Maeve Kyle, Cathriona McKiernan, Danny Mc Daid, Vera Sherry, Derek Graham, Bernie O’Callaghan, Hugo Duggan and Patsy McGonagle. Eamon Giles was selected as a member of the Donegal Athletics Team of the Millennium and was inducted into the County Board’s Hall of Fame two years ago.

The Cranford club attracted athletes from all over the county and within eight years three Cranford athletes Paddy Marley, Hugo Duggan and Danny McDaid were representing Ireland at senior level. Eamon is still the joint Ulster record holder for 100m having run the distance in 11 seconds at the Ulster Championships in Newry in 1967. The other joint holders are Paul Dolan from Ballyshannon who set the time in the Helsinki Olympics in 1952 and Hugo Duggan who set the time at the Ulster Decathlon Championships in Belfast in 1969.

Eamon Giles will be the 46th inductee into the Donegal Sports Star Hall of Fame when the awards takes place virtually on Friday night the 28th of January starting at 7.30 p.m.
Ulster Seniors title winners in 1971 72

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Calls for proper planning service in Inishowen

 

The importance of the Planning Service to Inishowen has been highlighted at a Municipal District meeting this week, particularly in the context of the Mica crisis.

Cllr Martin Farren told the meeting that when the Covid crisis is over, it’s vital that a full time planner is returned to Inishowen.

He says the centralisation of planning to Lifford a number of years ago has not worked to Inishowen’s benefit, and given the number of applications being received locally, it’s clear that change is needed…….

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Meanwhile, Cllr Martin McDermott, who chairs the council’s Mica Redress Committee says it’s vital that the planning section prepares for a large number of applications for temporary accomodation as Mica affected homes are demolished and replaced.

He says imagination will be needed both locally and nationally to ensure that the massive task of tackling Mica is not delayed by planning problems:

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Roads around Manor need urgent attention – Coyle

 

Donegal County Council is being urged to carry out urgent remedial works on two roads outside Manorcunningham, one at Monclink and the other at Sallybrook.

Responsibility for Manorcunningham and its immediate surroundings transferred from Inishowen to Letterkenny before the last local elections, but Cllr Donal Coyle told a recent meeting of Letterkenny Milford Municipal District that there were question marks over who was responsible for the two roads.

He was told both are in the Inishowen area, but the Monclink one is not under Donegal County Council control.

He urged officials to ensure both roads are addressed, and says he’s confident that will happen because area engineers generally cooperate effectively:

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Derry shopkeeper reaches out to author of mystery letter

 

A Derry shopkeeper has reached out to the author of a mystery letter which details how the shopper pretended to give him £20 note when they had really only handed him a tenner.

The incident at Jim’s mobile shop in Carnhill happened in the early 90s.

The young customer went away with more change than they should have but has now come clean while also enclosing £20 notes as compensation.

Speaking on the Nine Till Noon Show, Shopkeeper Jim, says he has no idea who the person is but wants to meet with them:


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34 people awaiting admission to LUH

 

There were 34 people awaiting admission to Letterkenny University Hospital this morning.

Five people were on trolleys in its Emergency Department while a further 29 were waiting on wards.

Meanwhile the number of patients with Covid-19 at the hospital has dropped to 45.

There are two patients with the virus in ICU.

 

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