Monday 24 August 2015

Did the internet ruin your summer?



Did you notice that there appeared to be less children playing outdoors during the summer this year?
 
It didn’t cross my mind until my son commented this week that he didn’t mind going back to school because there was no one around to play with. He had a point – there were certainly fewer youngsters out playing football on our local green in comparison with previous summers.


So where were they all hiding? In a sure sign that the economy is picking up, some of them had gone abroad with their families – but that hardly accounts for the full eight weeks or so of the school break.


Was it possible that many of our children were lured indoors by their growing dependency on the internet?

The results of a new study published by Stop Procrastinating, a productivity website, seems to confirm as much.

The survey of 2,000 parents across the country found that a majority are concerned by their children’s internet use during the summer and say that it will cause conflict during family holidays.

It found that parents are also concerned by their inability to block their children’s access to the internet during the summer.

Among its findings were:
•68 per cent worried their children use the Internet for too long during the summer holidays.
•52 per cent said their children were less active because they used social media instead of playing with friends.
•48 per cent worried their children didn’t seek out sociable activities during the summer.
•62 per cent said their children’s use of smart devices would cause conflict and stress during their family holiday.
•56 per cent said that their children read less over the summer than they did when they were children. They blamed the internet for this.


While the internet can be a valuable learning resource, our reliance on smartphones and tablets has become worrying. Social networking has replaced meaningful human contact and even those with hundreds of so-called Facebook friends can, in reality, be lonely and isolated.


Parents are under mounting pressure to buy the latest gadgets for their kids, unwittingly exposing them to online violence or pornography.


Despite dire warnings about childhood obesity, kids are literally left to their own devices instead of engaging in sporting activities.


It may be an inconvenient truth, but we all know that the internet is a problem when it comes to our children. The question is: what are we willing to do about it?

Sunday 16 August 2015

Zero tolerance needed on dog fouling


When you consider the low number of on-the-spot fines issued for dog fouling across Dublin's four local authorities last year, you'd think we didn't have a problem with this disgusting epidemic that plagues our communities.

Incredibly, only 13 fines were issued in 2014 across the city and county, despite a €10,000 campaign by the councils to raise awareness of the issue.

This summer, it's everywhere you look. It’s on our footpaths, our open spaces, our grass verges and our beaches. By extension, this means it ends up inside our homes, schools, sports clubs and workplaces.


It's next to impossible to go anywhere these days without having to navigate a course around dog excrement. It’s not the fault of our canine friends, of course. If they have to go, they have to go.

Because there’s no such thing as bad dogs – just bad, irresponsible owners with the manners and civic mindedness of rodents.

The problem affects children and adults alike. At best, it is a messy, unpleasant experience, particularly when you have to clean it out of the crevices of the soles of your shoes. At worst, it can have serious health implications and even lead to blindness. 

While the laws are there to fine people if their dogs foul in a public place, enforcement is typically non-existent in some areas. On-the-spot fines of €150 can be issued or up to €3,000 if a conviction is secured in court. But the chances of being caught are pretty slim, as last year's figures show.

When was the last time you saw a dog owner being reprimanded by a council official and issued with an on-the-spot fine?

It is curious that our local authorities don’t see the financial potential of policing dog fouling as they do, for instance, parking.

There’s hardly a community left in Dublin that isn’t subjected to disc parking. Much – if not all – of this revenue goes straight into the coffers of the local authorities. By extension, this helps pay for local services such as street cleaning and road maintenance.

Pay and display parking works for one simple reason – visibility. The sight of uniformed parking warden stalking our streets is more than enough to ensure that we comply with regulations.

And more often than not, if you take a chance and don’t pay for your parking, there is a very high probability that you’ll be caught and fined. We may not like it but it’s a clear deterrent.

Imagine if our local authorities put the same effort into the dog dirt problem? Every community in Dublin should have a uniformed dog fouling inspector on the streets on a daily basis. The revenue generated from the fines alone would pay their wages. There would also be significant environmental and health benefits.

Irresponsible, selfish, lazy, pig ignorant dog owners would think twice the next time their adorable mutts soil a footpath. Find them and fine them; publicly name and shame them.

I imagine there would be much public support for a zero tolerance approach to the issue of dog fouling. Put it on your list of demands when the general election candidates come calling in the months ahead.

Wednesday 20 May 2015

We're on the right track with public transport

Surely one of the most short-sighted decisions in the history of the State was the removal of trams from the city’s streets in the late 1940s, followed a decade later by the axing of the legendary Hill of Howth service.
Just imagine the positive impact on tourism today if the lines had remained in place in the intervening decades before trams seemed like a good idea again. 
While our state-of-the art light rail system has been a major hit with 21st century commuters, I’m told that the Luas doesn’t come close to matching the Dublin trams of old, where you could take a day trip out to Dalkey, Howth, Sutton, Clontarf or even Blessington.

It was a major upheaval for Dubliners all those decades ago when tram tracks had to be ripped up from the streets to make way for buses and cars in the name of ‘progress’.
Equally, reinstating the tracks for the Luas has been a headache for commuters, particularly given the modern-day explosion in traffic. Work to connect the two lines across the city is ongoing. A little bit like Dublin itself, it will be great when it’s finished.
In terms of public transport, we’re slowly getting there, even though we’re still waiting on a rail service of some description to key locations such as the airport and major population centres like Swords.
I had reason to take the bus to work on a number of days last week due to car trouble and was pleasantly surprised by how the service has improved. There’s an app that gives real-time information on when your bus will arrive – there’s even on board wi-fi. If only they served coffee!
The one negative aspect was having to listen to commuters babble incessantly into their phones as if they were the only ones on the bus. I was better prepared the next day, making sure I brought a set of earphones – problem solved.
Travelling to work by car is fast becoming the least attractive option, with fuel, parking and toll costs making it increasingly unviable.
With a bit of joined-up thinking (and joined-up Luas lines), there’s no reason not to consider using public transport more – even if it’s not a patch on the old tram system.

Tuesday 12 May 2015

Mixed feelings about church camera ban

My youngest son will be making his First Holy Communion this weekend and we’re all really looking forward to the day.
Whether you’re a devout catholic or not, the occasions of Communion or Confirmation are important milestones in a child’s journey through life and provide cherished, lasting memories for all the family.
Quite rightly, we will now be prohibited from taking photographs during the ceremony – a sensible rule in itself.
The proliferation of camera phones over the past decade has brought out the amateur photographer in all of us, turning every possible event – from school concerts to sports days – into a paparazzi-like feeding frenzy.
There is nothing more irritating than seeing parents and relatives jostling for position around the altar to get the best vantage point as the priest attempts to carry out the sacrament.
So I was initially delighted to hear that the church has instructed each diocese to draw up guidelines on the use of cameras during religious services. 
However, I was somewhat perplexed to then read reports that part of the reason for the ban relates to the church’s child protection guidelines.
In my view, this is an absolute fallacy and, quite frankly, an insult to parents. A decision to prohibit photography during ceremonies should solely have been made on the basis that it is disrespectful of the occasion and an unwelcome distraction for the children. It should not be rolled out under the guise of a child protection measure.
This is the sort of nonsense that forces right-thinking people to lose all sense of perspective; where every innocent action is viewed with deep suspicion by an increasingly paranoid society.
It is, of course, only right and proper that the church has robust child protection measures in place given the scandalous history of clerical abuse in this country. With good reason, parents today are less trusting of members of the clergy than previous generations were. No longer is a priest considered to be beyond reproach; an untouchable pillar of the community afforded unwavering reverence.
The best protection we can offer our children is our knowledge of what happened in the past. 
It’s a sad reality that many decent, law-abiding priests who abhor the sexual abuse of children have been tarnished by association, through no fault of their own. Moreover, they have been further let down by the often inadequate response of church leaders, both at home and in Rome. But the fact remains that those found to be responsible for abusing children within the Catholic Church were the ones wearing white collars and administering the holy sacraments – not the parents and relatives taking photographs during ceremonies

Wednesday 11 March 2015

Prognosis is poor for health service reform

You can really only appreciate the scale of the crisis in our health service when you experience it for yourself, be it personally or through the eyes of a sick friend or relative.

The main problem with our hospitals is not the standard of care provided by those in the medical profession - it’s trying to get access to it. While there are always exceptions, in general I have found the quality of our medical professionals - from frontline ambulance crews to nurses, junior doctors and consultants - second to none. In particular, I will always remember how well we were treated when our children were born in Holles Street and the immense gratitude I felt towards the competent and caring midwives.




But not all of my experiences with the health service have been so positive. I have seen elderly relatives left languishing on hospital trolleys and have endured long, painful hours in chaotic A&E departments in the presence of aggressive drunks and drug addicts.

There is a serious case to be made for segregating those presenting to A&Es with alcohol related injuries. Unless there is an obvious risk to life, they should be made wait the longest for treatment so genuine cases can be prioritised by hospital staff.

Like so many others, inordinate public waiting lists have forced members of my family down the road of private consultants where they have paid extortionate sums for 10 minutes of their time. Some private health insurance policies seems to only cover a small portion of the fee these days.

In reality, our two-tier health service is pushing patients down the private route due to the fear factor. People who are rightly worried about their symptoms don’t want to be waiting for a year or more to see a specialist under the public system.
 
But doesn’t it seem wrong that you can see this same consultant - sometimes within a matter of days - if you are willing and able to pay for it?I’m no expert on health sector reform but would it make sense if consultants were made to choose between their private and public practices? Surely more time solely devoted to public patients would help take the pressure off hospital waiting lists.
 
The other side of the argument is that consultants may well opt to exclusively concentrate on their lucrative private clinics, creating a dearth of medical expertise in the public system. It’s a difficult circle to square.

Given the chaotic system he has inherited from his predecessors, it’s unlikely that current Minister for Health Leo Varadkar will be able to magic up any quick-fix solutions this side of a general election.Chances are he’ll be leaving the Department of Health in the same sorry mess he found it in. He has less than one year to prove us wrong.

Monday 2 March 2015

Time to end discrimination in rental market

Is renting the new buying? Are we about to dispense with our national obsession with owning our own homes and adopt a more European attitude when it comes to long-term renting?
With stringent new lending requirements introduced by the Central Bank, purchasers are going to find it increasingly difficult to find a 20 per cent deposit in a resurgent property market. First time buyers will have to stump up 10 per cent for properties costing up to €220,000 (and 20 per cent of the balance above that). 

This well-intended measure, designed to avoid a new property bubble, is going to push many families and individuals into the unforgiving world of our dysfunctional rental sector. 
Dubliners will bear the brunt of the pain for the privilege of living in the capital. Understandably, the country’s working majority need to be close to their jobs or at least within reasonable commuting distance.
With the recovery in house prices in Dublin, there has been an exponential rise in rents. A quick search on a leading property website lays bare the grim realities facing renters. Prices can vary from suburb to suburb but it’s difficult to find a decent sized family home for under €1,300 per month, even in the less salubrious parts of the city.
Beyond the Pale and away from urban centres, it’s a different story. I have friends renting an idyllic rural property – a stone-fronted converted mill – for €400 per month. You’d be lucky to get a garden shed for that sort of money in Dublin.
Traditionally, we were always led to believe that it made no sense to rent. The conventional wisdom was: why pay ‘dead money’ when you could own your own home for less?
But we are now in very different times and prospective purchasers face a range of obstacles before they can get a foot on the properly ladder: risk-averse lenders; rising house prices; inadequate supply of new homes; and new Loan to Value (LTV) borrowing restrictions. 
From this crisis we will see the emergence of a new breed of long-term renter. Their children will grow up in rented accommodation without having inherited their parents’ expectations of owning their own property.
In the absence of a properly functioning and regulated rental sector, we have a long way to go before we can enjoy the standards and security afforded to many of our European neighbours.
In Ireland, some landlords have effectively operated a form of apartheid that discriminates against those on rent supplement and casts a slur on people in receipt of social welfare payments. The Government is finally bringing forward equality legislation this year that will outlaw the practice of specifically advertising for tenants who are not in receipt of rent allowance. While this is a welcome step in the right direction, will it go far enough in ending the appalling treatment of social welfare recipients? 
Local authorities also need to ensure that slum landlords are eliminated from the rental market by ramping-up their inspection programmes and taking enforcement action where necessary.
Security of tenure and measures to control the spiralling cost of renting are also areas that will require progressive political thinking if we are to offer future generations a viable, realistic alternative to home ownership.

Wednesday 18 February 2015

Speed detection needed in housing estates

There has been a lot of talk of speed this week.

The National Roads Authority is proposing a rush hour speed reduction to 60km/h on the M50 in a bid to reduce what it calls the "accordion effect", where vehicles braking on a heavily trafficked route cause a ripple reaction behind them.

Most of us would love to be able to travel at 60km/h on the motorway at peak times instead of moving at a brisk walking pace, so it will be interesting to see if there is any merit to the NRA's proposal.

But traffic congestion on the capital's busiest route was the last thing on the minds of the parents of little Jake Brennan (6), who was tragically killed by a car outside his home. They held a three-night vigil outside the Dáil to promote their campaign for a speed reduction to 20km/h in residential areas. The initiative, which has become known as 'Jake's Law', was the subject of a Sinn Féin bill and was met with widespread political support, despite warnings from the Minister for Transport that its implementation could prove problematic.


But like everything else in this country, a law is only as good as its enforcement. Reduced speed limits in housing estates will do little for the safety of our children if the detection vans are not moved from our motorways and major roads and into residential areas.

One of the most notorious speed traps is regularly located on the N4, just as you exit the M50 near Liffey Valley Shopping Centre. This is not an area where children play football on the green or even where pedestrians cross the road. It always strikes me as revenue raising exercise rather than a safety measure.

I would like to see the accident statistics for this particular spot because I can't help but think that communities would be far better served if this van was located in nearby housing estates.

Residents' associations also need to play a stronger role in reducing the risk to children's lives. Attempts by parents to have speed reduction measures introduced in their areas are often thwarted by a minority of people who are afraid that ramps or excessive signage will lower the tone of the area or - God forbid - affect property prices.

In my experience, local authorities are slow to act on calls for speed reduction measures unless there is a broad consensus among residents.

On a related note, have you noticed the reduction in the numbers of so-called boy racers on our roads? I'm not just talking about the 'skangers in bangers', but also the young men who spend a fortune modifying their cars.

There was a time when boy racers plagued my community; now they are reduced to one or two brain dead idiots. You'd almost miss the obnoxious roar of their souped-up back boxes in the middle of the night.

So where have they all gone? My guess is that a large section of the boy racer demographic have either been forced to emigrate or have lost their jobs and can no longer afford to pimp their rides.

Whoever said there was nothing good about the recession?