In this issue:
Talks on Irish Rail dispute continue
Justice for Clerys Workers Solidarity Concert with Christy Moore
Christy Moore performs at Clerys solidarity concert in Liberty Hall
Jack O’Connor Presidential speech to Conference
SIPTU President announces union campaign for decent work
SIPTU delegates at Conference
Call for an urgent and wide-ranging fire safety audit of properties
SIPTU security guard members to conduct industrial action at Shell terminal in County Mayo
Failure to end VAT break for non-compliant hospitality sector
Extract from President Michael D Higgins keynote address to Irish Labour History Society Conference
SIPTU agrees deal to bring Dublin Fire Brigade numbers up to safe level
SIPTU Youth - Why Trade Unions Matter
SIPTU calls on Roscommon Leisure Centre board to engage with WRC
Seminar on Brexit
School Bus Driver Representative Retires
SIPTU Radiographers and Radiation Therapists are ready for State Registration
SIPTU Community supporting 72 hour vigil by people with disabilities
Signed Limited Edition Print of James Connolly by Jim Fitzpatrick
SIPTU graduates from the ICTU/UCC Diploma in Adult Learning and Development
BNM unions express disappointment at end of harvesting of peat for energy
Annual Mass for Deceased Members
SIPTU members vote to accept new agreement with Brinks Ireland
Fairshop
Carrickmines tragedy must never be repeated
Budget is mix of positive measures and missed opportunities
The National Living Wage and Alternative Enforcement
2015 European Week for Safety and Health at Work
Palestinian call for protection
Supporting Quality
JLT Home Insurance
One Direct - Car Insurance
Travel Insurance
Taxback
Young Workers Network
SIPTU Basic English Scheme
Larkin Credit Union
Fair Hotel
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Carrickmines tragedy must never be repeated

The fire that led to the deaths of ten members of the travelling community, including five children, at a halting site was an accident waiting to happen. For decades, travellers in Ireland have been treated like second, or third class, citizens with many hundreds of families forced to live on the side of the road in unhygienic conditions without adequate water, electricity and other basic services.

That the Connors, Lynch and Gilbert families who lost their lives in the Carrickmines tragedy were living in this ‘temporary’ site for over ten years underlines the complete failure of government and local authority efforts to provide decent housing for the traveller community, settled or otherwise.

There are complex issues arising from the culture and ethnicity of the Irish traveller community but there can be no excuse for leaving young families in the squalor and deprivation evident at the Carrickmines site. Is it too much to ask that this tragedy which took the lives of five adults, five children and an unborn child can never be allowed to happen again?

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