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60 bar staff temporarily redundant after flood

Up to 60 employees at one of Douglas’s best-known bars were made temporarily redundant after its owners announced the pub would close for two to three months so it can be gutted and renovated following this week’s flooding.

Some of the employees have worked at Barry’s bar and restaurant for 17 years while others just started summer jobs in recent weeks.

They were informed at a meeting yesterday.

Nearby, at Douglas Village Shopping Centre, the anchor tenants, Tesco and Marks & Spencer were locked in meetings with loss assessors yesterday.

Some of the tenants hoped they could re-open their businesses in a week’s time but others believed it will be a month before they are trading again.

As the clean up continued, already some of the focus has shifted to measures to minimise damage when the waters rise again.

Cork’s city manager is giving “active consideration” to the introduction of a city-wide flood alert system.

Tim Lucey said he will bring a full report to council on Monday week outlining the council’s response to Thursday’s flooding and a plan for the future.

In the Meadowbrook estate, Glanmire, where up to 50 homes were swamped by up to four feet of water, the first insurance assessors began to inspect the damage.

The county council delivered skips to the estate as residents began dumping destroyed furniture, carpets and household appliances. Several cars have also been written off.

Parts of Blackpool are counting the cost for a fourth time in a decade after the heavy downpours caused the River Bride to cascade into the village.

Some families have had no insurance since the first event in late 2002 and told the Irish Examiner they have asked the council to supply flood barriers for doorways.

In Clonakilty one man in his early 20s is still recovering after he was electrocuted during the flash flood. While handing out sandbags, he lost his balance and fell against a live electrical box and was thrown back into the flood waters.

Elsewhere two hotels have opened their doors to help flood victims in Cork.

And one of the country’s largest paint companies, which was itself damaged by flood waters, has pledged to donate thousands of litres of paint to stricken householders as they begin the process of repairing their homes.

The Fitzgerald’s Vienna Woods Hotel and the Montenotte Hotel are just two of several city businesses who yesterday offered to assist the residents of Glanmire and Riverstown.

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