Why don't councillors talk as much about homelessness at meetings anymore?
For years, homelessness was a standing item on the agenda at most housing committee meetings. But, recently it hasn’t featured as often.
There is perhaps nobody as significant to the story of collecting Ireland’s oral folk tradition as Séamus Ennis, who was born a hundred years ago this May.
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“Whose baby is this?” asked Lord Mayor Nial Ring, at the Central Area Committee on Tuesday.
The Firehouse Film Contest’s organisers want to help filmmakers get over first-time jitters, inhibitions and procrastination – and share their movies with an audience.
As the high-level Moore Street Advisory Group teases out issues around the future of the street, some traders say they feel abandoned.
Addiction is an illness, not a moral decision, and people suffering through it deserve dignity and proper healthcare, writes Anne Buckley.
Here’s some of what councillors talked about at their first full meeting of the year at City Hall.
Businesses say they want more, tougher policing to deal with what they say has been a rise in crime. But others say a more health-focused response is what’s needed.
Sometimes women are blamed for anti-social behaviour, when actually they were suffering domestic violence, says Niamh White of refuge Aoibhneas.
In recent months, the online publication All the Food launched, as well as the print magazine Char. And there’s more to come.
The interest in table tennis seems to have waned in recent years, say those who still turn out to play.
On the southside of Victoria Quay, customers in this cosy hideaway can pick from a menu of fast-food classics, cooked up about a foot and a half away from where they sit.