Amid attacks from the right on “NGOs”, trust in Ireland’s charities has been declining
Scandals in some charities have also harmed the reputation of the sector as a whole, which is unfair, people working for other nonprofits say.
It’s the third community centre the area has lost in recent years, after Carman’s Hall and the Donore Avenue Youth and Community Centre.
Have you been asked for a transit visa, when you don’t need one?
“Responses received do not present an optimum solution for the site,” says a council report.
Meanwhile, those groups, like the Muslim Sisters of Éire, which runs a food table at the GPO, are “being inundated with demand”.
Locals want to know if Lidl is still going to build a promised supermarket there. In the meantime, it’s lying vacant and asbestos fell off a derelict building on the site into a neighbour’s garden.
A centre with a theatre, a black-box space, and rehearsal halls could cost €25 million to €35 million, a consultant told the council’s arts committee Monday.
With Superwomen Everywhere, she hopes to reach women who may avoid yoga because they feel out of place.
The developers have finished them, but years on the council has yet to take control of – and responsibility for – them. “It’s a major issue.”
Residents have been campaigning for a new mixed, non-denominational school. The response so far? One’s just been built for area pupils – in Sandymount.
“I feel like they’re not familiar with visa policy,” says Huimin Ye, who missed her trip to Vienna to visit a friend as a result.
These were some of the issues that councillors discussed at the latest meeting of their South Central Area Committee.
“This image of the Pearse Lyons Distillery is certainly one of juxtaposition, old with new.”