Wednesday, 29 November 2023

Sustainability To The Fore At Cork County Council’s Enterprise Awards in North Cork

 

Sustainability To The Fore At Cork County Council’s Enterprise Awards in North Cork

The first ‘Best in Cork’ Awards for North Cork Revealed 

A Mallow company that repurposes decommissioned wind turbine blades into greenway bridges and outdoor furniture has been recognised as one of the best businesses in North Cork. BladeBridge was named Best Start-up at the Best in Cork for Cork County Council’s first of three divisional awards at a special event at Springfort Hall Hotel, Mallow.  

Viska Systems was named Best Small Business in the region. The Buttevant based company designs and manufactures robotics and automation systems for a range of industries.  

Charleville based CPH, which is Ireland’s largest independent construction services company, received the Best Medium Business award. It was established in 1989, employs 32 people and has the largest green electric fleet of any of the top 30 powered access companies in Ireland and the UK 

The three winners and three runners up will now go on to represent North Cork at the overall Best in Cork awards set to take place at Cork County Hall in January.  

Renewable energy development company NMK Renewables was the runner up in the Best Start-up category; The Sibly Food Co, which makes healthy energy balls and baked goods, was the Best Small Business runner up; with speciality food distributors Horgan’s Delicatessen Supplies the runner up Best Medium Business.   


Chief Executive of Cork County Council Valerie O’Sullivan added, “It is important for us to shine a spotlight on the businesses that make North Cork such a vibrant place to live, work and visit. The Best in Cork awards aim to recognise sustainability, growth and innovation. It is clear from the entries that businesses in North Cork are making huge strides to ensure their company is as sustainable as possible and I would like to commend them for their efforts to date. One of the most sustainable things we can all do is to support local businesses and I would encourage people to buy local this Christmas as well as throughout the year whenever possible. When you buy goods or services from a local company you are reinvesting in your local community and supporting vital jobs.”   

The Divisional awards for South Cork will take place in Midleton on Monday, December 4th. They will be followed by the divisional awards for West Cork in Rosscarbery on Wednesday, December 13th. 

Captioned images available here: https://we.tl/t-9wGb6B2Yum 

North Cork Divisional Award Winners 

Best Start-up 

Winner: BladeBridge 

Runner Up: NMK Renewables 

Best Small Business 

Winner: Viska Systems 

Runner Up: The Sibly Food Co 

Best Medium Business 

Winner: CPH 

Runner Up: Horgan’s Delicatessen Supplies 

Fermoy QQI Level 4 Horticulture course starting in January in our Cork College of FET Centre

 





Just to let you know that there are still a few places left on the Fermoy QQI Level 4 Horticulture course starting in January in our Cork College of FET Centre.





Regards,

 

Brendan Glynn

BTEI Coordinator

Cork College of FET (Mallow Centre)

IDA Business & Technology Park

Quartertown

Mallow

Co Cork

P51 HC63

 

Tel 022 55452

Mob 086 3629199

 



Tuesday, 28 November 2023

Christmas Events in Cork County 2023

 Christmas Events in Cork County 2023


Mallow Christmas lights


Christmas Events in Cork County 2023

Christmas preparations are well underway in towns and villages across the county to encourage people to experience the best of what County Cork has to offer while supporting local business, jobs and communities. 
Cork County Council is delighted to support a host of community groups and organisations in bringing festive light and cheer to their towns and village. We have gathered details of just some of the events taking place across the county. Please note events are subject to change, please check local arrangements before travelling.

Cork County Council is also providing for special car parking arrangements across its own operated car parks throughout the month of December. Visitors are encouraged to check the offers in their local area.


 https://www.corkcoco.ie/en/events/christmas-events-in-cork-county-2023

Tánaiste opens MacCurtain Street Cork City Public Transport Improvement Scheme

 Tánaiste opens MacCurtain Street Public Transport Improvement Scheme

CNMacCurtainSt_30


The MacCurtain Street Public Transport Improvement Scheme – which brings about a significant redrawing of traffic management priorities in the city centre -was officially opened today by Tánaiste Micheál Martin T.D. and Lord Mayor of Cork, Cllr. Kieran McCarthy.

 

The project is aimed at improving the reliability and journey times of bus services in the city and providing improved walking and cycling infrastructure along the city quays and at key streets and junctions. The scheme, which began in January 2022, will make public transport, walking and cycling more attractive for people living in, working in  and visiting the city centre – thereby supporting healthy living and economic activity.

 

Funded by the National Transport Authority (NTA), the works included major public realm investment, with over 12,530 square metres of public realm and upgraded pathways, new public lighting, seating, street furniture as well as a substantial programme of tree and shrub planting.  There has been 1 kilometre of new cycle lanes installed, providing connectivity to the wider cycle network from Shandon Street to the Marina via dedicated cycling facilities, as well as upgrades to 17 signalised traffic junctions and pedestrian crossings,12 new bus stops, 5 of these with shelters, and over 30,360 metres of resurfaced roadway across the scheme.

 

The project area encompassed several of the streets and quays in the area surrounding MacCurtain Street, delivering cycling and pedestrian connectivity improvements, road resurfacing and signalised junction upgrades which have facilitated traffic management changes along Anderson’s Quay, Camden Quay, Penrose Quay, Merchant’s Quay, St. Patrick’s Quay including Christy Ring Bridge, Lavitt’s Quay, Mulgrave Road, Devonshire Street and Cathedral Walk, culminating with the restoration of two way traffic on MacCurtain Street, with transformative public realm works there and in the adjoining Bridge Street and Coburg Street areas.

 

Lord Mayor of Cork, Cllr. Kieran McCarthy said: “MacCurtain Street and its surrounding neighbourhoods are steeped in a rich history, heritage and memory and today we are writing another chapter.  The opening of this Cork City Council project is an important piece of an evolving story about how we live, work and recreate in a growing Cork City. MacCurtain Street is now an important exemplar of a vibrant, diverse, sustainable, green quarter with buses, pedestrians and cyclists making their way in and out of the city, safely and timely.  The deeply ingrained sense of pride of place in this community, amongst businesses and residents alike, in conjunction with a co-creation mindset with the City Council has been integral to the vision and reality of this project. Such a co-creation model will also continue to serve the city’s evolution into its exciting future.”    

 

Tánaiste Micheál Martin T.D. said: ““Cities are for our people, our streets are places where people can meet to connect and enjoy the unique atmosphere that areas like MacCurtain Street have to offer.  The improvements in the public spaces delivered under the MacCurtain Street Public Transport Improvement Scheme will benefit this city and the people of Cork for generations to come.  An inviting, attractive public space inevitably fosters a sense of community, economic development, health and wellbeing, bringing the city to life.”

 

Chief Executive of Cork City Council, Ann Doherty said: “Our city is changing with our city population projected to increase by 50% by 2040.  To accommodate this growth, the improvement of our public transport network is not just vital, it is imperative if our city is to function well and prosper. This project is a key element of this.  Cork City Council is grateful for the support and patience of residents, businesses and the wider public who backed this scheme and share Cork City Council’s vision for a city grounded in sustainability.  We are also encouraging the wider public to avail of the enhanced bus service if they are travelling to the city centre for work or school or for Christmas shopping or socialising”.

 

Anne Graham, Chief Executive Officer of the National Transport Authority said: “The National Transport Authority is delighted to support this strategically important project for Cork City.  These enhancements to MacCurtain Street and surrounding areas will provide improved access to the city centre through the provision of better walking, cycling and public transport infrastructure. The delivery of this scheme will encourage more people to consider sustainable travel, reduce unnecessary car journeys and help to ease traffic congestion which is one the key objectives of the Cork Metropolitan Area Transport Strategy.” 

 

 

Changes to bus routes

A key component of the MacCurtain Street Public Transport Improvement Scheme is improved bus infrastructure and changes to several Cork City bus routes.  

From 26 November 2023, new 24 hour bus lanes will be in operation on MacCurtain Street, Coburg Street, Bridge Street and Cathedral Walk. This will improve bus journey times and allow for two-way bus movements on these streets, making it easier to access local schools and businesses by bus.   

 

New Bus Routes for the 207, 207A, 208 and 209: 

 

The southbound routes will travel from Summerhill North and turn right onto MacCurtain Street and stop at the new westbound bus stop opposite York Street. 

 

They will continue westbound on MacCurtain Street and then turn left onto the new contraflow bus lane on Bridge Street, stopping at the new bus stop on Bridge Street. 

 

They will then continue onto St. Patrick’s Bridge and then onto St. Patrick’s Street. 

 

Note:  The right turn from Summerhill North onto MacCurtain Street will be for busses only.   There will be no right turn for motorists from Summerhill North onto MacCurtain Street.

 

The northbound buses will travel from St. Patrick’s Street onto St. Patrick’s Bridge then onto Bridge Street and stop at the new bus stop on Bridge Street.

 

They will continue onto MacCurtain Street and travel eastbound to the new stop on MacCurtain Street beside York Street.  

 

As before the 207, 207A, 208 and 209 will continue onto Summerhill North, the 214 onto the Lower Glanmire Road, and the 205 and 212 onto Alfred Street.

 

New Bus Routes for the 203, 215 and 248:

 

The southbound routes for the 203, 215 and 248 will travel from the N20 to Leitrim Street and onto the new sheltered bus stop on Coburg Street. 

 

They will then turn right onto Bridge Street, continue onto St Patrick’s Bridge and then onto St Patrick’s Street for the 203 and 215 and the Bus Station for the 248. 

 

The northbound routes will travel from St Patrick’s Bridge, onto Bridge Street, turn left onto Coburg Street. 

 

The bus will continue onto Devonshire Street turn right onto the N20. 

 

A new contraflow bus lane has been provided on Cathedral Walk to facilitate access for the 203 and 215 to Watercourse Road. 

Creative Ireland and Healthy Ireland Supporting Wellbeing through Social Prescribing Creative Engagement

   


Back: Cork Co Co Creative Ireland Public Engagement Officer, Emma Dwyer, Mayor of the County of Cork, Cllr. Frank O’Flynn, Healthy Ireland Arts & Culture Lead CKCH, Sheelagh Broderick Front: Uillinn West Cork Arts Centre, Public Engagement Assistant (Arts for Health) Etain Collins, Dunmanway Social Prescribing Link Worker, Wendy Bond



Creative Ireland and Healthy Ireland Supporting Wellbeing through Social Prescribing Creative Engagement This year Social Prescribing in Cork County and Kerry received a welcome boostwith the allocation of funds from the Creative Ireland Socially Prescribed Creative Engagement initiative in partnership with the Local Authority Arts Offices and the National Family Resource Centre Mental Health Project. Recognising the positive role creativity has on physical and mental health and wellbeing, the funding was allocated to increase the cultural opportunities available at a local level.

The main objectives of the initiative are

1. Create enduring links between local social prescribing networks supported by the HSE and local authority Culture and Creativity teams responsible for creative programming locally.

2. Support the wellbeing of individual clients of the social prescribing link worker via participation in creative engagement.

3. Lay a strong foundation for the development of a local ecosystem that supports creative programming that specifically addresses the creative wellbeing needs of people who use the services of social prescribing link workers.

4. Generate learnings that can be applied in developing a programme nationally.


In Kerry the You, Me & Creativity programme was delivered directly in Q4 2023 through the participating Family Resource Centres in Ballyheigue, Ballyspillane, Kenmare and Listowel with the support of Kerry County Council Arts office and the National Family Resource Centre Mental Health Project. A variety of different workshops were organised including dance, ceramics, percussion and wreath making, training was provided to increase Azure Dementia Inclusive facilitationcapacity at cultural institutions, and enabling measures were delivered to remove barriers to participation.


In Cork County an Arts & Chats programme has been developed to build connections between social prescribing networks, the libraries, and creative facilitators living and working throughout the county. Arts and Chats will offer a series of workshops from December 2023 through Cork County Council’s library branches.The participants will take part in a creative activity, from printmaking and drawing toukelele playing or singing. The workshops are designed to be social, with a cup of tea and a chat being an important element of each meeting. A capacity building measure to develop the sector is being provided through Uillinn: West Cork Arts Centre and Cork County Council’s Library and Arts Service who will establish a panel of facilitators that will receive training in social prescribing. The training willdraw on experiences from other counties to give people a broad knowledge of whatsocial prescribing is and how they can support their networks. Dr. Sheelagh Broderick, Senior Health Promotion & Improvement officer commented,“This is a great opportunity for people who have been isolated to get out and get creative in their own local communities. The service is being provided free and support is available for those who have difficulty with access. Get in touch with your Social Prescribing Link Worker at Family Resource Centres in Dunmanway, Adrigole, Mallow, Midleton and Ballincollig’ This work is part of a broader trajectory for Arts and Health noted for action in the Healthy Ireland in the Health Service implementation plan 2023-2027 under the Strategic Priority Strengthening Partnership and Community Working. The Social Prescribing service recognises that health is heavily determined by social factors such as poverty, isolation and loneliness. Through the use of social prescribing, healthcare professionals and others can refer people to a range of local non-clinical services to help improve a person’s wellbeing and provides a credible referral pathway for other HSE programmes. To see a complete list of the Social Prescribing services in Cork and Kerry Click

Here. https://hsehealthandwellbeingnews.com/social-prescribing/



Funding Workshop for Musicians 50+

 Funding Workshop for Musicians 50+

 

 

This summer First Music Contact worked in collaboration with Age & Opportunity to survey professional musicians aged 50 & over, working in Ireland, to assess their needs and to hear about their experiences as they move forward in their careers.

 

One of the main areas of professional development that emerged from this survey was the need for more information on the funding and supports available for arts practices. In response, Age & Opportunity and First Music Contact are delighted to announce an online workshop on the topic of funding and bursaries with speakers from Kilkenny Arts Office, The Arts Council and Culture Ireland taking place online this December.

 

 

The online workshop will take place on Wednesday 13th December at 3pm. 

 

 

Join us to learn more about different funding streams and opportunities available, and have any questions you have about when and how to apply answered.

 

 

Head to the link below to register for free now! 

 

 

https://fundingworkshopoldermusicians.eventbrite.ie 

 

 

Please note that while this workshop is of course open to everyone regardless of age, the content will be tailored somewhat to the experiences of those in the 50+ age bracket.

Cork County Council has approved its Budget for 2024 totalling over €458 million.

 

Cork County Council Approves Balanced Budget of €458.3 Million

Council continues to increase spending to support communities across Cork County

Cork County Council has approved its Budget for 2024 totalling over €458 million.  This is the first balanced budget Council has adopted in several years and importantly ensures services are maintained and even increased despite continuing high inflation (7.8% for 2022 and 5.1% to October year on year). 

Key services such as Housing and Roads will see increases of €18.4m and €22.1 million respectively. The Local Property Tax, payable by householders, remains unchanged with commercial rates also staying at 2023 levels. The SME Grant Incentive Scheme will also continue providing a 3.5% rebate up to a max of €7,000 for each Ratepayer.  The increase in operational expenditure reflects Cork County Council’s commitment and ambition to deliver the services needed to enhance urban and rural communities across County Cork. 

The Council continues its focus on supporting communities and outdoor resources, evidenced in the creation of a new Service Enhancement Fund, valued at €650,000 together with ongoing maintenance of the €3.3 million General Municipal Allocation, the Village Enhancement Fund and the Town Development Fun.   

Climate Action legislation commits Ireland to NetZero emissions by 2050 and a 51% reduction by 2030. The recent destruction caused by Storm Babet across a number of the county’s towns and villages, and in particular the devastation in East Cork, has increased focus on the need to accelerate efforts to combat climate action.  The Department of the Environment, Climate and Communications has allocated €1.2 million to Cork County Council from the Climate Action Fund (CAF) to deliver the Community Climate Action Programme (CCAP) addressing both direct climate action, climate education and capacity building. Cork County Council is committed to its current climate adaptation activities across its services.   

This commitment is reflected in Council’s Capital Budget Programme through investment in rural work hubs, improving living conditions in urban and rural areas, flood and coastal protection works for vulnerable communities, energy efficiency projects in Council-owned facilities, protection of waterways and sustainable travel projects. 

Cork County Council’s €1.5 billion 3-year Capital Programme encompasses current, proposed and potential infrastructural projects to be undertaken by Council between 2024 and 2026. The overall emphasis of this expenditure relates to housing provision, roads, environment, recreation & amenity, and flood programmes.  


Wednesday, 22 November 2023

ENGAGE Connecting With Men Mallow

 


 




Connecting with Men

Date:          December 13th 2023

 

Time:         10am- 4.30pm

 

Venue:     Gilbert Centre, Fair Street, Mallow, Co Cork

 

Aim of the Workshop

The aim of this workshop is to assist a broad range of practitioners and service providers to explore the world of males, and to develop practical strategies for effectively engaging with them around health and wellbeing issues.

The aim of this workshop is to assist a broad range of practitioners to effectively connect with men on health and wellbeing issues.  It focuses on the engagement process (i.e. WHY and HOW to build relationships with men) rather than offering a new or revised health programme (i.e. WHAT to offer them).

 

Objectives of Workshop

The key objectives for this workshop are to:

·         Reflect upon how to create a ‘safe space’ for working with men.

·         Gain a common understanding of what men’s health is and why it is important.

·         Explore how gender influences the values and attitudes that men develop in relation to their health, and how this influences their health behavior's.

·         Identify some of the determinants that shape health outcomes for men.

·         Reflect on participants’ own value base, experience, skills, attitudes towards and expectations of men.

·         Explore what a ‘male friendly’ health programme or service looks like in practice.

·         Signpost participants to further sources of help, advice, guidance and support.

 

Who Should Attend?

This Workshop will be of interest to a broad range of service providers and practitioners who wish to connect in more meaningful ways with men. 

 

Cost

The ‘Connecting with Men’ workshop is FREE for all participants.

 

Registration:

https://bookwhen.com/corkkerryhealthpromotiontraining/e/ev-szqu-20231213100000

 

Further Information

To apply for a place on this workshop or for further information, please contact:

Email: Clare or Aoife at Clare.Deasy@hse.ie or Aoife.NiChoncuir@hse.ie