Repeated damage to the grounds of St Senans Rugby Football Club (RFC) in Shannon over the past week has left a “massive bill”.

On Wednesday last, a firearm was released in the vicinity of the clubโ€™s grounds. While that incident caused no damage to any property or injured no persons, the rugby club has experienced repeated instances of property damage, incidents which have been reported to Shannon Garda Station.

Public relations officer of St Senans RFC, Robbie Hoban explained, โ€œWeโ€™ve had two large holes cut in our fences, weโ€™ve had the locks broken with angle grinders three nights in a row as well as the chains we use to secure the gates. We kept replacing them but every night they were being broken so we just gave up. The locking mechanism that sticks to the gate was cut off with an angle grinder. The cost of replacing fencing is massive, we will have to replace a whole section of it. We have no fundraising going on at the minute because of COVID so these things are just a killer for usโ€.

No quotation has been carried out as of yet but the damage to the fencing is said to be considerable, work to the fencing in recent redevelopment of the club was โ€œone of the most expensive partsโ€.

โ€œAll this money has to be raised and people have to give this money to the club because we are an amateur organisation. We have good sponsors but again that sponsorship money is always earmarked for jerseys, flags, upkeep of the field, payment of ESB and gas bills, to have to pay for something that shouldnโ€™t have even happened is like someone robbing your house, we donโ€™t have insurance for that kind of thing because itโ€™s not something you insure against, when youโ€™re involved with a club youโ€™re trying to get the best insurance deal to keep the costs as low as you can,โ€ Hoban stated.

Weekly meetings of the club committee are being held on Zoom. โ€œEveryone gives up their own free time to do this and nobody gets anything out of it only for the love of the club like any sport. Fundraising in a normal time is hard enough because all clubs are hitting the same people. To have these unnecessary costs at the moment is really demoralisingโ€.

As a result of the damage, the access to the public to Jimmy Slattery Park poses an insurance risk, no persons would be insured when the grounds are locked but the compromising position has left the club โ€œin limboโ€. Robbie added, โ€œAt the moment our gates are open, our fences are open, there was someone witnessed going to the toilet in the middle of our field on Monday, that stuff isnโ€™t onโ€.

He acknowledged that the Gardaรญ had their hands tied in what they could do but was adamant responsibility needed to be taken for recent events.

An online fundraiser has since been set up by the club.

Related News

albert dolan sisters of mercy 1
โ‚ฌ1m allocated to rejuvenate old Sisters of Mercy convent in Gort
corofin v cooraclare 12-10-25 jamie malone 1
Malone clocks up the miles to help Corofin climb back to senior football ranks
kilfenora corner linnanes pub 1
Community plans for Kilfenora Corner Project scrapped
church scariff sacred heart 1
Bicentenary celebrations of Scariff church
Latest News
henry adams kieran considine 1-2
Liscannor.ie goes live as village's new official website
albert dolan sisters of mercy 1
โ‚ฌ1m allocated to rejuvenate old Sisters of Mercy convent in Gort
inagh kilnamona v scariff ogonnelloe 11-10-25 eugene foudy 2
Foudy & Inagh/Kilnamona looking to bridge five year gap for senior success
raymond o'mahony andrea o'keeffe 1-2
Awesome display from Andrea wins player of the week
corofin v cooraclare 12-10-25 jamie malone 1
Malone clocks up the miles to help Corofin climb back to senior football ranks
Premium
Malone clocks up the miles to help Corofin climb back to senior football ranks
No talk of three in a row for Truagh/Clonlara
U21 teams profiled as the games begin in football championship
The Water Break: How ร‰ire ร“g painted the town of Ennis red with historic senior double
Lanigan's having a ball in ร‰ire ร“g's golden era

Advertisement

Subscribe for just โ‚ฌ3 per month

If youโ€™re here, you care about County Clare. So do we. Did you rely on us for Covid-19 updates, follow our election coverage, or visit The Clare Echo every week for breaking news and sport? The Clare Echo invests in local journalism and we want to safeguard its future in our county. By becoming a subscriber you are supporting what we do, will receive access to all our premium articles and a better experience, while helping us improve our offering to you. Subscribe to clareecho.ie and get the first six months for just โ‚ฌ3 a month (less than 75c per week), and thereafter โ‚ฌ8 per month. Cancel anytime, limited time offer. T&Cs Apply. www.clareecho.ie.