Gorey Guardian

League introduces raft of new charges

August 1978

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the end of the year from their drilling sites near Ballygarre­tt.

According to their annual report, the company’s prospects near Ballygarre­tt and Bunclody could yield enough gold to make drilling worthwhile. And further drilling in the Ballygarre­tt area is expected to strike more gold before Christmas.

The report puts North Wexford side by side with Donegal, Kerry, and North Bolivia. Although the Wexford sites are in the early stages of developmen­t, they are described as ‘very prospectiv­e’.

The report states: ‘in our Wexford/Wicklow licences, there is widespread gold in boulders, stream sediments, and trenches.’

The company now plans to redouble it efforts to extract gold from the Ballygarre­tt prospect, with a new team due to start work at the site over the next couple of months.

Her efforts continued in vain with an attempt for Deputy Avril Doyle. Again, no luck.

By the time she finally gave up with the phone, two more trees had been reduced to stumps. From this season onwards, it will be considerab­ly more expensive for clubs to take part in the Wexford & District Football League. Hardest hit will be clubs guilty of offences such as late kick-offs or not bringing two footballs to a game.

The most contentiou­s charge is the introducti­on of a registrati­on fee for each player. A club must now send 50p for every registered player to the League Registrar. For clubs with say two teams and two big squads, totalling 50 players, this will mean an increase of £25 in their outlay.

The League says this is necessary to revive the rather ailing fortunes of its finances, which were hard hit by inflation over the past couple of years, and the long-sought representa­tion on the Leinster FA senior and junior committees, which meet weekly in Dublin, bringing considerab­le travelling expenses.

The committee has also issued a scale of fines for late kick-offs and other offences, which leave clubs in no doubt whatsoever that they would be well advised to conform to the regulation­s.

The scale is: after five minutes late for kick-off, 5p for every subsequent minute (to be doubled to 10p for subsequent offences); for having no football, £1; for only having one football, 50p; for having no pitch markings, £2; for having bad nets, £1; for not having corner flags of the required standard, 50p. All these fines will double where a club repeats an offence, so it can easily be seen how expensive it could be if clubs don’t learn their lesson quickly.

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