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People’s Festival Cancellation

People’s Festival Cancellation

Everybody was surprised, many were disappointed and some were even shocked and angry, when we found out last weekend just a few hours before the start of the People’s Festival that it got unexpectedly cancelled.

I found out (Thanks to Darragh Doyle!) at midnight on Friday, having just suggested to everyone a few hours earlier to come to the festival. At that time I had to decide if I would send 9400 more mails to let you all know, but I decided to post the change on the Facebook page for the Dublin Event Guide instead. The cancellation happened less than 14 hours before the start of the festival and everyone was keen to find out why it didn’t go ahead, but unfortunately no full explanation has been provided by this morning (Fri 26 Aug), despite promises for a full statement already last Saturday. Because it can’t be too complicated to explain what happened, this might indicate that there will not be an official explanation!?

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So let me put the facts and some speculation together to at least attempt an explanation. I wasn’t involved in any way, but I think a lot of people are left wondering.

It all started when the Festival of World Culture (FOWC) was cancelled. This was partially because of the high cost and the cost overrun, but many think the FOWC was seen by the Councillors in Dun Laoghaire as a nuisance and they wanted to get rid of it. After the FOWC cancellation thousands of people were seriously disappointed (me included!) and a number thought about if and how it would be possible to run an alternative festival. I looked into it too, but around the same time a group in Dun Laoghaire got together and decided to work towards running a “People’s Festival”. The name surprised initially, because the FOWC was as well for the people, so it was a bit strange to stress the “People” element, but it then emerged that at least at some stage the people behind the festival had not only cultural but as well a political motivation and saw the People’s Festival as opposition to the establishment/authority. In how far this is still the case with the group that finally ran the planning for the festival is not clear to me. But either way, the result is that unfortunately the authorities and NOT the People “won”.

It seemed that the organiser did a good job, got lots of bands on board and ran some fund raising events. The word about the People’s Festival was spreading, but many thought it was a successor of the FOWC. This was never planned and the organisers stressed that from the beginning, but because the People’s Festival was filling the gap that the FOWC left, it is not surprising that this was assumed by many.

A pre-announcement of the date indicated that the 20+21 Aug 2011 was the targeted weekend, but the final announcement took another while. Nevertheless, the People’s Festival had developped a momentum that seemed to surprise the organisers. (I remember a Facebook Event Page message where they were surprised about 800 people having declared that they would attend.)

Around that time my estimate was that up to 10,000 people could arrive in Dun Laoghaire for that weekend and you can imagine that 10,000 people somehow need to be looked after with Stewards, Garda, food, drink etc.

The venues were just three pubs, but there were two outdoor stages announced and that would have taken the pressure off the indoor venues.

Unfortunately it was exactly these outdoor stages that caused the whole festival to fail, it seems. It turns out that the organisers had assumed that the venues had the required licenses for live music indoors and outdoors. And while this might have been a little too naive and should have checked early on, I can understand that an assumption was made that the pubs were either licensed or would look after all these requirements.

Only on Friday afternoon the organisers found out that the licenses were not held when someone from the Garda checked what was planned for the weekend.

At around 19:00 a statement was released that all events would now have to be moved indoors and that the outdoor stages will NOT be available. That doesn’t sound tooo serious, but when you start wondering how possibly 10,000 people will fit into 3 pubs and who will look after the more than 8000 people who might be stranded outside, you realise that there were bigger problems that JUST the license.

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Clearly Dun Laoghaire didn’t want the People’s Festival and the People’s Festival organisers didn’t want Dun Laoghaire, so there was seemingly no dialogue from very early on, which could maybe have sorted some of the issues.

I don’t know what happened between 19:00 and 21:58 on Friday evening when finally the cancellation was announced, but analysing all aspects, I am not surprised that the ONLY option was to cancel the event completely.

Just think about all the bands that were meant to play outside and now were not allowed to. They could NOT have accommodated on additional stages inside so quickly, so they would have been VERY upset. Their fans even more! Thousands of people could not have been let into the pubs with Off-licenses as the best available alternative AND on top of that, I dare to guess that the gardai were not prepared for the event and that the organisers might not have had the appropriate number of stewards. So public orders issues were another threat.

So, what was the probably reason for the while disaster? I would say, that it was (understandable) inexperience combined with the fact that the authorities and the organisers didn’t work together but maybe even against each other.

The stage based element of the event was seemingly very well prepared and organised because the gigs did then go ahead in some shape and form on Saturday and Sunday in three venues in the Dublin City Centre (Stags Head, Button Factory, Sweeney’s Mongrel).

I would say the organisers learned a hell of a lot in a very very short time frame ;-) and if they will go for it again next year, it will be a success. I would recommend to leave the ideological or political element to one side, but only the future will show if that is possible.

Interestingly, the newspapers were extremely ignorant and wrote articles without having done and research, but even more interesting is that a Dun Laoghaire councillor claimed that they were involved in planning the People’s Festival. Odd councillor! See the article here:

www.independent.ie/national-news/festival-pulled-over-time-constraints-2854200.html

Ammunition find: Seconds matter…after 90 years!?

Ammunition find: Seconds matter…after 90 years!?

This afternoon I was in South Great George’s Street and suddenly sirens and blue light everywhere. From the Rathmines direction three garda motorbikes raced down the street in super speed. Behind them a big green truck with blue lights and sirens and the writing “Explosive Ordnance Disposal” (i.e. the Army Bomb Disposal Unit) on it. Great St. George’s Street near George’s Street Arcade is an area with quite a number of pedestrians, but luckily there weren’t too many people around at that time because neither motorbikes nor truck would have been able to stop if someone had crossed the street not hearing/seeing the convoy.

Something SERIOUS must be up, I thought.

A little later I heard in the news that in Strandville Avenue, near North Strand Road, a ammunition dump was found. Grenades, rifle rounds and artillery shells were discovered under the kitchen floor of a house being renovated and it emerged that they were badly corroded and dated back many years, possibly to the War of Independence, that’s 1919-1921!

Not so good to have lots of corroded ammunition next to the DART/train line in a reasonably densely populated area of the city, but let’s consider this:

This ammunition was in that house for approx 90 years!!! But after it is found, the Bomb Disposal Unit (supported by the police) RACES through the city centre as if seconds or minutes matter.

(And let me clarify, the ammunition was found at 11:45 and the scene was cleared at 15:15. I saw the break-neck speed convoy racing by at approx. 14:40. So either it took them nearly 3 hours to get there OR it was not the first time the bomb disposal unit was on site. Either way, a more leisurely and safe speed through the city centre would have been ok.)

www.irishtimes.com/newspaper/breaking/2011/0817/breaking48.html
or
www.breakingnews.ie/ireland/historical-arms-dump-found-in-dublin-house-516885.html

Thanks a lot, Amazon!

Thanks a lot, Amazon!

Last Sunday (07 Aug 2011), the European Data Centre of Amazon’s cloud computing service, which is based in Dublin, experienced an outage. This is something that shouldn’t happen, but it CAN happen. Data centres are usually protected against outages with separate power sources from the electricity supplier and with their own diesel generators etc, but problems can and do occur. It only gets a little odd if the stories don’t make sense.

Amazon claimed that lightning struck a transformer of the electricity supplier and then an explosion in this transformer had such a bad effect on the synchronisation of some services that Amazon’s services were unavailable for up to 48 hours.

Strangely, though, there was no lightning in Citywest on that day. And strangely the ESB doesn’t know anything about an explosion and a fire. And strangely other data centres in Citywest survived the power outage by switching over to their backup generators that made sure that their customers were not affected.

So what was Amazon on about? Maybe they really don’t have the full picture (reason for power outage) yet, but it is a little tall to claim that a lightning strike, an explosion and a fire was responsible if you don’t know. And why did Amazon’s generators not sort out the problem? …it seems like someone screwed up!

In this world where 100% availability is important, this is not ok to admit, though. We will survive! But the galling thing is that that wrong report about the unreliable and lightning affected power infrastructure in Dublin went around the world and attracted comments about the unsuitability of Ireland for services that need high reliability. NOT a good thing in economically difficult times and when serious inward investment is required in Ireland.

Thanks, Amazon, for your help! :-/

How the story was reported /based on information provided by Amazon) and then rapidly was picked up by online and offline media all around the world:
www.datacenterknowledge.com/archives/2011/08/07/lightning-in-dublin-knocks-amazon-microsoft-data-centers-offline/

The mysterious circumstances if you look into it further:

BT Ireland

Convention Centre Dublin – Not sooo successful!?

Convention Centre Dublin – Not sooo successful!?

The Irish Times reported on Monday that the state has paid more than EUR 43m to the people behind the Convention Centre in Dublin since its opening. EUR 15.4m in 2010 and EUR 27.8m until now in 2011. With these figures and 40% of the year still ahead of us, it could come to another EUR 20.4m by the end of the year. Which then is a total of EUR 63.6m. That’s a lot! These 63.6m is a part of the EUR 715m that the state will pay the consortium in this “Private-Public Partnership” over 25 years before the centre goes into State ownership. Sure, a big project like the Convention Centre takes a while until it gets into full gear, but with a capacity of 8000 people, it is a little concerning that events in the CCD have an average of just 300 people. And in total it means that for every single visitor you and I have given EUR 512 as a subsidy. www.irishtimes.com/newspaper/frontpage/2011/0801/1224301686670.html

On 19 May the Convention Centre issued a Press Release saying “To date, over 76,000 guests have attended events hosted at The CCD. By the end of this year, the venue will have helped to boost the local economy by over €60m.” (www.theccd.ie/index.jsp?p=100&n=108&a=391). Well, that sounds quite good, but EUR 60m the local economy was boosted by? And we gave them EUR 63m by the end of the year? Looks like we could have saved EUR 3m by giving that money DIRECTLY to the local economy!

Minimum Wage reversal?

Minimum Wage reversal?

Enda Kenny has announced today that the government would reverse the reduction of the minimum wage and would bring it back up to EUR 8.56 by the summer.
I am surprised about that! Sure, 1 Euro per hour amounts to EUR 40 per week or EUR 160 per month and if someone is on minimum wage then this is a fairly significant amount, but there have been reductions in a number of other prices and cost, so I guess the minimum wage wouldn’t HAVE to go up the full amount!?

Restaurants are now saying that they can only accept the reversal if other workplace agreements will change, but aren’t rent and rates the biggest problem for restaurants? It can’t be that the 1 Euro per hour will kill the business!

 
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