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Inishowen being hit again by emigration 15.04.08

by Simon McGeady, Inishowen Independent

CONSTRUCTION workers from Carndonagh have begun to abandon Ireland and head across the sea in search of employment as a result of the slowdown in the Irish building industry, the Inishowen Independent can reveal.
In a scene reminiscent of pre Celtic Tiger Ireland, a significant number of Carn men now spend weeks at a time away from home, at work on construction projects across Britain, at sites in London, Grimsby and Edinburgh.
Carndonagh-based workers began to move across the Irish Sea last autumn and since the turn of the year many more have followed.
Speaking to the Inishowen Independent, plasterer Kevin Kelly, who has been working in Grimsby since February, said he started to notice the work in Donegal and on the East coast dry up at the end of last summer.
The 24 year old said there has never been so little work in the country for plasterers since he began working six years ago.
“The sites in Dublin started closing down last summer. Then I worked in Gweedore for a while. I knew a man from Carn, Martin O’Donnell, who went over to England to work in November. I decided to follow him and in February I got a job plastering at a big new school in Grimsby,” said Mr Kelly, who is one of six Leeds-based Carn workers.
The Millbrae man said that although is still a lot of work in construction in England, the weak pound is hitting Irish workers hard.
That said, he expects to continue working in England will into the summer. After which he intends to pursue a new career.
Mr Kelly travelled home this week to attend an interview at LYIT. He hopes to begin a Sports and Business course at the Letterkenny college in the autumn.
“I know a few more plasterers who are looking to get back to college, John Doherty and Adrian McLaughlin are trying to get into the same course as me.”
The Inishowen Independent attempted to make contact with another Carn man Christopher Diver, now working in the London area, but he was unavailable for comment yesterday.
Central Statistic’s Office figures, released last autumn revealed that one third of the male workforce in Carndonagh were involved in the construction industry.
Chairman of Carndonagh Community and Rural Development Company, Raymond Doherty, said the outlook is bleak for many of the town’s young men.
“I live on the Derry Road and for years you would be a fool to put your car [nose] onto the road early on a Monday morning because of all the vans heading down to Dublin for the week, but that has cooled down big time in the last few months.”
Mr Doherty said it was very hard to estimate the numbers of Carn people now travelling to England to work, but he knew of local people working in several different cities in Britain. He added that many young men see no future in construction.
“Kevin [Kelly] is lucky, he has his leaving Certificate. A lot of the boys would have left school without getting a qualification.
“I would compare what’s happening now in the construction industry to Fruit of the Loom. In the early days people left school to work in the factory and earn money,” said Mr Doherty adding that he feared several young men in the town had not been careful with their money when times were good and could now face financial hardship.
“For many young men it’s definitely going to be a difficult time ahead.”
Mr Doherty added that his organisation have been promoting the idea of an enterprise centre at Barrack Hill to boost the local economy and he urged locals to challenge local TDs on what they were doing to create employment in Inishowen.

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