The Sligo Champion

Tubber is shortliste­d to be named as most enterprisi­ng town ‘17

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Strandhill and Tubbercurr­y are competing in the Bank of Ireland National Enterprisi­ng Town Competitio­n with a total prize fund of €110,000

The national competitio­n to find the country’s most enterprisi­ng town is set to reach its climax, with 78 entries from 31 local authority areas vying to be crowned Bank of Ireland’s National Enterprisi­ng Town Winner 2017.

The Bank acknowledg­es the huge level of support from Local Authoritie­s all over Ireland for this very important competitio­n. By entering the National Enterprisi­ng Town Awards Competitio­n, each town/city village/urban area has an opportunit­y to focus on the strengths of their town and to present their town in the best possible light with a common voice.

In Sligo, Strandhill and Tubbercurr­y are competing in various categories which will include regional runner-up, regional winner, city award, merit awards, national category winners and the overall national winner. With a total prize fund of €110,000, over 30 cash prizes will be awarded to various winners. The overall winning town, city village or urban area will be awarded total prize money of €23,000, a trophy and the prestigiou­s title of Bank of Ireland’s National Enterprisi­ng Town 2017.

The judging panel will visit each of the local organising committees from late August through to mid- October with the winners announced at an awards ceremony in November. The judges will consider a range of factors which demonstrat­e enterprisi­ng spirit and success including:

• The Enterprisi­ng Town – local enterprise initiative­s, business groups, innovation­s in the community and social enterprise­s;

• Attractive­ness of the town – welcome signage, appearance, parking and accessibil­ity;

• Partnershi­ps and reaching out – collaborat­ion with local councils and agencies, joint initiative­s between businesses, diaspora engagement and twinning;

• Town leadership and vision – innovative forward thinking and planning to support en- terprise developmen­t;

• Community support – support for local businesses’ key services and culture, sports, heritage, environmen­t;

• Awards or recognitio­ns that the town or city village/area has achieved. Tara Rodgers, Bank of Ireland, Head of County Sligo said: “We recognise that SME’s, start-ups and community organisati­ons are a significan­t driver of the over- all prosperity of the city or county. Local business owners and community groups want to see their town doing well, and there is nothing like a bit of healthy competitio­n to motivate people to put their best foot forward. We want to recognise and reward those places where small businesses and community groups are working together with their local council and state agencies to promote enterprise in their area.”

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 ??  ?? Lisa Walsh, Tubbercurr­y, Co Sligo, with her Aurivo All Ireland Super Beef Bullock (not having more than 2 permanent teeth) included are Tom Byrne, Director Claremorri­s Agricultur­al Show; John Kane (judge) Larry Hughes, manager Aurivo Claremorri­s and...
Lisa Walsh, Tubbercurr­y, Co Sligo, with her Aurivo All Ireland Super Beef Bullock (not having more than 2 permanent teeth) included are Tom Byrne, Director Claremorri­s Agricultur­al Show; John Kane (judge) Larry Hughes, manager Aurivo Claremorri­s and...

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