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johndeasytd.com

ISSUES

Deasy calls on Council to safeguard future of local soccer club’s ‘Crystal Pitch’

8/9/2015

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John Deasy says the Receiver tasked with selling the former glass factory properties needs to know that any proposal to change the purpose of a pitch currently used by Dungarvan United AFC will not be entertained by Waterford City and County Council.
John Deasy with mmebers of Dungarvan United AFC::: Members of Dungarvan United AFC, including chairman David Walsh, pictured at the Crystal Pitch with John Deasy TD, Cllr Damien Geoghegan, Sports Minister Michael Ring, and Waterford Council CEO Michael Walsh.
For the past 25 years United have availed of a playing field owned by Waterford Crystal in Receivership. It backs directly onto Kilrush Park — the soccer club’s home ground since 1980.
Commonly known as “The Crystal Pitch”, it is zoned for ‘Open Space’ under the Dungarvan Town Development Plan, 2012-2018. This zoning is designed “to preserve and enhance Open Space areas and Amenity Areas for passive and active recreational uses”.
John Deasy says: “I’ve been in contact with the Council and it’s time they made it clear to the Receiver that this pitch will not be used for anything other than soccer club purposes.”
Acting for Waterford Crystal Ltd in Receivership, Deloitte have been in discussions on the sale of both the former Waterford Crystal factory in Dungarvan and the separate Sports and Leisure Club site roughly a kilometre away.
Late last year the Receiver’s solicitors served notice on United to stop using the Crystal Pitch with immediate effect. 
Doing so would mean getting rid of 14 teams and “decimate the club,” says Dungarvan chairman David Walsh. The use of their main playing field and the Crystal Pitch is split evenly among all teams, whilst the latter is also used predominantly for training. With 27 teams (male and female) from under-6s up, having a second field is essential. 
John Deasy has been in regular contact with both club and senior local authority officials over the past year. “At this stage the Council needs to make it abundantly clear to the Receiver that this pitch, if sold to a third party, is not going to be permitted for any other use, and it will be making no change to the zoning of this particular site,” he says.
After being instructed to desist from using the pitch, Dungarvan United were subsequently invited through law firm A&L Goodbody, representing the Receiver, to make an offer for the land and buildings before the site went on general sale.
However, the club is heavily in debt due to ongoing investment in its facilities (including pitch drainage works, astroturf, a new covered stand and floodlights) and “borrowing more funds is not realistic,” David Walsh says.
Despite this fact, the club made two offers to the Receiver last February — one for the playing pitch, another for the entire lot, including the disused Crystal clubhouse. If accepted, either bid would have to be met through further local fundraising. 
“This potential securing of these lands would be a fantastic outcome as the club prepares to mark its 50th anniversary in 2016,” says the chairman, who believes the current zoning of the lands should “reduce the value of the site considerably.”
In recent weeks United have been informed that the Receiver is now dealing with another interested party in connection with the property, and would only “consider” engaging with United should those negotiations prove unsuccessful.
This has left the club’s committee in limbo, after years of modernising and forward planning. Many of its hundreds of members would have connections to the old Dungarvan Crystal team and the factory workers. 
With the permission of the Crystal Centre Committee, the club effected a clean-up of the centre’s old vandalised tennis courts and laid out a grassed training area for schoolboy teams. This land was previously a magnet for vandalism and anti-social behavior, which has reduced dramatically as a result, much to the relief of residents of the area.
John Deasy says: “The club needs to be dealt with on a fair basis given their contribution to the wider community and the Council should now intervene to ensure that the Receiver is under no illusions as to what will be allowed.
“If this is a tactic to engineer arbitration for the pitch it is ill-advised. The people selling this land need to engage constructively with the soccer club for the first time since this process started,” the local TD added.

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Sports Minister opens Dungarvan Gymnastics Club’s new home

19/2/2015

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::: Group of Dungarvan Gymnastics Club members pictured with Minister for Sport Michael Ring during his recent visit. Included are coaches Lindsey Sheehan, Lyndsay O'Shea Flynn & Denika O'Shea; Deputy John Deasy; Cllr Damien Geoghegan, Mayor of Dungarvan and Lismore, and Rosarie Kealy , Sports Coordinator with Waterford Sports Partnership.
Dungarvan Gymnastic Club’s new premises at Westgate Business Park were formally opened recently by Minister for Sport, Michael Ring TD, on February 19, 2015.

After seeing a dynamic display of gymnastics, the Minister praised the great work being done by the club to improve the health and well-being of its members in a fun and fitness-orientated environment.

The club was established eight years ago and is affiliated with Gymnastics Ireland. It currently caters for 149 recreational gymnasts and 49 competition gymnasts, ranging in age from four years upwards.

The club has competed at Women’s Artistic Gymnastics since 2008 with considerable success, winning 18 regional team medals (13 gold) and 8 team medals at national level. 

Members have also collected 78 individual regional medals and 4 national titles to date.
With the aid of a grant application by Waterford Sports Partnership to the Irish Sports Council, basic equipment was purchased such as floor and safety mats, a vault, springboard, and beam.

Over the past five years the club’s fundraising has enabled it to purchase additional equipment, including 2 asymmetric bars — all now housed in the club’s spacious new unit at 2-3 Westgate, having recently relocated from Dungarvan Sports Centre.

Having allocated the club a grant of €18,000 under the 2014 Sports Capital Programme, Minister Ring’s visit was arranged by Deputy John Deasy, who supported the club’s funding application. 

Lindsey Sheehan, club coach, says the sport’s popularity is really on the increase locally. “The club are currently receiving approximately 10-15 membership enquiries a week and have 30 applications on their wait list, with an additional 36 members wait-listed for the competition classes.” 

To cater for this demand, the club is planning to further improve its facilities and equipment. For more information see www.dungarvangymnastics.com
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John favours more funding for golf prospects; Treacy outlines criteria

2/10/2014

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Considering the country’s lofty status in the world of golf, Deputy John Deasy has posed the question as to whether more money should be invested in Ireland’s up-and-coming talent.

Irish Sports Council chief executive John Treacy answered various questions about funding when he appeared before the Dáil Public Accounts Committee last Thursday.

Noting that Ireland leads EU per capita figures for registered golfers — albeit club memberships have been declining globally since the recession hit — the Waterford TD felt the Sports Council allocations for the GUI High Performance programme (€375,000) and Team Ireland Golf Trust (€139,000 “for 15 young pros”) “doesn’t seem like a lot of cash”; particularly when the latter had helped bring through the likes of Peter Lawrie, Shane Lowry and Michael Hoey since it started in 1999.

He wondered should greater grant aid be allocated given “how much effort is being put into young golfers in clubs, and the success that they’re achieving, including in the area we’re both from” — citing European amateur bronze medallist Gary Hurley and his West Waterford clubmate Seamus Power, who is currently on the eGolf Professional Tour in the US.

“People hear about some of these young pros being on Tour, even the Challenge Tour, and they think they’re making a boat-load of cash, and that isn’t the case. Many of them are really struggling,” said Mr Deasy, who was a member of the Dungarvan Golf Club team (along with Austin Spratt, Derry Kiely and Kieran Hogan) that won the All-Ireland Junior Foursomes title in 1985 — the year he took up a partial sports scholarship in the US.

Looking at Paul McGinley’s achievement in the recent Ryder Cup, on top of those of Padraig Harrington, he said “the enormous success that Irish golf has had internationally, it’s amazing. Absolutely amazing. Across America, across the world. When you think of golf, you do think of Ireland.”
 “The enormous success that Irish golf has had internationally, it’s amazing. Absolutely amazing."
John Deasy favours more funding for young golf prospects

Mr Treacy, who is a member of both Dungarvan and West Waterford Golf Clubs, said the High Performance programme is about putting coaching in place for top amateur players (at Carton House) and “making sure they’re exposed to international competition at the appropriate age.

“It has been hugely successful because the Rory McIlroys and the Graeme McDowells of this world... are a product of the GUI and their coaching systems and the coaches on the ground, the club coaches.” The criteria in place around this funding is Sports Council-approved, with the maximum grant available to amateurs being €5,000.

The Villierstown man explained that when players decide they’re going to go pro, there’s a c.€200,000 Golf Trust established by the Council (with backing from Fáilte Ireland and the commercial sector) — but “those young aspiring golfers have to meet criteria before they’re funded. So it isn’t someone turning around when they’re 18 years of age and saying ‘Oh, I’m going to be a pro’.

“What we want to be careful of is we don’t want young golfers turning pro too early. So if they’re going at the appropriate age, then the Trust kicks in.”

Asked by Deputy Deasy whether any pros had “slipped through the net... who did not get the grant and actually did succeed,” Mr Treacy said he didn’t think so.

“We have supported people for a long period of time, because it’s not like the other sports where you can tell after three or four years whether they’re going to actually make it on the world stage or not. Sometimes it can be five, six, seven years with the golfers and we’ve actually stood by a lot of them.”

He said that without that “€20,000 when you’re turning pro — and I would have heard it myself from the likes of Peter Lawrie — they wouldn’t have been able to do it... to meet their expenses when they go on tour... It is a journey. And it is difficult. But that funding does go a long way.”

The Sports Council chief concluded: “So a lot done but, I think, more to do. I agree with you Deputy Deasy. This is a sport where we can excel on the world stage and we have excelled and we need to make sure that we continue it and that we have the systems in place that can support young aspiring golfers that have the talent to perform at the highest level and make sure nothing gets in their way.”
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John says Camphire International Horse Trials merits more funding

2/10/2014

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Camphire Horse Trials: John Treacy told by John Deasy that this world-class equestrian event should receive greater funding
John Deasy - Camphire Horse Trials deserves more funding
Deputy John Deasy has said the “paltry” funding given to the Camphire International Horse Trials event in west Waterford doesn’t tally with its international status and high-calibre competition.

Raising the issue with Irish Sports Council CEO John Treacy at a recent meeting of the Public Accounts Committee, Mr Deasy said Horse Sport Ireland provides a Home International hosting grant of €5,000 while some horse classes receive prizemoney from the HSI breeding committee — but that’s it.

This is despite the fact that the annual summer event in Cappoquin has “been built up over the last 14 years” to achieve “international status”. With “only two other 3-star courses in Ireland”, the lay-out on the banks of the Blackwater has a first-class reputation among top-level riders.

Looking at “where we have been relatively successful over the last few Olympics, the equestrian area really stands out... and for a very significant horse trialing event” — comprising cross country, showjumping and dressage — “€5,000 seems a very small number to me,” Deputy Deasy said.

“Considering the kind of success people who attend these horse trials have gone on to achieve internationally, not just in the Olympics but in world-class events”, he felt “a more significant amount of money should be contributed” — wondering whether the Sports Council should consider funding such events directly.

John Treacy replied that “without a shadow of a doubt” equestrian sports — which “fit with our natural environment” — have proven to be very successful for Ireland internationally.

“The unfortunate part is our funding has been reducing, with a knock-on effect to Horse Sport Ireland whose funding is probably down over €400,000 over the last number of years. They currently allocate €84,000 to [around eight] events around the country... and as part of that Camphire gets €5,000.”

“I suppose it’s never enough,” he accepted, “because they are huge events and very important for the local economy as well.” (Camphire, which will be held from July 22-26 next year, also includes a Trade Village and Country Fair sourcing local producers.) “But the reality is funding is down... and they [HSI] have a huge demand in regard to some of those shows.”

While acknowledging “I’ve no doubt that what you do must be very difficult — just the competitive aspect of different sports looking for their allocation,” Deputy Deasy said “€5,000 is a paltry figure to be honest.

“Maybe, given its success and given how the Irish equestrian area has grown, some consideration should be given as to how the Sports Council can help these events out a little bit more,” he added.

Mr Treacy said HSI “are undertaking a strategic review at the moment and that issue is definitely coming up in terms of international events... So there are plans afoot in terms of trying to support some of these... with some more funding.”

With Deputy Deasy asking “When is that going to be finalised; and do you have an input?”, the CEO said “we did give feedback to it.” Asked “was that to increase the amount?” the Sports Council chief said: “No it wasn’t that specific. We were [talking] more on a macro level. But I know it’s part of what they’re thinking around that strategy at the moment.

“Look, we’d like to be in a position to give more money to these shows because I agree with you Deputy Deasy, they’re very, very important and there are some fine shows right around the country, and nowhere closer to my own heart than west Waterford.

“We do know they put on world-class events and they bring in international riders and it’s obviously something we will encourage HSI to do, to invest more money in these shows,” Mr Treacy concluded.

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JOHN DEASY TD

  • Constituency Office 35, O'Connell Street, Dungarvan, Co Waterford
  • Phone 058-43003​
  • Email john.deasy@oireachtas.ie

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