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Business Post expected to move to Irish Management Institute (IMI) campus
Business Post expected to move to Irish Management Institute (IMI) campus

Irish Times

time22-05-2025

  • Business
  • Irish Times

Business Post expected to move to Irish Management Institute (IMI) campus

Staff at the Business Post have been told it is likely that operations will move to the Irish Management Institute (IMI) campus in south county Dublin when the lease on its offices on Merrion Road expires later this year. Colm O'Reilly, chief operating officer of Enda O'Coineen's Kilcullen Business Post Group, which publishes the newspaper, said the move was 'probable' but 'we haven't finished all of the plans yet'. He said the group, which comprises other businesses including RedC Research and events company iQuest among others, is not consolidating all of its operations at the IMI campus in Sandyford, Dublin 16. However, The Irish Times understands newspaper staff could move later this year when the Business Post's lease on AIG House on Merrion Road in Dublin 4 expires in the autumn. READ MORE Mr O'Coineen's group acquired the IMI from University College Cork (UCC) in a deal that was finalised earlier this month. UCC will reportedly retain control of the sprawling 13-acre campus in suburban south county Dublin as part of the transaction. At the time of the deal, the Kilcullen Business Post Group said the addition of IMI would complement its existing portfolio and align with its 'House of Brands' vision to deliver content through experiences through 'insights' with and executive education. 'Our group of companies bring together the power of news reporting and insights as well as research – this will help to further inform IMI on the trends and emerging areas that leaders need to know and understand,' Mr O'Coineen said at the time. The Business Post recorded continued losses in 2023, according to latest accounts last month, but said it expects to be profitable and cash generative this year and next. It returned a loss before tax of €552,582 for the year, which was up from a loss of €359,184 the year before. It also had a net liability position of €2.6 million, up from €2 million. The directors did not recommend the payment of a dividend. Turnover shrank from €8.6 million to €8.3 million, although the cost of sales also came down from €6.6 million to just under €6 million. 'Over the last number of years, the company's immediate parent company has been investing in complementary businesses to create a modern, data-driven, and fully integrated media platform built around the Business Post brand,' the group said at the time.

Live near a town? Got food or smelly shoes? Foxes and badgers may pay you a visit
Live near a town? Got food or smelly shoes? Foxes and badgers may pay you a visit

Irish Times

time17-05-2025

  • General
  • Irish Times

Live near a town? Got food or smelly shoes? Foxes and badgers may pay you a visit

I've taken some images of a badger and fox who visit our garden in south county Dublin. Here is a picture of them both here at the same time. Jennifer O'Neill, Dublin Foxes are now more abundant in urban areas than in the countryside. The average urban fox territory can be as low as 20 hectares, whereas it can be up to a 100 hectares in rural areas. They are common visitors to gardens, where they will scavenge on any food they can find, even smelly shoes left outside. Badgers are not as frequently seen but they do visit gardens with lawns. They dig holes to catch earthworms, which can form up to 40 per cent of their diet. Indian meal moth, supplied by Claire Hearty We have had an ongoing issue with these insects in our kitchen since just before Christmas. We would like to know what they are and how we can encourage them to leave our house. They fly around and also seem to have larvae. We have disinfected all cupboards, drawers and surfaces, to no avail. Claire Hearty This is an Indian meal moth, a species that attacks a wide variety of foodstuffs such as grains, dried fruit and nuts as well as pulses and spices. While native to tropical and subtropical regions, they have been around these parts since 1847. You need to inspect all your dried food stores, throw out any that are contaminated and keep the rest in sealed containers, not just the paper bags they came in. READ MORE long-tailed field mouse, supplied by Elaine Foxton While doing a clean-out of the garden shed in Ferns recently, I swept up this guy along with some clay that had fallen from under the lawnmower. At first I thought it was a mouse and then, on closer inspection, saw the very long tail and bushy whiskers. Can you enlighten me please? Elaine Foxton [ How can businesses change their business model to support biodiversity? Opens in new window ] It is a mouse – not a house mouse but the wee sleekit, cowrin, tim'rous beastie that Robbie Burns found in his ploughed field in 1785: a long-tailed field mouse, Apodemus sylvatica. This native species has a tail that is longer than its body and long whiskers that are vital for finding its way in the dark. They count long grass pasture among their preferred habitat as well as hedgerows and field boundaries, so go handy with the lawnmower. Another reason to subscribe to no-mow-May. wolf's milk slime mould, supplied by Una Thompson I saw these little blobs on an old tree root in Dromore Wood in south Kerry. I think they may be known as wolf's milk. Una Thompson This is a slime mould, probably Lypogala terrestre, which is common throughout Killarney National Park, so no surprise that it would be in Dromore Wood as well. It has been called wolf's milk in English because they secrete an orange-pink substance, which people long ago thought was the colour of wolf's milk. Who knew? Slime moulds are classified as different organisms to fungi. They don't form a mass of hyphae in the wood substrate as fungi do but rather form masses of protoplasm, called plasmodia, which creep about engulfing particles of food. Bee-eater, supplied by Derek Brennan This bee-eater was around the parish of Bunbeg in Donegal during the first week of May. Derek Brennan (Donegal overseer of IWebs) This is the European bee-eater. These birds normally nest in southern Europe and north Africa and over-winter in southern Africa. They eat bees and other flying insects such as dragonflies, darting out from a perch to catch them in mid-air. Once they have their catch , they bash the bee or wasp against a branch to remove the sting and venom. This one has caught a large bumblebee. There are one or two sightings here most years. Please submit your nature query, observation, or photo, with a location, via or by email to weekend@

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