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Major boost for Mullingar as 1,200 construction jobs promised
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Achieving work-life balance as a remote worker
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5 things we’ve learned after one year of working from home
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To mark one year of working from home, we asked members of the Silicon Republic community to share some of the biggest lessons they’ve learned.
A whole year has gone by since the Government told employees across Ireland to work remotely to help minimise the spread of Covid-19. Now, as it looks like working from home could be here to stay, it’s important that we reflect on what we’ve learned over the past 12 months.
So, we asked some of the people in the Silicon Republic community – people leaders, directors, managers and more – for their thoughts.
The country’s leading construction companies are warning the ban on non-essential construction is damaging Ireland’s international reputation and putting future foreign direct investment at risk.
In a letter to Taoiseach Micheál Martin, Construction Industry Federation director general, Tom Parlon, asked the Government to reconsider the extension of the ban on non-essential building work.
The letter, signed by the country’s biggest construction firms, warned the extension of the ban will “damage Ireland’s reputation and reduce foreign direct investment as no other country has locked down construction”.
It said future housing supply will be reduced by 800 homes a week and the ban will “wipe over €3bn of construction output from the Exchequer”.
December 17, 2020 11:55 am
Reducing emissions in dairy beef production is put under the spotlight in the third and final episode of the ABP podcast series Farm Matters.
The topic of reducing carbon emissions in dairy beef production, and in particular the role that beef genetics can play in sustainability, was up for discussion with host Mary Kennedy.
Contributors to the podcast sharing their knowledge and opinions of this area included: Dr. Padraig French, head of the Livestock Systems Department and Dairy Enterprise Leader at Teagasc; Dr. Andrew Cromie, geneticist and technical director at the Irish Cattle Breeding Federation (ICBF); and Donal McCarthy, a dairy farmer from Clonakilty in Co. Cork.
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