Eoin Ó Riain laments poor service in electronic communications

Frustrated publisher of technical periodical and online resource in the same area

Mr Ó Riain said he would never have made the move to Connemara if he had known how inadequate the broadband would be. Photograph: Alan Betson/The Irish Times
Mr Ó Riain said he would never have made the move to Connemara if he had known how inadequate the broadband would be. Photograph: Alan Betson/The Irish Times

Eoin Ó Riain moved from Dublin to Caorán na gCearc, Baile na hAbhann, Co Galway, in 2003.

Like many web-based entrepreneurs he no longer felt the need to live in a city and thought he could run his publishing business from the Gaeltacht area instead.

He publishes a small technical periodical in the area of automation, especially process automation. He also publishes a web resource in the same area.

Mr Ó Riain said he would never have made the move to Connemara if he had known how inadequate the broadband would be.

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"I think that the most significant illustration of the situation throughout my area of Cois Fharraige and south Connemara is that the new news enterprise [tuairisc.ie] set up last year was unable to find a suitable site for its business in the Gaeltacht area it serves and had to set up shop in Bearna, which at best is a marginal Gaeltacht area," he says. (Tuairisc.ie confirmed to The Irish Times that the presence of fibre-optic cables was a reason for locating in Bearna outside Galway city.)

Mr Ó Riain said the local district committee in his area has set up a forum to try and improve broadband, but “looking at the current Government’s perceived anti-rural bias they have little expectation of any real action and are extremely despondent.

“At my present age [late 60s] it is unlikely that I will move the business but will close it down and the terrible service in electronic communications will be a major contributory factor.”

Ronan McGreevy

Ronan McGreevy

Ronan McGreevy is a news reporter with The Irish Times