Thursday 7 September 2017

Waterford and Lismore To Get Second Permanent Deacon


The number of priest working actively in the Diocese of Waterford and Lismore has dropped dramatically since the turn of the Millennium and are expected to drop even further in the next decade, but the Diocese is to get a second Permanent Deacon in the coming weeks.

Dunhill man Brendan Gallagher is to be ordained a Permanent Deacon by the Bishop of Waterford and Lismore Alphonsus Cullinan at the Sacred Heart Church in Dunhill at 3pm on Sunday October 1.

Two years ago Brendan was accepted as a candidate for the Permanent Diaconate Programme in the Diocese of Waterford and Lismore in a ceremony where the chief celebrant was Bishop Cullinan, assisted by Mgr. Nicholas O Mahony who is the Vicar General of the Diocese and also the Priest in Charge of the Parish of Dunhill and Fenor with the last number of years.

Just over twelve months ago Brendan took the next step on his journey to become a Permanent Deacon when he was instituted an acolyte and as a Lector at a ceremony at the Cathedral of the Most Holy Trinity in Waterford with Bishop Cullinan again the principal celebrant.

As a Lector Brendan became in a position to instruct adults and children in faith and prepare them to receive the Sacraments. He can speak about the Liturgy and minister to the sick. He can assist priests and deacons on the altar and in Eucharistic ceremonies.

In 2001 the Irish Episcopal Conference received permission from the Holy See to proceed with the restoration of the Permanent Diaconate on the Island of Ireland.

Eight years later the Bishops appointed a national training authority to approve and monitor formation of suitable candidates to be Permanent Deacons, and the first ordinations took place in the following years.

The first responsibility of the deacon is to be an effective visible sign of Christ who came to serve rather than to be served.  Although the ministry of the deacon may be exercised on a part-time basis, he remains at all times a deacon and he is called, in his life-style, to reflect this.

Other duties of a Permanent Deacon include:

• Assisting the priest at the celebration of the Eucharist
• Bringing the Eucharist to the sick at home and in hospitals
• The formation of altar servers and of acolytes
• Presiding at Exposition and Benediction of the Blessed Sacrament
• The celebration of Baptism
• Celebrating marriages (with the appropriate delegation)
• Presiding at funerals

• Proclaiming the Gospel at the Liturgy
• Preaching the homily
• Participating in sacramental preparation programmes
• The formation of readers
• Facilitating study of and prayer with the scriptures

• Facilitating the development of lay ministry
• Visiting the sick
• Visiting prisoners
• Visiting the bereaved
• Youth ministry, and the facilitation of peer-ministry among young people
• Promoting awareness of the social teaching of the Church
• The promotion of justice and human rights

He receives his mission from the Bishop of his Diocese, and will be assigned to work as a member of a team, normally under the leadership of a parish priest.  He is called to minister in close co-operation with priests and with members of the lay faithful who are entrusted with various ministries.  

Permanent Deacons are not intended to replace lay ministers.  In many places, they play a key role in the development and co-ordination of lay ministry.  Neither are deacons intended to be “mini-priests,” making up for a shortage of vocations.  The Vatican Council is quite clear that, alongside the diaconate, the role of the ordained priesthood must continue to be fostered, because without the priest there is no Eucharist and without the Eucharist there is no Church.

The first Permanent Deacon in the Diocese of Waterford and Lismore was ordained in 2015, when Dr. Lazarus Gidolf was ordained in St. Oliver’s Church in Clonmel by Bishop Alphonsus Cullinan in front of a large gathering of Priests including Very Rev. Fr. Pat Fitzgerald who is the Diocesan Director for the Permanent Diaconate as well as Parish Priest of the Saint Paul’s Parish in Waterford City, Parishioners and members of the Indian Community as well as members of Lazarus family and friends.

Brendan Gallagher will be known to many through sporting circles and was for many years very involved with Ladies Football in the county and was for a time the Chairman of the Ladies Football County Board.

Saturday 19 August 2017

Search Takes Place For Missing Youghal Woman


Gardai have concluded searches for a missing woman in Youghal today.

Gardai along with soldiers, the coast guards and members of the Irish Search Dogs Organisation took part in search of disappeared forty five year old woman Tina Satchwell.

Members of the Garda Water Unit also carried out dives close to the shore in Youghal Harbour.

Ms. Satchwell went missing from her home in Grattan Street in the East Cork town on March 20.

Searches were also carried out at the Golf Links road where a section of the road was closed off during the operation.

Gardai have said that they are following over 200 lines of inquiry.

Ms. Satchwell is originally from Fermoy in North Cork is described as five foot six in height and of medium build with shoulder length hair and having blue eyes. It is understood that she moved to Youghal two years ago.  

She was reported missing by her husband on March 24, four days after he arrived home to find her missing after he had gone on a shopping trip in Dungarvan.

Anyone with any information on her disappearance is being asked to contact Midleton Garda Station on (021) 4621550.

It has not been confirmed if the search will resume tomorrow.

Thursday 17 August 2017

Hogan to referee All-Ireland Hurling Final


Fergal Horgan will be in charge of proceedings in this years All-Ireland Hurling Final between Waterford and Galway after the GAA confirmed today that he will be this years referee.

Horgan will become the first Munster referee to take charge on All-Ireland Final day since Waterford’s Michael Wadding was the man in the middle when he took charge of the 2010 final between Tipperary and Kilkenny.

It is the third time that the Knockavilla Kickham’s Clubman has taken charge of an All-Ireland Final, but his first in the senior grade. Previous to this years final he was also the man in the middle for the 2014 All-Ireland Minor Final and Intermediate Final twelve months later.

He has taken charge of a number of big games this year including the Munster Final Clash between Cork and Clare and the All-Ireland Senior Hurling Club final between Cuala and Ballyhea.

However he will be most remembered for his most recent inter county game that he refereed as he sent Waterford’s Tadgh de Búrca off against Wexford in the new Pairc Ui Chaoimh following a consultation with his linesman.

He is the first Tipperary referee to take control of the biggest game of hurling of the year since Seamus Roche was the man in the middle in 2005 when Cork beat Galway 1-21 to 1-16.

Cork’s Colm Lyons is the standby referee and linesman while Paud O’Dwyer will run the other line. Limerick’s Johnny Murphy will be the fourth official.

Kilkenny Referee Sean Cleere will be the man in the middle for the minor game between Galway and Cork.

The Tipperary man’s other experience of being in Croke Park on All-Ireland Final day was 21 years ago when he played in goal for the Tipperary Minor team when Tipperary beat Galway 2-14 to 2-12. The captain of that Tipperary team will William Maher, who was appointed a selector with the Waterford Senior hurling team in 2013 after Derek McGrath was first appointed as manager. Previous to this he helped guide Tipperary to win the All-Ireland Minor Final twelve months earlier.

Saturday 12 August 2017

Mount Melleray Abbey Has A New Leader


The Cistercian Community in Mount Melleray has a new Abbot.

Dom Richard Purcell was recently elected as the community’s leader after he filled the same position at Mount Saint Joseph Abbey in Roscrea in County Tipperary, a position he held from 2009, serving first for six years and then on his reappointment in June 2015.

Dom Richard is a native of Rathgar in Dublin, he received his first abbatial blessing from the them Bishop of Killaloe Most Reverend Willie Walsh.  

The new abbot at Mount Melleray entered Mount St Joseph Abbey in 1997, having completed a degree in music and French at UCD.

Dom Richard previously studied Music, French and Italian at UCD. He completed Philosophy studies at Maynooth and Theology studies in Oxford.

On completion of his studies in Oxford, he returned to Saint Joseph’s where he took up the position of bursar. He was ordained in 2007 and became Prior of the Community while retaining the title of bursar.

The Constitution of the Cistercian Congregation does not allow a monk to become an Abbot until he is thirty five years of age and is seven professed.

When he was first elected as Abbot at Saint Joseph’s he failed to reach the requirements to take up the position. 

However after he was voted as Abbot in the North Tipperary Monastery proceedings were suspended while the necessary dispensations were sought from Rome.

Cardinal Rode the prefect of the Vatican’s Congregation for Institutes of Consecrated Like and Societies of Apostolic Life issued the dispensation for Dom Purcell to Dom Eamon Fitzgerald, himself a former Abbot of the Mount Melleray Abbey.

The monastery at Mount Melleray was founded on 30 May 1832 at Scrahan on land owned by Sir Richard Keane in Cappoquin by a colony of Irish and English monks, expelled from the abbey of Melleray after the French Revolution of 1830, and who had come to Ireland under the leadership of Fr. Vincent de Paul Ryan. It was called Mount Melleray in memory of the motherhouse. On the feast of St. Bernard, 1833, the foundation stone of the new monastery was blessed by the Most Rev. William Abraham, Bishop of Waterford and Lismore.

Monday 31 July 2017

Two Injured In Dungarvan Stabbing Incident


Two people, were brought to University Hospital Waterford in the early hours of the morning to be treated for non-life threatening Injuries following a stabbing incident in Dungarvan.

The Emergency services were called to the scene in the Thompson Lane area off the town, an area between the towns Main Street and the Quay.

The scene of the incident was examined and investigations are on-going.

One person has been arrested by Gardai and was brought to Dungarvan Garda Station for questioning.

Gardaí are appealing for anyone with information to contact them.

Gardai in Dungarvan have appealed for anyone with information to contact them in Dungarvan on 058 48600, the Garda Confidential Line on 1800 666 111 or at any Garda Station.

Friday 7 July 2017

€15,000 of Public Money on Entertainment


Independent TD for Waterford John Halligan is one of five TD’s that form the Independent Alliance Group in Dáil Éireann spent more than €15,000 of public money on entertainment in 2016 it has been announced.

The Independent Alliance is chaired by Senator Feargal Quinn was founded in January 2015 by five Independent TDs Michael Fitzmaurice, Tom Fleming, John Halligan, Finian McGrath and Shane Ross.

Sean Canney, John Halligan, Finian McGrath, Kevin (Boxer) Moran and Shane Ross are the current TD’s in the group.

The figure of €15,000 is contained in the latest report for the Standards in Public Office Commission on public spending for 2016.

The report states that the majority of the spending was on events for TD’s staff and on catering for events in their constituencies.

The report also shows that Independent TD’s spent over €63,000 last year getting specialist and technical advice to help them in parliamentary work.

None of the political parties in the Oireachtas are reported as spending on entertainment. Parties in the Oireachtas are funded under different rules when it comes to spending on entertainment.

The report states that over €8 Million was spent by politicians and political parties of public funds in 2016.

Thursday 6 July 2017

Relic of Indian Saint to Visit Waterford


A relic of Saint (Mother) Teresa of Calcutta is to visit Waterford.

The Knights of Columbanus recently received the relic from the Sisters of Charity and it is currently touring Ireland and will visit the Roman Catholic Cathedral in Waterford City on Thursday July 20, arriving at 7-30pm and will leave for a visit to the Cathedral in Enniscorthy on Saturday July 22 at 4pm, arriving at the Co Wexford venue at 7-30pm that same evening.

The relic, a muslin cloth bearing the blood of Saint Teresa encased in a cross has been touring Ireland since June 8, starting at Saint Patrick’s Cathedral in Armagh, and has since made its way down the West Coast of Ireland into Munster taking in parts of Leinster before arriving in Waterford.

Agnes Gonxha Bojaxhiu was born in Skopje in Macedonia on August 26 1910, she was the youngest child of Nikolle and Dranafile Bojaxhiu. Her father, who was involved in Albanian-community politics in Macedonia, died in 1919 when she was eight years old. She left home in 1928 to join the Sisters of Loreto in Rathfarnham in Dublin where she learned to speak English with the view of becoming a missionary.

In 1929 she moved to India where she began to work with the poor and the needy. After she arrived she began her novitiate where she learnt Bengali  and taught in a nearby school near her convent. She took her first religious vows in May 1931, and chose to be named after Therese de Lisieux

She took her solemn vows in May 1937 while she was a teacher at a Loreto convent school in eastern Calcutta. She served there for nearly twenty years.

Although she enjoyed teaching at the school, she was increasingly disturbed by the poverty surrounding her in Calcutta.

She began missionary work with the poor in 1948. She founded a school in Motijhil, Kolkata, before she began tending to the poor and hungry. At the beginning of 1949 Teresa was joined in her effort by a group of young women, and she laid the foundation for a new religious community helping the "poorest among the poor".

In October 1950, Teresa received Vatican permission to form the diocesan congregation which would become the Missionaries of Charity which she founded in 1959 and quickly became throughout the world as Mother Teresa. Just over sixty years later her order had over 4,500 Religious Sisters working in 133 Countries across the world.

In 1979, Teresa received the Nobel Peace Prize for work undertaken in the struggle to overcome poverty and distress, which also constitutes a threat to peace". She refused the conventional ceremonial banquet for laureates, asking that its $192,000 cost be given to the poor in India.

In March 1997 Teresa resigned as head of the Missionaries of Charity, and she died on 5 months later at the age of 87 and was canonised by Pope Francis in Rome in September 2016, becoming Saint Teresa of Calcutta.

According to a biography, during her early years Teresa was fascinated by stories of the lives of missionaries and by the age of 12, she was convinced that she should commit herself to religious life.

By 1997 the 13-member Calcutta congregation had grown to more than 4,000 sisters who managed orphanages, AIDS hospices and charity centres worldwide, caring for refugees, the blind, disabled, aged, alcoholics, the poor and homeless and victims of floods, epidemics and famine.

Tuesday 4 July 2017

Hundreds March For Cardiac Care in the South East


Hundreds of people from across the South East have protested outside the gates of Leinster House over what they claim are inadequate cardiac facilities in the south east, and have called for improved facilities at University Hospital Waterford.

Many people in the South East region have called for 24/7 cardiac care at the hospital but to date, both the Government and the HSE have failed to respond.

The Unit at University Hospital Waterford is open Monday to Friday from 9am to 5pm and those that suffer a heart attack outside of these hours is transferred to Cork University Hospital or to Hospital’s in Dublin.

Two weeks ago, Thomas Power, a County Waterford man got a heart attack on a Sunday and was being transferred to CUH in an ambulance, died on route outside Dungarvan despite best efforts to revive him.

Campaigners have said that if facilities were available in Waterford he would have survived.

Fianna Fáil leader Micheál Martin said at Leaders Questions in the Dáil today that  the sister of Mr Power spoke to a number of politicians today and gave a heart-rending account of the devastation his death had caused.

Mr Martin said a report in 2012, which was accepted by the HSE, had recommended a second cath laboratory for Waterford University Hospital but it never happened.

The Taoiseach Leo Varadkar expressed his sympathy to the family of Mr Power but said he could not comment on individual cases.

The Taoiseach who has Dungarvan connesctions pointed out that additional hours had been provided to the cath lab and that extra money had been invested by the HSE. A tender had also been issued by the executive for a mobile cath lab for the area.

 

Hundreds of people staged a vigil outside University Hospital Waterford on recently calling for 24-hour cardiac care for the region.

Health Minister Simon Harris said last month that he is open to a further review on the issue of cath labs in the South East.

“I commissioned an independent clinical review in relation to the cath lab situation in Waterford the minister said.

“I followed the recommendations in full, in terms of the allocation of additional resources, and I’m now putting in place a mobile cath lab.

“As Minister, I’ll always stand by clinical recommendations. I am open, though, after the improvements that Professor Herity has made, of taking course to have a further review on the issue,” he said.

Tuesday 20 June 2017

Halligan Reappointed a Minster of State


The Taoiseach Leo Varadkar today appointed his Ministers of State, which included Waterford TD John Halligan who was reappointed as Minister of State for Training and Skills.

The new appointments as expected included Carlow/Kilkenny TD John Paul Phelan who was appointed Minister of State for Local Government and Electoral Reform.

The New appointments in full are:

Minister of State for Local Government and Electoral Reform - John Paul Phelan (Carlow/Kilkenny)

Minister of State for Housing and Urban Development - Damien English (Meath West)


Minister of State for Financial Services and Insurance - Michael D’Arcy  (Wexford)


Minister of State for European Affairs - Helen McEntee (Meath East)


Minister of State for Food, Forestry and Horticulture - Andrew Doyle (Wicklow)


Minister of State for Public Procurement, Open Government and e-Government - Patrick O’Donovan (Cork)


Minister of State for Community, Natural Resources and Digital Development - Seán Kyne (Galway West)


Minister of State for Mental Health and Older People - Jim Daly (West Cork)


Minister for Trade, Employment, Business, EU Single Market and Data Protection - Pat Breen (Clare)


Minister of State for the National Drug Strategy and Health Promotion - Catherine Byrne (Dublin South Central)


Minister of State for Defence - Paul Kehoe (Wexford)


Minister of State for the Diaspora and International Development - Ciarán Cannon (Galway East)


Minister of State for Equality, Immigration and Integration - David Stanton (Cork East)


Minister of State for Disability - Finian McGrath (Dublin Bay North)


Minister of State for Training and Skills - John Halligan (Independent Alliance – Waterford)


Minister of State for the OPW and Flood Relief - Kevin ‘Boxer’ Moran (Independent Alliance – Longford/Westmeath)


Minister of State for Tourism & Sport - Brendan Griffin (Kerry)


Minister of State for Higher Education - Mary Mitchell O’Connor (Dun Laoghaire/Rathdown)

Saturday 10 June 2017

Former Minister Dies Aged 80


Former Fine Gail TD for Waterford and Minster for Agriculture Austin Deasy has died following a short illness. He was 80.

He served as a TD for Waterford from 1977 until he retired in 2002 to be replaced by his son John who has been returned in each General Election since he was first elected.

He was born in Dungarvan in 1936 and was educated locally and then at University College Cork after which he became a teacher where he taught at Saint Augustine’s College in Dungarvan.

He joined Fine Gael in the mid 1960’s and was elected a member of Dungarvan Town Council.

Former Taoiseach Liam Cosgrave nominated him to the Seanad before he was elected a TD in 1977.

In 1982 Garret Fitzgerald appointed him to the Cabinet as Minister for Agriculture where he remained until the Government fell in 1987.

He resigned from the party temporarily in 1988 when the then Fine Gael leader Alan Dukes when it was decided that Fine Gael would not oppose economic developments purposed by the minority Fianna Fail Party, but returned to the Parties Front Bench when John Bruton took over as leader in 1991.

Mr. Deasy died earlier today at University Hospital Waterford.

Fine Gael leader Leo Varadkar who has strong Dungarvan connections has expressed his condolences to the Deasy family following the news.

Mr. Varadkar said Mr. Deasy was "well loved and respected by the people of Waterford whom he was proud to represent". 

John O’Shea to be released by Sunderland


Ferrybank man John O’Shea who is currently preparing for a World Cup Qualifier against Austria on Sunday with the Republic of Ireland is one of the biggest named players who will not have his contract renewed by Sunderland for next season.

The Black Cats were relegated last season and are currently without a manager after former Everton and Manchester United manager David Moyles left the club has decided not to renew the contracts of a number of experienced players as they try and get back to the Premier League as quickly as possible.

Along with O’Shea, other players to leave the North East club include Victor Anichebe, Sebastian Larsson, Joleon Lescott as well as Steven Pienaar.

O’Shea who made 28 appearances for Sunderland last season jointed the North East Club in 2011 after he had spent nine successful years with Manchester United.

His current contract expires at the end of the month and will have to look for a new club if he wishes to prolong his career if the next manager wishes to offer him a new deal.

The Ferrybank man who captained the Black Cats for four of the six seasons he played for the club, represented the club on 182 occasions, scoring three goals.

A recent report in a British newspaper suggested that O’Shea was hoping to stay with Sunderland, but that there was interest elsewhere if he was not retained including from midlands championship outfit Wolverhampton Wanderers.

Thursday 25 May 2017

A Changing Church


Priests and Parish Pastoral Council members from across the Diocese of Waterford and Lismore gathered in Clonmel during the week to hear plans outlined for the years ahead as changes take place owing to the declining number of vocations in the Diocese.

In the last three decades nearly all parishes have seen changes happen with the amount of priests working in parishes cut and some parishes have been left with no priest living and working in the parish, and are instead administered from neighbouring parishes.

In the future lay people could be asked to play an even greater role in most parishes that they are currently asked to.

Lay people could well be asked to carry out prayer services at funerals where there is no priest available to administer and could also be asked to carry out other functions like the distribution of ashes to the faithful on Ash Wednesday and to bless throats on the feast of Saint Blaise.

Parishes could also be brought together with one priest working as a moderator alongside different Pastoral Councils.

Parishes could also be administered by a Permanent Deacon or a lay person directed by a Priest from outside the Parish.

In the future where it is not possible to have a mass celebrated in a given church, a lay parishioner could be appointed to lead the people in a prayer service.

The last number of years has seen the number of Priests working in the Diocese significantly drop with Priests who are members of Religious Communities already working in a number of Parishes across the Diocese.

Two years ago the then newly appointed Bishop of Waterford and Lismore, the Most Very Reverend Aphonsus Cullinan was able to bring three priests from India to the Diocese to work in parishes in Clonmel, Carrick-on-Suir and Waterford City, but it is understood that there is no plans to bring any other priests in on Temporary Missions.

There are currently five parishes in the Diocese that do not have a working priest.

In West Waterford the Parish of Tallow is without and priest with the Parish Priest of nearby Ballyduff Upper travelling to Tallow to celebrate mass in the town.

Modeligo and Affane became the first parish not to have a priest and is administered from nearby Cappoquin and recently the Parish Priest of Clashmore and Kinsalebeg retired and the Parish Priest of Ring and Old Parish was appointed as a moderator working with other priests in the area to ensure that parishioners can attend mass on a Saturday evening or Sunday morning in their own parish.

In the east of the county there are two parishes currently without a Parish Priest.

Dunhill and Fenor is currently administered from Tramore while Butlerstown is administered from the Saint Paul’s Parish in Waterford City.

Currently all Parishes in County Tipperary that are part of Waterford and Lismore have at least one priest working in them.

The Diocese of Waterford and Lismore has four Diocesan Priest’s that were ordained since the turn of the Millennium with a further ten priests working that were ordained in the previous decade.

In the same time (1990-present) over 40 priests of the diocese have died, while an number of others have stepped aside from active ministry while a number of men have decided to be laicised.

At present priests are obliged to offer their resignation to their Bishop once they reach the age of 75, but because of the shortage of priests in the Diocese some ask or are asked to remain in active ministry as long as their heath allows them to do so.

At present the Diocese also has a number of priests in the double digits who are currently retired, but many are helping out in parishes at weekends as well as covering when priests are sick are on holiday.

In the Diocese there is currently at least one priest who has only taken time away from his ministry during the weekdays in recent years so that parishioners in his care can attend weekend masses without having to call on often what is often much in demand priests to stand in for him.

The then Bishop of Waterford and Lismore the Most Very Reverend William Lee began the process for preparing parishes for what lies ahead some years ago when he gathered parishes at a meeting in Dungarvan and it was explained to those that attended that  the parishes would have to be clustered into groupings and that the amount of masses on offer in each parish could have to be cut and the times of some masses would have to be changed so that they fell in such a way that allowed a priest from a neighbouring parish to come and celebrate the mass if needed while also celebrating mass in his own parish.

Wednesday 24 May 2017

33 Jobs to Be Lost In Waterford


33 jobs are to be lost at one of Waterford longest manufacturing industries.

Staff at Waterford Stanley learned of the job losses this morning at a meeting which all workers at the plant were called to attend.

There is currently 57 people working at the factory on the IDA Industrial Estate and it is to be cut to 24 over the next five months.

Middleby Corporation which owns Waterford Stanley who makes cast iron heating stoves and cookers is to begin outsource the work needed to make the products.

The company says that it intends to continue to operate its sales, distribution, marketing and after sales service in Waterford.

The company is also set to close its Coalbrookdale Foundry in the UK which supplies cast iron to the Waterford plant.  

Management are to enter a formal 30 day consultation period with employees and their representatives to finalise the details of the job losses.

Business is to continue to operate as normal over the coming months while changes are implemented.  

18 months ago, management told employees at the Waterford plant that they were looking for 41 redundancies over the following months.

At the time there was about 100 people working in manufacturing and distribution working for the company.

Staff were informed at the time that the job losses were a cost cutting measure and all losses would be voluntary.

News of the job losses was announced to the public by Fianna Fail TD for Waterford Mary Butler this morning on the Déise Today programme on WLR.fm.

Mary Butler who is the Chairperson of the Oireachtas Jobs, Enterprise and Innovation Committee as described the news of the job losses as a very sad day for Waterford.

Figures released by the Central Statistics Office show that unemployment in Waterford is the highest in the country at 9.4%

Monday 1 May 2017

19 Beds to Close at Dungarvan Hospital


The Rehab Unit attached to Dungarvan Community Hospital is to close.

Patients at the Sacred Heart Unit were told over the weekend that the unit was to close with immediate effect.

Fianna Fail TD for Waterford Mary Butler has said that she was contacted over the weekend with the news.

The unit was built in 1996 and has twenty six beds which include beds for Physio, Rehab and Palliative Care beds.

Seven of the twenty six beds were closed in January with the remainder of the beds to go from the middle of this week.

It’s the second time in six months that such a bed unit closure for hospitals in Waterford was announced over a Bank Holiday weekend.

Over the October Bank Holiday weekend in 2016 it was announced that University Hospital Waterford was to have ten inpatient beds closed on a temporary basis due to a shortage of nurses.

Monday 27 March 2017

Pilot Dies in County Waterford Accident


The pilot of a light aircraft which crashed near Dungarvan this afternoon has died.

The plane which he was piloting came down in a field near Dungarvan Golf Club at about 4-30pm.

The scene of the accident is being preserved pending the arrival of the Air Accident Unit who are expected to carry out a preliminary investigation this evening.

It is understood that the crash happened in a field of trees about 5k from Dungarvan about 200 metres from the main Waterford to Dungarvan road. Reports suggest that the man made a mayday call just before 4-30pm and attempted to land in a field.

Gardaí have told members of the media it appeared the man was killed instantly when the aircraft hit the ground.

Early reports suggest that the man was not from the area.

A stretch of the N25 close to where the plane came down was closed by Gardai and diversions are in place which could remain in place for a number of hours.

Gardai are appealing for any witness or anyone who noticed a low flying aircraft in the area this afternoon to contact them in Dungarvan on 058 48600

One Injured in Small Plane Crash near Dungarvan


One person has been seriously injured after a small airplane crash landed near Dungarvan this afternoon.

It is understood that the aircraft came down in a field close to the N25 in the Knocknagranagh area of county Waterford, near Dungarvan Golf Club.

The Road between the Knocknagranagh Cross and Bridgie Terries is closed off as the emergency services work in the area. Local diversions are in place.

It is believed that the injured person is a member of the Waterford Aero Club which operates from Waterford Regional Airport.

Reports suggest that the plane came down after 4-30pm.

The Irish Coastguard Helicopter, Rescue 117 was dispatched to the area to work with other Emergency Services personnel.

The accident happened in much the same area as where Howard Cox died two years ago when his plane also crashed in the area after he left Waterford Regional Airport in a home built plane.

The Air Accident Investigation Unit has already begun an investigation.  

Tuesday 14 March 2017

19 people wait on a bed at University Hospital Waterford but other hospitals in the region have higher number


Figures released today by the Irish Nurses and Midwives Organisation show that was 506 people on trolleys across the Country.

The largest number waiting on trolleys is at the Midlands Regional Hospital in Tullamore which had 39 people waiting on a bed.

Closer to home and at hospitals in the region numbers are also high.

Thirty six people were waiting on a trolley at Cork University hospital, while at the close by Mercy University Hospital there was eighteen people waiting for a bed.

At both South Tipperary General Hospital in Clonmel and Saint Luke’s Hospital in Kilkenny there were twenty nine people waiting for a bed.

Nineteen patients were waiting for a bed at University Hospital Waterford while at Wexford General Hospital the number waiting on a bed was eleven.