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Leitrim businesses affected by tornado to be offered low-cost loans

Microfinance Ireland provide loans of up to €25000 to small businesses.

BUSINESSES AFFECTED BY the tornado in Leitrim are to be offered low-cost loans up to €25,000. 

Enterprise Minister Simon Coveney and Social Protection Minister Heather Humphreys updated Cabinet today on the supports measures being rolled out.

A clean-up operation got underway in Leitrim village yesterday after it was hit with a localised tornado. 

The freak weather event happened at 12.30pm on Sunday. 

Footage and photos posted on social media in the immediate aftermath showed debris scattered around streets and significant damage to cars and some property in the small village.

Taoiseach Leo Varadkar visited the area yesterday and pledged the government would support those impacted. 

Coveney told Cabinet that an official from Microfinance Ireland visited Leitrim village today.

Microfinance Ireland provide loans of up to €25000 to small businesses and start-ups based in Ireland. It is supported by the Irish government and EU.

The minister said today that Microfinance Ireland will be offering businesses affected by the tornado low cost loans of 5.5%, with no repayment required for a six month period

The aim is to assist businesses to conduct emergency repairs in a busy period of the year, in advance of any payouts from insurance companies.

Humphreys said the Humanitarian Assistance scheme is available immediately to provide income-tested financial support to people whose homes are damaged from severe weather events and who are unable to meet costs for essential needs, household items and structural repair.

The scheme does not cover risks that are already covered by insurance policies or cover business or commercial losses. 

Income limits for the scheme are €50,000 for a single person, €90,000 for a couple and €15,000 per dependent child.

Varadkar said yesterday that the next step is to engage with the insurance companies, adding that most people in the village are insured. 

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    Mute skin flint
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    Nov 4th 2014, 7:36 AM

    The more I read and research, the more I think the EU is a scam, and our boys have fallen for it hook, line and sinker.

    60
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    Mute Flora Butcher
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    Nov 4th 2014, 7:45 AM

    what did you find in your research?

    21
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    Mute SeanieRyan
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    Nov 4th 2014, 8:15 AM

    They all genuinely believed in it.

    Most external economists pointed out the inherent flaws and problems it would cause, famous noble economist Milton Friedman, wrote a prescient article in the late 90′s outlining why.

    It reads like a summary of the last 15 years.

    Germany, France, Italy, Holland are all locked in to sub-par or zero growth as far as the eye can see.

    The continent will be long burst before the current strategy delivers.

    The project itself is flawed, not just the regulation.

    17
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    Mute Dan public
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    Nov 4th 2014, 7:46 AM

    And the scam continues

    37
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    Mute CAPITAINE ADEBAYO
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    Nov 4th 2014, 8:06 AM

    The EU is a disaster. It’s only a matter of time until ‘the rules’ don’t suit the big guys anymore and then BANG little old Ireland having taken the hit for so long will be back in the mire due to ‘unforeseen crisis’ watch this space. It’s shagged.

    35
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    Mute SeanieRyan
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    Nov 4th 2014, 8:22 AM

    Certainly the larger states have a habit of ignoring EU directives or having laws fudged for them.

    However the Euro has destroyed their growth as well.

    Germany, Holland, France, Italy all have had sub par growth or decline for 15 years.

    All have seen trade with each other decline in since Euro came in.

    18
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    Mute CAPITAINE ADEBAYO
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    Nov 4th 2014, 8:34 AM

    Think that’s bad, check out EU’s own growth predications for the next 10 years… Then look at Youth unemployment figures across the med and here right now. EU bang on about tough decisions etc etc, the real tough decision that needs to be made is for somebody to admit this is a failure sooner rather than later.

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    Mute SeanieRyan
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    Nov 4th 2014, 9:10 AM

    Yet no one will talk about them.

    The Eurozone is an economic disaster for internal trade, jobs, growth, etc etc.

    It is destroying the North of Europe as surely as the South, just at a slower pace and their exports are hiding it.

    We are going to have to wait a few more years, the Eurozone and EU have a cult following and loyalty.

    They can’t fix it, the devaluations to bring the disparate forces in to line would destroy demand and employment in most of the continent for decades to come.

    8
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    Mute Konjac noodles
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    Nov 4th 2014, 8:14 AM

    If I ever meet anyone who admits to voting for Brian Hayes I will slap them. The cost of this monster has been €8000 per head. This elephant can’t be fed and we are killing ourselves and starving our children trying.

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    Mute Ryan Ash
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    Nov 4th 2014, 9:47 AM

    Where do you get the €8000 per head figure from?

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    Mute Konjac noodles
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    Nov 4th 2014, 11:48 AM

    Ireland has paid 42% of the total cost of the European banking crisis, at a cost of close to €9,000 per person, according to Eurostat.

    That’s were I got figure

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    Mute Search Eagle
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    Nov 4th 2014, 3:35 PM

    “Ireland has paid 42% of the total cost of the European banking crisis, at a cost of close to €9,000 per person, according to Eurostat.”

    Germany’s bank bailout cost her ~€300 billion.
    Ireland’s cost her ~€65 billion.

    65 billion isn’t even 25% of 300 billion.

    If we didn’t even pay for a quarter of Germany’s bank bailout, how could we have paid for 42% of the whole of Europe’s.

    The 42% figure is propagated by people who either can’t interpret figures correctly or more deviously, people with an agenda for whom fact does not matter.

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    Mute SeanieRyan
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    Nov 4th 2014, 8:05 AM

    Every single Eastern European capital has mover closer to the Viennese standard of living except Slovenia’s. Key difference, it is in the Euro.

    For 15 years the Eurozone has had problems with growth, half of it has been chronic.

    The ECB itself does not predict any decent growth this decade, especially in the well run North of it.

    There is something far deeper wrong here than just the banking regulation.

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    Mute Sol thai
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    Nov 4th 2014, 7:55 AM

    no matter how fast you spin it this is bad news and further ties us into Euro and EU, no accountability, it means things like MARP can’t happen in response to national crises and this model is untested. It means a regulator is unaccountable and not appointed by elected government. The ECB is also not accountable and the name is as miss leading. The Emperor has no clothes.

    30
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    Mute Lydia McLoughlin
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    Nov 4th 2014, 8:08 AM

    Jobs for the boys on a European scale! All looking out for themselves!

    23
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    Mute Ryan Ash
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    Nov 4th 2014, 9:48 AM

    Job for which boys? Banking regulators? Oh gawd…

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    Mute Sheik Yerbouti
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    Nov 4th 2014, 9:00 AM

    An Irish politician educating us on how banks work….isn’t that a contradiction!

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    Mute SeanieRyan
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    Nov 4th 2014, 9:15 AM

    Most of Europe’s banks at the time were broke as well, including German ones.

    They just let us take the hit and later on flooded their own ones with cheap LTRO trillions.

    You have Germans telling us they are an economic miracle with 2% growth. Holland is a stable success story with bare growth for 10 years.

    Sick parody.

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    Mute Ryan Ash
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    Nov 4th 2014, 9:46 AM

    He’s educating us about banking supervision – not how banks work.

    @ Seanie: With aging populations and shrinking workforces, where exactly is the new growth going to come from?

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    Mute Francie Coffey
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    Nov 4th 2014, 11:20 AM

    ” new pan-eurozone Single Supervisory Mechanism. ” – & so, the plot thickens…

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    Mute Ryan Ash
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    Nov 4th 2014, 9:44 AM

    “Staff working on the Supervisory Mechanism will not be entitled to regulate banks in their home country.”

    Imagine if this had been the case in Celtic Tiger Ireland…

    6
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    Mute R39CRW8f
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    Jan 13th 2015, 4:35 PM

    “Let’s remember that the financial crisis was truly European in nature and to eradicate potential future contagion, we need to develop a unified European approach.” Really????

    So when people spoke out about the EU not being fit for purpose Brian, you told us it was a global issue/crisis starting with Lehman Brothers…No???

    I for one certainly agree that most of our current problems are “truly European in nature”, but not exclusively. Cowards in FF, FG and LB also share that accolade.

    5
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