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Destruction after Hurricane Ida PA

Shortages of supplies and workers to delay damage repairs in US after Hurricane Ida

The hurricane damaged or destroyed more than 22,000 power poles.

SHORTAGES OF SUPPLIES and workers are likely to delay rebuilding after Hurricane Ida hit the east coast of the US.

Ida slammed into the Gulf Coast of the US, then took its destruction to the Northeast, at a time when building contractors were already grappling with severe shortages of workers and depleted supply chains.

The damage inflicted by Ida has magnified those challenges.

The struggle to find enough skilled workers and materials is likely to drive up costs, complicate planning and delay reconstruction for months.

Joe Sobol, owner of Big Easy Construction in New Orleans, said work like repairing roofs or continuing with scheduled renovations will cost more than usual and take much longer.

Ali Wolf, chief economist at the real estate research firm Zonda, said her expectation “is that it only gets worse from here.”

Lake Charles, Louisiana, 200 miles west of New Orleans, still hasn’t recovered from the damage left when Hurricane Laura tore through the area a year ago.

The challenges facing construction companies stem from the brief but intense recession that hit after the Covid-19 pandemic started in March 2020.

The economy rebounded faster and stronger than expected and businesses of all kinds were caught off-guard by the surge in customer demand.

Workers and supplies were suddenly in short supply and businesses have been scrambling to acquire enough supplies, restock their shelves and recall workers they had furloughed during the recession.

Construction companies have been particularly affected. Among building executives Zonda surveyed last month, 93% complained of supply shortages and 74% said they lacked enough workers, which was before Ida struck.

“Natural disasters do cause a strain on building materials, reconstruction materials and on labour,” Wolf said.

“The difference today is that the entire supply chain has been battered even before Ida’s occurrence. You really have all these things hitting at the exact same time. Frankly, the last thing the supply chain needed was extra strain.”

Additionally, power is still out in many places and petrol is in short supply.

Full restoration of electricity to some of the hardest-hit areas of Louisiana battered by Hurricane Ida could take until the end of the month, the head of Entergy Louisiana has warned.

At least 16 deaths were blamed on the storm in Louisiana, Mississippi and Alabama.

Ida damaged or destroyed more than 22,000 power poles, more than previous hurricanes Katrina, Zeta and Delta combined – an impact Entergy president Phillip May called “staggering”.

More than 5,200 transformers failed and nearly 26,000 spans of wire — the stretch of transmission wires between poles — were down.

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    Mute MikejG
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    Sep 17th 2017, 8:02 AM

    I’m from “rural Ireland” and would love to move back home. All I need is a decent internet connection. Good broadband infasturture could be the rebirth of rural areas. So many jobs can be done remotely now.

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    Mute Marek Dąbrowski
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    Sep 17th 2017, 8:55 AM

    @MikejG: what about the mobile networks? What is the speed when using those?

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    Mute Patrick Cat #2
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    Sep 17th 2017, 9:55 AM

    @Marek Dąbrowski: 4G is very fast do the speed is not an issue, the coverage however can be

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    Mute mickmc
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    Sep 17th 2017, 9:57 AM

    @Marek Dąbrowski: Vodafone would be decent enough in most town of more than a few 1000 people who have fiber anyway. After that it very much hit or miss. More times miss than hit actually.

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    Mute Gavin Daly
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    Sep 17th 2017, 10:03 AM

    @MikejG: its interesting how the discourse on people living in isolated locations working away on laptops has gained such a foothold. The reality is that few jobs can be done in this way – IT companies still need to be in cities

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    Mute WilhelminaMCallaghan
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    Sep 17th 2017, 11:38 AM

    @MikejG: Im in rural Ireland spend most my time either in dublin or Belfast . There’s nothing here . Nothing . As for internet about 2bars today once it rains forget it no broadband , we ask they say oh you live 50some km away from exchange . Water service is private scheme that ruined my home as we were not aloud to have a valve in the property so in2010 pipes froze and burst damaging the place ( 150k I don’t have worth of damage that insurance didn’t cover and builder created worse ) the house is inhabitable since but it’s all I got left and that’s fighting the banks . Bus forget it . Shops drive up some 30 mins . Pubs don’t know I hear they close I don’t go out . Post drive 30 mins . Gardai closed, drive 30 mins .
    Work ( when I can get some )drive 3 hours . Schools don’t know I hear is not great . I think there’s some 7-20 maybe people who live here . I don’t imagine they be very young though
    I wish to god I didn’t buy this place, my neighbor ( not a local person , local people are nice ) is an a**hole and I have an acre of land I can’t use I live in fear because of her causing trouble for me .
    Mostly I sleep in friends couches shower at their place wash my clothes on them wonderful blessed machines they have now in the petrol stations . In the cities . I NEVER EXPECTED TO LIVE LIKE THIS. Is disgraceful . I am wasting the last best years of my life as a nomad paying for a shack I have no idea how the hell to fix .
    I can’t give up on my home as I would not get a mortgage , I just want floors a kitchen made of counter and shelves , a cooker a fridge . Heating in the winter , but hey guess what now I’m told I will have to fight to get me a 2 meter fence and 2metal garages on the side of my home ( I am not even including the garden that plantation of wilderness into it I just want that stupid woman to stop meddling in my life by getting a fence right just around the dam house for privacy ) I’m told planing permission . For a fence ? 2 metal garages to put my stuff in it ? Ah yeah . Living the dream

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    Mute WilhelminaMCallaghan
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    Sep 17th 2017, 11:39 AM

    @Marek Dąbrowski: 3G of and when you can get and two bars here down the border

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    Mute Gulliver Foyle
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    Sep 17th 2017, 11:46 AM

    @WilhelminaMCallaghan: it all depends on where you are. I spend half my time in rural Donegal, and have no issue at all with teleworking from there, including video conferencing. Unless you are thinking of running servers for your business (which doesn’t make sense in today’s cloud), then three vast majority of rural locations can be used. I would be surprised if any commentator was withing 5km of a small town and didn’t have mobile broadband.

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    Mute B9xiRspG
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    Sep 17th 2017, 11:55 AM

    @Gulliver Foyle: I’m half mile from small town /village and 10 miles from large town. Our exchange had been on the list for upgrade for last ten years. Bloody joke.

    4g is spotted but I can get Vodafone but that’s 15g a month limit. Try keeping to that with work, you tube, xbox live, Netflix etc. It’s impossible.

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    Mute Finn H. Schoyen
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    Sep 17th 2017, 8:08 PM

    @MikejG: I have to agree. A good broadband connection can lift the rural areas a lot.

    Sure, many claim to get by with 8 megabit ADSL, but there plenty more that can be done with 50 megabit or higher downstream, and upload speeds daycint enough to send the occasional large draft file for the few who have that kind of job (e.g. print design and occasional edited videos), say 15-20 megabit.

    Not only do the rural communities need a fast connection at their end, but the backbones leading out to all these areas also need to be on very fast fibre.

    Run a web shop? Host it in the ‘cleud in Dublin, and let the orders tick in to the back office of your little boutique in Ballydehob. :-)

    Learn from Sweden, where broadband expansion has been massive even to the rural areas for the past two decades.

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    Mute Shane Nolan
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    Sep 17th 2017, 7:42 AM

    I have terrible internet 200kbs when I download a game when I can I’m leaving where I am. I’m 4km from Carlow town and I am probably never getting fibre to be honest. There needs to be more investment in towns and more jobs allocated to areas outside dublin. There is much more allure now to live in Dublin, if they can give incentives for young people to stay in rural areas it would also benefit Dublin, as it may ease up the pressure on the housing crisis.

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    Mute Gavin Daly
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    Sep 17th 2017, 9:35 AM

    @Shane Nolan: you live 4km from the town – hence, poor broadband

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    Mute mickmc
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    Sep 17th 2017, 9:52 AM

    @Gavin Daly: That is a fact. Are you saying it’s acceptable to have poor/no broadband just because someone lives 4km or even 24km from a local town. Access to Decent broadband is now as essential as electricity and I don’t hear to many people saying electricity is a service which only should be reserved for some citizens of the country.

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    Mute Gavin Daly
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    Sep 17th 2017, 10:07 AM

    @mickmc: no, not at all. There should be a principle of equal living conditions. – as in Germany, for example. However, the onus is then on planning policy to only permit houses to be built where infrastructure and services can be provided at reasonable cost to the general taxpayer. Either that, or we need a massive increase is taxes. As things stand, isolated rural dwellers will continue to have inferior and/or withdrawn services.

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    Mute mickmc
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    Sep 17th 2017, 10:22 AM

    @Gavin Daly: Well that’s your opinion and your entitled to it. Thankfully it not share by the powers that be. Incidentally compared to the once off cost of connecting every house in the country to fibre how much do we tax payer( including rural dwellers) pay annually to keep Urban dwellers with Public transport, lighting and dare I say water. It a hell of a lot more than the once off cost of the Rural broadband scheme.

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    Mute Ben McArthur
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    Sep 17th 2017, 10:27 AM

    @Gavin Daly: Exactly. Germans don’t live in the countryside. They collect in the small towns. The result is viable sized communities, reasonably priced infrastructure and a landscape not dotted with ugly grey bungalows.

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    Mute Gavin Daly
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    Sep 17th 2017, 10:29 AM

    @mickmc: Yep, its not shared by the powers that be and thats why there is no rural broadband! Its been promised now for the best part of 15 years. Its not about urban v rural – thats a false dichotomy – most ‘rural’ dwellers work in towns and cities, its about maximising service delivery within the fiscal resources available for the benefit of everyone.

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    Mute Gavin Daly
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    Sep 17th 2017, 10:32 AM

    @Ben McArthur: yep. In Germany there is a constitutional right to ‘equal living conditions’. Hence, there is a massive onus on the planning system to produce settlement patterns which strive towards its achievement. In Ireland, we have the precise opposite. People wish to live where they want and then demand the services rolled up to their door.

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    Mute mickmc
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    Sep 17th 2017, 10:50 AM

    @Gavin Daly: Apart from Electricity what services is rolled to anyone door in rural Ireland?

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    Mute Gavin Daly
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    Sep 17th 2017, 11:07 AM

    @mickmc: roads, waste, post, ambulances, other emergency services, social care, healthcare, schools, school transport, Gardai, some water services, broadband..the entire suite

    btw and I said “..demand the services rolled up to their door”. The reality is of course that it is possible to deliver these services efficiently or effectively in conditions of dispersed settlement patterns. Hence, why they are so poor.

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    Mute Gavin Daly
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    Sep 17th 2017, 11:31 AM

    @Gavin Daly: *not possible to deliver..

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    Mute WilhelminaMCallaghan
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    Sep 17th 2017, 11:44 AM

    @mickmc: €300 a bill electricity . And pitch darkness outside . Ah yeah the €340 bins that are only collected every two weeks .

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    Mute Gavin Daly
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    Sep 17th 2017, 12:01 PM

    @WilhelminaMCallaghan: ironic that people move out to the countryside for pastoral lifestyle and to get away from it all – then are fed up at the quality/cost of services!

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    Mute mickmc
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    Sep 17th 2017, 7:33 AM

    In all fairness you can’t expect a post office or a garda station at every little crossroad across the country. Give us decent broadband and you could justify shutting a lot more post offices. The simple fact of the matter a lot of these services are not need. I don’t when the last time I stood in my local Post office or even pub for that matter.

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    Mute Patrick J. O'Rourke
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    Sep 17th 2017, 11:32 AM

    @mickmc: I’m in my local PO a lot nowadays. They’ve had a shot in the arm and it’s called Addresspal. It’s the best thing they’ve ever done.

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    Mute Gulliver Foyle
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    Sep 17th 2017, 11:50 AM

    @mickmc: you could have a Garda station and post office in every town if they were run privately. The problem is the cost of running each individual one of these is over a million each due to inefficiencies and pay in public service. A post office, like any shop, could be ran by an employee on minimum wage, but instead they are personal fiefdoms of individuals of inflated ps pay and pensions.

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    Mute Jho Harris
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    Sep 17th 2017, 2:57 PM

    @mickmc: Very short sighted there; perhaps you don’t need a post office now but they are a great boost to older people in rural areas. For some reason most of the pensioners know their pension becomes out on Friday but you seem to think they want to get the cash as early as possible not thinking that they get a great social boost from going early and meeting up with their peers. All going well you will find that out for yourself one day.; P.S. is there anything else you never use that you would like gotten rid off?

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    Mute Chris Kirk
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    Sep 17th 2017, 9:00 AM

    The decline of rural Ireland started with the disbanding of railways back in the sixties and not replacing rural parts of the country with a viable public transport service. The next decline has been the rationalisation of agricultural services and creameries where bulk milk collection means that farmers no longer need to go to the creamery with their milk or collect the milk cheque. this also lead to the decline of the pub trade where many farmers cashed their cheques and met up with other farmer neighbours. Then the banks closed making smaller branches unnecesary and forced people to go instead to larger towns. All of the above have lead to the unfortunate decline of rural populations and village life in Ireland.

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    Mute Daniel Donovan
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    Sep 17th 2017, 9:45 AM

    @Chris Kirk: I agree. There was a time when you coukd hop on a train in Dublin and go to any major town in the country. Looking at old railway just mkes you think of how much infrastructure was lost when these lines to rural areas in places like Galway, Donegal, Kerry, etc, were removed. A real shame.

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    Mute iohanx
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    Sep 17th 2017, 7:17 AM

    The government should approach Google or Tessa and offer a town in Ireland as a test location for driverless cars. Am sure many towns would compete for the opportunity.

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    Mute iohanx
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    Sep 17th 2017, 7:18 AM

    *Tesla

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    Mute Nick Allen
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    Sep 17th 2017, 8:23 AM

    @iohanx:

    And how would that increase business or generate money?

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    Mute iohanx
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    Sep 17th 2017, 8:51 AM

    @Nick Allen: have a think about it.

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    Mute Jho Harris
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    Sep 17th 2017, 4:01 PM

    @Nick Allen: Brainless people would pay way over the odds to live there

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    Mute (((Noel Hogan)))
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    Sep 17th 2017, 7:52 AM

    Encourage people to build and live near or in their local village and they’ll use the services there. If they can walk to it it’s convenient. If they have to jump in the car they are more likely to drive to the nearest big town.

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    Mute P.J. Nolan
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    Sep 17th 2017, 8:15 AM

    @(((Noel Hogan))):
    Agreed we do have a fondness for the house and half an acre in the country. (My own parents did it when they retired)
    Any politician who tried to restrict it had to pull back fairly quickly, only for people to turn around and then complain about lack of services.

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    Mute John Maye
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    Sep 17th 2017, 8:46 AM

    @P.J. Nolan: You know very little about today planning laws to make a comment like that

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    Mute Gavin Daly
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    Sep 17th 2017, 9:39 AM

    @John Maye: 1,273 one-off dwellings permitted in Q1 2017 ad compared to 2,481 multi-unit dwellings and 1,387 apartments. The average size of a rural dwelling is 3,315 sq.ft!

    Since 2001, >170,000 one-offs have been permitted. While there are individual hard cases, overall its relatively straightforward to get permission

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    Mute WilhelminaMCallaghan
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    Sep 17th 2017, 11:49 AM

    @Gavin Daly: can I get planning for my fence I want a 2 m fence just around the house itself to safe guard my privacy from evil neighbour I am in an acre of land I just want to be left alone and I want two metal prefab garages to empty the house off my things so I can try see what I can do to fix it . I rang them planning people they say I need permit as soon I put the notice out you know that devil beast of a nosy cow will object . I need privacy I can’t stand people intruding in my life and every time she decide to p.ss me off it is costing me more money I don’t have with her stupid complains .

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    Mute nikki
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    Sep 17th 2017, 9:01 AM

    Where I live in the west we have one bus every day that goes to Dublin. No other public transport. So if you don’t drive you are really stranded and have no employment opportunities.
    The ridiculously high insurance premiums also prevent people from driving so it’s catch 22.

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    Mute Michael Heery
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    Sep 17th 2017, 3:22 PM

    @nikki: the tax take from motorists is unbelievable , tests etc all painfully expensive..

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    Mute JustOneScoop
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    Sep 17th 2017, 7:59 AM

    Whole article and core focus is alcohol, what about the cynical move by Eir messing with the NBP insuring we still don’t have adequate broadband for hundreds of thousands of homes and businesses across the country. That’s the governments responsibility

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    Mute Shane Nolan
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    Sep 17th 2017, 8:35 AM

    @JustOneScoop: national broadband plan a myth to me!

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    Mute Frank Dubogovik
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    Sep 17th 2017, 10:25 AM

    @Shane Nolan: “national broadband plan” …..isn’t that just a soundbite around election time??????

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    Mute B9xiRspG
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    Sep 17th 2017, 11:59 AM

    @JustOneScoop: I remember comparing the nbr coverage plan with eir upgrade plan. Ut was like for like.

    What happened to the plan for ebs to use power lines to bring broadband to all. Eir did, stopped it in its tracks !

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    Mute Shaner Mac
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    Sep 17th 2017, 8:58 AM

    Rural Ireland must take some responsibility with its blight. Dreadful planning with one-off housing scattered everyone while the towns and village have major levels of dilapidation. Services are near impossible to provide with such s dispersed population.

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    Mute Chris Kirk
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    Sep 17th 2017, 9:06 AM

    @Shaner Mac: Dilapidation of towns and villages is mainly due to lack of community business especially for pubs, together with an ageing population when there is no viable employment opportunities for younger people.

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    Mute Gavin Daly
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    Sep 17th 2017, 9:46 AM

    @Chris Kirk: the reason there is no community businesses is the lack of people in the towns/villages. Rural Ireland has basically become a giant dormitory suburb for urban Ireland
    https://pbs.twimg.com/media/DIt0y4lWsAEAsJ4.jpg:large

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    Mute Shaner Mac
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    Sep 17th 2017, 9:53 AM

    @Chris Kirk: If more people actually lived in the towns and villages then they could easily walk to these businesses, instead they have to drive several miles. One of the business owners in the article decried the lack of access for cars, but if potential customers could simply have strolled in they would’ve got more business.

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    Mute Rochelle
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    Sep 17th 2017, 8:00 AM

    It’s sad but this is the public speaking, ease of access and free parking is now a must for any sort of routine shopping and nobody wants to try and find space along a main street. Retail parks, shopping centres and online are the present and future of shopping, these retailers need to adapt if they wish to survive.

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    Mute Windy Atlantic Way
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    Sep 17th 2017, 9:51 AM

    It’s happening all over again, government pump the cities with all the jobs , increasing house prices etc & forgetting rural ireland again. Their wind farm scam Developers are now destroying parts of rural ireland by driving people out of their communities & homes & making Rural Ireland more rural all while looking after their buddy developer. Another white elephant trotting down the road .

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    Mute Shawn O'Ceallaghan
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    Sep 17th 2017, 10:17 AM

    Why doesnt thecpub organise its own minibus/taxi to get people too and from the pub. I simply don’t think exceptions should be allowed when it comes to drink driving.

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    Mute Brian O Reilly
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    Sep 17th 2017, 10:31 AM

    The old hubs of social interaction in these towns (Church,Post Office,Banks,Libraries,Public Houses ,are all disappearing.the local schools are just dropping off points for overburdened children(those backpacks!)as their parents speed off to distant work places
    Impotent local public representatives,who no longer have any input,as Government Departments give up responsibility for Municipal Services to privatisation.
    Tip O Neill once said all politics is local and he was spot on ,its quality of life issues that must be addressed

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    Mute Jonathan Power
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    Sep 17th 2017, 9:54 AM

    And the government wants to rehouse the homeless in rural Ireland. You couldn’t make this stuff up.

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    Mute Gavin Daly
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    Sep 17th 2017, 9:22 AM

    @Shane Nolan: you’re 4km from the town – hence poor broadband

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    Mute Con Murphy
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    Sep 17th 2017, 10:11 AM

    True of course, but nobody in power cares. Given today’s opinion poll on the political parties that is not going to change.

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