Father of former Rose of Tralee contestant takes legal action against firm that organises festival
The father of a former Rose of Tralee contestant has initiated High Court proceedings against the company that organises the festival.
Richard Henggeler is a shareholder in Kerry Rose Festival Ltd, and it is understood his proceedings, filed in the High Court on Tuesday, are aimed at securing the return of money allegedly loaned by him to the company.
When contacted on Wednesday morning by The Irish Times about the case, Anthony O’Gara, chief executive of Kerry Rose Festival, said he was unaware of it, and was not in a position to comment.
News
- Rents for new tenancies increase twice as fast in areas outside Dublin: Rents for new tenancies outside the Greater Dublin Area increased by almost twice the rate as those in Dublin at the end of last year, with the switch to remote working and people moving outside the capital following the Covid-19 pandemic contributing to the trend.
- Some refugees left without accommodation on Mount St: At least 30 men, who previously slept in tents pitched outside the International Protection Office on Mount Street in Dublin city centre, were left without accommodation on Wednesday evening.
- O’Connell Street tree over 40ft tall to be felled after damage from Dublin riots: One of O’Connell Street’s large London Plane trees, which was badly damaged by fire during Dublin riots last November, will have to be felled, Dublin City Council has said.
- Nine new speed cameras at crash black spots: An Garda Síochána has announced the location of nine new speed cameras which are being located at significant crash black spots.
- Check out today’s Most Read stories.
- Join The Irish Times WhatsApp channel for breaking news straight to your phone.
World
- Arizona governor set to sign repeal of near-total abortion ban from 1864: Arizona is waving goodbye to a US civil war-era ban of nearly all abortions as a repeal Bill reaches the desk of Democratic governor Katie Hobbs.
The Big Read
- Google is somewhat two-faced on workplace politics: There are workplace politics, and then, there are Workplace Politics, writes Karlin Lillington. Just ask Google. First, there are the irritating workplace politics for which you fire your employees.
Opinion
- Finn McRedmond: What does overturning of Weinstein’s conviction mean for #MeToo?
- Lorcan Sirr: Housing is the missing link in the debate about immigration
Business
- Grant to buy used electric vehicles should be included in next budget, PwC says: Grants for the purchase of electric vehicles (EVs) should be extended to used as well as new EVs in a bid to accelerate the shift away from petrol and diesel cars to help the State meet its climate change targets, Big Four accounting firm PwC has proposed in its pre-budget submission to the Department of Finance.
Sports
- Dave Hannigan: Grotesque Tyson-Paul spectacle the very antithesis of a real sporting event: To understand why Mike Tyson is fighting Jake Paul in Texas in July, you only need to wander around any major American supermarket and marvel at the shelves of caffeinated swill called Prime.
Life & Style
· Exhausted, dominated by technology and broke: Sign of the Times survey is all bad news: Irish people are run ragged, stressed by the social media screeching from the far right and struggling with an enduring cost-of-living crisis, according to the latest Sign of the Times survey published by Ipsos B&A.
A helping hand with the cost of caring: what supports are available?
Matt Williams: Take a deep breath and see how Sam Prendergast copes with big Fiji test
New Irish citizens: ‘I hear the racist and xenophobic slurs on the streets. Everything is blamed on immigrants’
Crucial weekend in election campaign as bland as an Uncle Colm monologue on Derry Girls
Podcast Highlights
Why not try one of our Crosswords & Puzzles?
Like this?
Get the best content direct to your inbox by signing up to one of our newsletters