logo
Tom Toner leaves generous sum to Dogs Trust pooches

Tom Toner leaves generous sum to Dogs Trust pooches

Extra.ie​a day ago
Kind-hearted businessman, Tom Toner, has given unwanted pooches at The Dogs Trust Rehoming centre a second chance, bequeathing €50,000 in his will.
Mr Toner, who died last October, aged 92, following a short illness, left a generous donation to Dogs Trust in his last will and testament, which was written just five days before
A former chairman of Forfás, Mr Toner, was described as a 'transformative leader' in Irish business during a period of major change in Ireland. Tom Toner. Pic: Paul Sharp/Photocall Ireland
Now, after his death, his €50,000 donation will have a 'transformative effect' for the countless dogs in the care of the Dogs Trust facility in Finglas.
And the cash sum couldn't have come at a more optimum moment as animal charities are facing an unprecedented crisis across the country.
Since the start of this year, Dogs Trust has seen a significant increase in the number of people looking to surrender their dogs. This year, the rehoming charity has received over 3,300 surrender requests. Pic: Getty Images
While some of the dogs are dumped by irresponsible owners, the charity has attributed some of the increase in surrendered pooches to people who are forced to give up their dogs due to restrictive rental laws that don't allow pets.
So the 50,000 donation from the gentle-souled business leader Mr Toner will go a long way to providing care for the many dogs currently in the Dogs Trust facility, who have called on the government to appoint a dedicated minister to deal with the scale of the crisis. Tom Toner. Pic: RIP.ie
Mr Toner was the inaugural chairman of Forfás, the state agency responsible for advising the government on economic policy.
His last will and testament was dated and signed on October 21, just five days before he died.
Mr Toner, who had an address at Seafort Avenue in Sandymount, Dublin 4, left an estate valued at €12,093,893.99.
Mr Toner had an illustrious career that spanned both the public and private sectors. Pic: Getty Images
Under his reign, Forfás had recommended that a 12.5% tax rate be applied to all industries, which turned out to be the single most important policy decision that transformed Ireland into one of the most successful economies in the developed world.
Born in the Curragh army barracks in 1932, he won a Kildare County Council scholarship to study science at UCD in 1950, but later changed to commerce. He earned an MA in economics in 1955.
He once said his proudest career achievement was working with Donogh O'Malley's Department of Education in the 1960s to roll out free transport to second-level students in rural areas.
In 1970, he stopped drinking, joined Alcoholics Anonymous, and never touched alcohol again.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Mick Clifford: An Post is indeed doing fine, but the company's original business is in bad shape
Mick Clifford: An Post is indeed doing fine, but the company's original business is in bad shape

Irish Examiner

time22 minutes ago

  • Irish Examiner

Mick Clifford: An Post is indeed doing fine, but the company's original business is in bad shape

Managing decline is never easy. So it has been with Ireland's post offices. Over the last 30 years or so, the State's network has been reduced from nearly 2,000 to less than 1,000. The decline was inevitable with the flight from rural to urban Ireland. The introduction of the internet condemned what is now refereed to as 'snail mail' to the status of a sunset industry. Then along came the pandemic to accelerate further the migration of business and communication online. That reality is behind the public perception of the current status of An Post. Yet, as the company's CEO David McRedmond pointed out on Wednesday, the network accounts for only around 20% of the company's business. So it is that under McRedmond's stewardship, An Post has accelerated diversification away from mail delivery and into ecommerce and financial services. The result has been a company that returned a profit of €5.6m for 2024, up from a €20m loss the previous year. An Post also had, for the first time, revenues in excess of €1bn. That is fair going for a company associated in the public mind — erroneously — with the dying habit of snail mail. So it was no surprise that poor McRedmond nearly choked on his cornflakes on holiday in Italy when he saw a headline saying that his company was 'on the brink'. He rang Morning Ireland to put the nation right and he let fly. It would be hard to blame him. Presumably, he was expecting plaudits on his return home for the healthy finances instead of reading that he was overseeing a basket case. An Post CEO David McRedmond pointed out that the post office network accounts for only around 20% of the company's business. Picture: Brian Lawless An Post is indeed doing fine. But it is also the case that the company's original business is in bad shape. In line with global trends, mail volumes were down by 7.6% in 2024. Despite that, revenue from mail increased, but that is a scenario that can hardly be sustained. As reported in Wednesday's Irish Examiner, suggestions are being floated that delivery days might be cut. That would be a rational business decision, but one that would induce headaches among some politicians. The post office has been an integral feature of rural, and to a lesser but still significant extent, urban Ireland for centuries. As is often the case, perception, on which much of politics is often based, is very different from reality in this sphere. In 1995, there were 1,839 post offices, which was down by around 500 from 10 years previous. At the last count, there were 960. In the last decade alone, 257 have closed. According to a reply to a parliamentary question from Sinn Féin's David Cullinane, 201 of these were categorised as 'rural' and the remaining 56 as 'urban'. Cullinane described the figures as 'shocking'. 'The local post office plays a vital role in Irish life, providing financial services, access to the social welfare system, communication infrastructure, and community supports,' he said. 'In many areas, they are the only visible expression of the State.' Maybe so, but the reality is that post offices are run as businesses by independent postmasters who are effectively franchisees. The average age of postmasters is pretty high. When retirement beckons these days, there are very few willing to take up the slack. In May, the Irish Postmasters Union commissioned a report from Grant Thornton to map out the future. The consultant calculated that a strategic investment of €15m annually, up from the current €10m, is required over the next five years to stay any further culling from the network. If the money isn't forthcoming, the result would be 'cutting communities off from vital services, undermining national goals for regional equity, social cohesion and financial access', the report said. The report also stated that that the network in Ireland is between €344m and €776m in terms of its annual social and economic value to communities. Post offices are run as businesses by independent postmasters who are effectively franchisees. File picture: Maxwells All of that may be something of a sideshow commercially within An Post. Politically, however, it is the only show in town. No government wants to be associated with what effectively would be further cuts to services particularly in rural Ireland. So it was that, to mix a few metaphors, somebody in cabinet leaked in order to run a flag up the pole, suggesting that palms need to be greased in the name of votes. Whomever could it have been? The minister who brought the report to cabinet, Patrick O'Donovan, said that it certainly wasn't him. One down, 14 ministers and a few super juniors to go. Not only did a minister breach cabinet confidentiality with that leak, they also took it upon themselves to trample all over O'Donovan's well-tended patch. No wonder he was angry at how this leak turned out. By rights he should have got on the phone immediately to McRedmond and they could have shared their anger and mused on how commerce and politics sometimes just don't mix.

'Big battle ahead' on EU supports for farming, IFA warns
'Big battle ahead' on EU supports for farming, IFA warns

Irish Examiner

time22 minutes ago

  • Irish Examiner

'Big battle ahead' on EU supports for farming, IFA warns

The Irish Farmers' Association has warned of a "big battle ahead" for vital EU supports for farming, ahead of the publication of the European Commission's proposals for the next EU budget post-2027 and the next Common Agriculture Policy (Cap). Speaking from Brussels, IFA president Francie Gorman said what was emerging about how farming will be funded from 2027 was "very concerning". 'While we will have to examine the specifics in more detail, it is clear that the EU Commission is downgrading the importance of the Cap and food production to allow for greater spending elsewhere,' he said. 'The Cap is being turned into an environmental and social policy. Support for farmers who are producing the most food is being consistently reduced. The commission seem more interested in finding ways to cut payments to individual farmers rather than support them,' he said. "As it stands, the Cap provides an annual injection of nearly €2bn into our rural economy to support food production. 'At a time when Ireland is a net contributor to the overall EU budget, this level of investment in every parish takes on even more significance. Cap has been the cornerstone of the multi-billion export sector that underpins thousands of jobs in regions far from the urban centres,' he said. The EU Commission also needs to be honest with consumers. Cutting Cap funding will reduce food production and lead to food price inflation. 'These proposals will have to be approved by the member states and the EU Parliament, so there is a long journey ahead and we will expect a real fight from our Government and MEPs. 'The EU presidency, which Ireland will assume this time next year for the second half of 2026, takes on added importance. Our Government has to secure the maximum funding for Irish farmers to encourage the next generation to consider farming as a career. "From the Taoiseach down, this has to be front and centre of every discussion across those six months,' he said. Commenting, agriculture minister Martin Heydon said: 'These are complex legislative proposals which will need detailed consideration. The commission is proposing major changes in structure that we will now study in detail in order to better understand the impact on Ireland. 'This publication is just the beginning of a protracted process. Member states will, through the Council of Ministers, begin the process of agreeing a general approach to the commission's proposals, before engaging in line-by-line negotiations with the EU Parliament and the EU Commission. "This will take some time, and I fully expect the progression of these proposals to be a significant feature of Ireland's presidency of the EU Council in the second half of next year.' The minister will host the first meeting of Ireland's Cap consultative committee on Thursday, which will engage in detail on these proposals. Read More Agricultural output price index up 20.7% in the 12 months to May

Open Championship at Dublin's Portmarnock remains firmly on the cards as feasibility work continues
Open Championship at Dublin's Portmarnock remains firmly on the cards as feasibility work continues

Irish Independent

timean hour ago

  • Irish Independent

Open Championship at Dublin's Portmarnock remains firmly on the cards as feasibility work continues

Speaking ahead of The 153rd Open at Royal Portrush, R&A Chief Executive Mark Darbon confirmed that the governing body continues to work on the feasibility study into the suitability of the north Dublin links. "First one would say is that I've got one venue on my mind this week and it's Portrush, given it is my first Open Championship, and looking forward to delivering what we hope will be a successful event," explained Mr Darbon, who said in April that the R&A was "really optimistic" about the prospect of hosting The Open in Dublin. "Yes, we are thinking about Portmarnock. We think it's a wonderful links golf course, and we've been really encouraged by the support that we've had in principle from the Irish government to work with us to understand whether we can stage an Open Championship there in the future. "We're knee-deep in the feasibility work to help us answer that question fully. We expect to have a clearer picture by the back end of this year." A crowd of 278,000 is expected at Royal Portrush this week, which is the biggest attendance at an Open held outside St Andrews. However, whether Turnberry returns to the rota while Trump is in power remains to be seen, as a decision on the 2028 staging is still to be made. "I think we've been extremely clear on our position, as in respect of Turnbury," Mr Darbon explained. "We love the golf course, but we've got some big logistical challenges there. You see the scale of the setup here, and we've some work to do on the road, rail, and accommodation structure around Turnberry, and we've explicitly not taken it out of our pool of venues. "But we need to address those logistical challenges." Mr Darbon's predecessor, Martin Slumbers, said last November that the Trump issue was central to the R&A's decision. "We will not be taking any events there until we are comfortable that the whole dialogue will be about golf," Slumbers said. "That situation is something we're still not comfortable with at the moment, but that could evolve in the coming years." Asked about those remarks and whether Trump's presence in the White House was relevant to their decision, Mr Darbon said: "It's a somewhat hypothetical question in there. Unless we address the logistical challenges, it's difficult for us to go back. "I met a couple of months ago with Eric Trump and some of the leadership from the Trump Golf organisation and from Turnberry. "We had a really good discussion. I think they understand clearly where we're coming from. We talked through some of the challenges that we have, so we've got a good dialogue." As for Muirfield, which hasn't hosted The Open since 2013, Mr Darbon explained that there were logistical challenges there too. "We love the golf course at Muirfield," he said. "We're in a discussion with the venue right now. "There's some things that we need to evolve at Muirfield — the practice ground, in particular, is a challenge for us to host the modern Open, and this is work we need to do, and if they need to facilitate some of the infrastructure that we require decent cabling to enable the scale of the production that we have these days. "But it's good dialogue, and we'd love to be back here in the future. As I've said, no, it's not just about a number of fans, but there are some other things that go into staging the championships, practice ground and the wider infrastructure." As for LIV Golf's reapplication for Official World Ranking points, Mr Darbon confirmed that it was being studied by the OWGR technical group, but he had not examined in detail the changes proposed by the Saudi-funded league to improve its chances of being awarded points. "We actually had an OWGR board meeting yesterday," he said. "An application has been received. I think that's a good thing. "There's a robust process that now exists. The bid will be assessed by the technical committee and then ultimately determined by the board. "I think Trevor Immelman (Chairman of the OWGR) released a statement regarding that recently, and I'm sure he'll talk about that in more detail to come. "I haven't reviewed the technical submission in any detail. That's the process that we'll go through now, so difficult (to say what's being proposed by LIV).'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store