The Sunday Leads

Just have the Sunday Independent and Sunday Business Post to hand at the minute. Post will be updated when the others land.

Sunday Independent

The Sindo leads with a piece by Jody Corcoran and Maeve Sheehan on a Sunday Independent/Quantum Research telephone poll to gauge public feeling on the Government and the economy.

The poll consisted a sample of just 500 households randomly selected.

The questions asked:

  • Do you have confidence in the political system produce answers to our current economic crisis?
    • Yes – 24% / No – 76%
  • Do you worry about your ability to earn or to continue earning a living?
    • Yes – 48% / No – 52%
  • Are you concerned that you could possibly lose your home?
    • Yes – 20% / No – 80%
  • Have you felt ashamed because you could not pay your bills?
    • Yes – 27% / No – 73%
  • Have financial worries ever seriously affected your mood?
    • Yes – 54% / No – 46%
  • Do you believe Ireland has anything to offer to those who will finish their education in the next few years?
    • Yes – 38% / No – 62%
  • Would you see emigration as an option for yourself?
    • Yes – 22% / No – 78%

The Sindo also says it can:

reveal that officials empowered to seize goods to meet an undischarged debt are coming away empty-handed from the often palatial homes of wealthy developers, lawyers and celebrities.

Dublin County Sheriff John Fitzpatrick said: “A different class of individuals are coming into us. We are getting developers, lawyers, celebrities… and for very big money too.”

His current caseload includes a court order against a property developers for €18m, a judgment of €3m against a solicitor and one for €1.4 against a “celebrity”. He does not believe he has a “hope in hell” of getting the money back.

The minor lead is a piece on how the late Celine Cawley’s family is upset with her characterisation as a “ruthless, domineering businesswoman.”

Brendan O’Connor is kicked to the inside pages by Ann Harris with a piece on Brian Cowen’s speech to the Dublin Chamber of Commerce dinner last Friday.

Sunday Business Post

The SBP leads with a story by David Clerkin and Ian Kehoe on how a loophole allowed companies and the super-rich to avoid paying Capital Gains Tax to the tune of €400m in a single scheme. Some 26 taxpayers availed of the scheme.

Ian Kehoe follows up the lead with a front page piece how the owners of the Shelbourne hotel “may never see any return on their €230m investment in the St. Stephen’s Green property.”

He writes:

The consortium of investors, including Bernard McNamara, bought the hotel in 2004 for €120m and injected a further €110m into a redevelopment and refit of the property.

However, court documents filed by John Sweeney, the Galway businessman who owns one-third of the hotel, state that investors have earned nothing from the investment to date and there is no indication that there will be any return in the near future.

Another minor lead by John Burke says that the ESRI was forced to withdraw a “controversial report” on waste management in Dublin due to errors.

Professor Richard Tol said that the move was being taken after the institute identified significant errors after publication. He confirmed that the conclusions reached in the report would be reviewed in the light of the errors and could potentially be changed.

“Any errors identified will be corrected… we’re in the middle of redoing what needs to be redone,” Tol told the Sunday Business Post.

Burke follows this piece with a page 2 piece on how Dublin City Council has paid almost €15m more to consultants that gave it advice on the controversial Poolbeg incinerator.

The council agreed to pay €6.5m to the consortium, headed by consulting engineers RPS, in July 2001, according to documents seen by the Sunday Business Post. However, the local authority has paid more than €21m up the start of this year for services connected to the incinerator project.

Links go live as the pieces do, so do pop by and I’ll send you to the full stories!

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7 Responses to The Sunday Leads

  1. Pingback: €40m Scandal! Religious orders demand taxpayer pay their Ryan inquiry legal bills | election.ie

  2. Richard Tol says:

    The ESRI will not withdraw the waste report.

  3. Alexia Golez says:

    The piece opens “The Economic and Social Research Institute (ESRI) is to withdraw a controversial report it published on waste management in Dublin because of errors in the document” but later says “it is understood the ESRI will publish an amended report this week or early next week”

  4. Publishing amendments does not mean the original is withdrawn. I’m curious to see who in ESRI used the term “withdraw” because that seems over-reaching.

  5. Alexia Golez says:

    @Bernie: They are two completely different things and seem totally contradictory. Pick up a copy tomorrow and read it.

  6. Richard Tol says:

    @Bernie
    No one in the ESRI used the word “withdraw”.

  7. Pingback: ESRI rejects the SBP claim that Dublin waste report will be withdrawn | election.ie

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