*Kilrush Digital Hub. Photograph: Eamon Ward
A โhuge surgeโ in demand for desk space at Clareโs remote working digital hubs has been recorded in the month of June while the prospect of opening student hubs in the county is to be examined for third-level students.
Between 200 to 300 staff of Clare County Council have been working remotely during the global pandemic, previously โpockets of tens and fivesโ of employees would have been used to such a working environment. A โsubstantial investmentโ has been made by the County Council on laptops for staff, Head of IT Urban McMahon confirmed.
Speaking at a special meeting of the West Clare Municipal District, McMahon outlined, โPrior to COVID-19 we were in a very good place with demand to remote hubs. Since then we have seen a huge surge in demand for desk spaces and facilitiesโ.
Digital hubs owned by the local authority reopened on June 15th in Ennistymon, Kilrush, Miltown Malbay and Feakle at โa reduced capacityโ. Ordinarily there would be individuals at the thirteen hot desks in Kilrush, due to social distancing only six people can use the work space. Urban was hopeful changes would be announced by health officials on social distancing guidelines to lower the recommended distance from 2m to 1m. At present, he noted there was โa substantial interest in desk spaceโ.
An expansion of the services offered by DigiClare is being assessed, McMahon told the meeting. โWe all know what is going on with third level institutions, weโre looking at making student hubs available. The feeling is that colleges wonโt be open and that courses will be partly onlineโ. Co Clare currently has ten broadband connection points, Urban stated. He said recent months have seen a โfocus on access to broadband and servicesโ. The Council are beginning to work on establishing WiFi points throughout the county, he added.
Queries of the potential of working hubs in rural areas were raised by Cllr Joe Garrihy (FG). He questioned if โcommunity facilities like town hallsโ could be used for students, โis there a way of making them pop up digital hubsโ.
Rural parts of the county โhave a huge lack of adequate broadband,โ McMahon admitted and said the issue was apparent during the restrictions. He was optimistic on the possibility of community facilities being used for the purpose outlined by the Lisdoonvarna representative. โWe are not just going to put them out somewhere and say we have WiFi here, we need to look at the locations and have the footfall that will use,โ he cautioned.
Communities will be strengthened by the presence of digital hubs, Cllr Gabriel Keating (FG) believed. โIf we get these hubs working in parishes so people can build a house in that area, there is a huge future to develop the hubsโ.
Progress in Clare on the creation of digital hubs is the envy of Green councillors across the country, Cllr Roisin Garvey (GP) remarked. She confessed that she snuck into the Ennistymon hub prior to the reopening โbecause it was melting my head to work from homeโ and revealed that interacting with two other individuals there proved to be very beneficial.
The hubs were part of the discussion during negotiations on the Programme for Government when the Inagh woman represented her party in talks alongside Simon Coveney (FG) and Dara Calleary (FF), โthere is huge potential there. People would love to come here, I donโt think we can rely on the roll-out of broadband, the village and town hubs should be done first and foremostโ.