At the moment I am working in a near city centre location. In a 500 metre stretch of road there are four pubs two are closed fulltime, one opens for five nights only the other is open fulltime. There is one small shop open and several others closed forever. What was once a bustling area with people leaving and waiting for buses has become a near wasteland. Many of the flats/houses in the stretch are empty, two have water leaking 24/7 onto the public footpath; many are not looked after and are eyesores. Even the small Post Office there has a sign "Use Us or Lose Us" displayed. Further up the road is a row of houses with windows and doors boarded up (probably a legitimate ploy not to pay water taxes, property taxes etc). Most of the non Irish residents have emigrated to other countries (many of them hospital workers). Most of the Irish renters have skidaddled also. Landlords scratch their combined heads trying unsuccessfully to attracting people into the area.
Even the popular school that never needed to advertise for students now has signs displayed publicly advising of open-nights. The creches have signs displaying vacancies (unheard of in better times).
But, all is not lost, it is thought that Tesco is taking over one of the other closed businesses on the stretch and will open a drive-in supermarket with off licence with a security man overseeing customers use the automatic self-check-out machines.
This situation is not unique. Exactly the same is being mirrored in most towns/cities/villages throughout Ireland. The bad news is that this situation is with us forever. The traditional job outlets are gone. The civil service, Post Office, Banks, hospitals gave guaranteed employment which no longer exists.
Combined, they were probably Ireland's greatest earners with knock-on spending and probably was the life-blood of our community.
Even the popular school that never needed to advertise for students now has signs displayed publicly advising of open-nights. The creches have signs displaying vacancies (unheard of in better times).
But, all is not lost, it is thought that Tesco is taking over one of the other closed businesses on the stretch and will open a drive-in supermarket with off licence with a security man overseeing customers use the automatic self-check-out machines.
This situation is not unique. Exactly the same is being mirrored in most towns/cities/villages throughout Ireland. The bad news is that this situation is with us forever. The traditional job outlets are gone. The civil service, Post Office, Banks, hospitals gave guaranteed employment which no longer exists.
Combined, they were probably Ireland's greatest earners with knock-on spending and probably was the life-blood of our community.