Pre-deceased by her father Billy; Mrs Donnelly sadly passed away, while in the care of the staff at the Community Hospital of the Assumption, Thurles.
Her passing is most deeply regretted, sadly missed and lovingly remembered by her sorrowing family; loving daughters June and Becky, sons Vincent and William and their partners Daniel, Paul, Wissam and Aoife, grandson Mark, her beloved mother Helen, sisters Alice and Sinéad, brothers Michael, Noel, Liam and Decky, brothers-in-law, sisters-in-law, nephews, nieces, relatives, neighbours and many friends.
For those persons who would wish to attend Requiem Mass for Mrs Donnelly, but for reasons cannot, same can be viewed streamed live online, HERE.
The extended Donnelly family wish to express their appreciation for your understanding at this difficult time, and have made arrangements for those persons wishing to send messages of condolence, to use the link shown HERE.
Note Please: House strictly private. Donations if desired to the Palliative Care Unit at the Hospital of the Assumption, Thurles, Co. Tipperary.
Pre-deceased by his parents John and Bridget (Bridie), his brothers Jim and Kevin, sister-in-law Sally and nephew Kristian; Mr Kelly passed away peacefully following a brief illness, surrounded by his loving family.
His passing is most deeply regretted, sadly missed and lovingly remembered by his sorrowing family; loving wife Breage, sons Stephen, Ciaran and daughter Fiona, daughters-in-law Siobhan and Caroline and Fiona’s partner Shane, grandchildren Aislinn, Niamh, Niall, Emily, Alara and Robbie, sisters and brothers. Nancy (O’Connor) Jackey, Eamon, Gerald and Marie (Campion), brothers in law, sisters in law, nieces, nephews extended relatives, neighbours and a wide circle of friends in both the UK and Ireland.
The extended Kelly family wish to express their appreciation for your understanding at this difficult time, and have made arrangements for those persons wishing to send messages of condolence, to use the link shown HERE.
The Irish government (Cabinet) is due to consider a new digital and AI strategy this week, and the standout proposal is the Government’s intention to legislate to restrict social media access for those under 16 years old. The political context matters. Ireland is heading into its EU Presidency (July–December 2026) and online safety is being positioned as a priority. The strategy is expected to reflect a familiar line: Ireland would prefer EU-wide rules, but will take national action if Europe moves too slowly.
Enforcement, Not Slogans. The key question isn’t whether protecting children is important, it’s how the State can make any restriction meaningful. Last year’s plan for a “digital wallet” age-verification pilot points to the enforcement challenge. An under-16 restriction is only as strong as the age assurance behind it. If access is still controlled by “enter your date of birth”, then the ban becomes more of a headline than a barrier. But age checks raise a second concern, that of privacy. Any system must avoid becoming an online ID-by-stealth, or creating new data trails for children and families. If the public believes age verification means uploading identity documents for everyday apps, trust will evaporate quickly.
Algorithms are moving to centre stage. One of the most significant elements of this debate is the focus on “recommender systems”, the algorithms that decide what users see next, i.e. instead of showing you posts in simple time order, the platform uses algorithms to predict what will keep you watching/scrolling/clicking and then automatically serves more of that. The Joint Oireachtas Committee on Artificial Intelligence has urged that “recommender systems” should be off by default, and that platforms should be prevented from switching them on for children’s accounts. This goes beyond moderation and into product design, the mechanics that can drive compulsive use, extreme content pathways, and unhealthy comparison. If Government wants to reduce harm, recommender controls may prove more effective than an age line on its own.
The wider EU backdrop. The strategy also comes as European regulators intensify scrutiny of platforms and AI systems. It includes discussion about engaging the European Commission to ensure the EU AI Act’s prohibited practices remain fit for purpose as AI capability grows. At the same time, Big Tech is lobbying hard. Meta has told Government it should prioritise efforts to scrap the planned EU Digital Fairness Act, which is expected to target addictive design and dark patterns. That alone signals where the next regulatory battles will be fought, not just content, but the way products are built.
Will it work? Supporters say an under-16 restriction is a clear, protective line that reflects what many parents want. Critics, including CyberSafeKids CEO Mr Alex Cooney, argue a blanket ban could be porous, children will find workarounds and that it risks shifting responsibility onto families, rather than forcing platforms to reform. Ultimately, Ireland will be judged on outcomes. If this is to be more than a headline, it needs three things, workable age assurance, credible privacy safeguards, and real obligations on platforms, especially around said “recommender systems” and addictive design.
Opinion: the ban headline isn’t enough, tackle harm by design. An under-16 ban is an easy political sell. But it risks becoming a comforting story we tell ourselves while the underlying machinery remains untouched. The platform problem isn’t mainly that teenagers exist online. It’s that many products are engineered to maximise attention, and the fastest way to do that is through emotional escalation, endless recommendations, and compulsive loops.
If Ireland wants a serious policy, it must do more than draw a line at 16. Age assurance has to be privacy-preserving, not a backdoor ID requirement. And the real test of ambition will be whether Government is prepared to confront “recommender systems“, the very engines that push users from one piece of content to the next. A mature approach would target companies, not children, transparent design rules, meaningful enforcement, and algorithmic limits for minors. Otherwise, we’ll get a strong headline, and the same problems, just simply shifted around.
Rev. Jesse Jackson, Civil Rights Campaigner & Founder of Rainbow PUSH Coalition, Dies Aged 84.
Sadly today Tuesday, February 17th 2026, US civil rights leader Mr Jesse Louis Jackson (1941 – 2026) has died aged 84, his family has confirmed. He died peacefully this morning, surrounded by relatives.
Over more than six decades, Mr Jackson became one of the most recognisable figures in American public life, a minister, organiser and political candidate who worked to build broad coalitions around civil rights, economic justice and voter participation. Mr Jackson rose to national prominence during the 1960s through his work with Southern Christian Leadership Conference and alongside Martin Luther King Jr.. He later helped lead organising efforts in Chicago, including the SCLC-linked Operation Breadbasket.
He twice sought the Democratic Party nomination for president, running in 1984 and 1988, campaigns widely credited with expanding participation and helping shape modern coalition politics in the US. Mr Jackson also founded the Rainbow PUSH Coalition, a nonprofit focused on civil rights, social justice and advocacy. A phrase closely associated with his public message, and repeated across decades of speeches and organising was: “Keep hope alive.”
Health. In recent years, Mr Jackson faced significant health challenges. Reports noted he had been diagnosed with progressive supranuclear palsy (PSP), a rare neurodegenerative condition, and was hospitalised in late 2025.
Family. The family said Mr Jackson’s work was rooted in a lifelong commitment to justice, equality and human rights, and that further details on public observances and arrangements would be released in Chicago. He is survived by his wife Jacqueline Jackson and their children Santita Jackson, Jesse Jackson Jr., Jonathan Jackson, Yusef Jackson, Jacqueline Jackson (daughter) and Ashley Jackson, as well as grandchildren.
Tributes. Following the announcement, tributes were issued across political and civic life in the United States, including from former presidents and civil rights leaders, reflecting Jackson’s long-standing influence on American public debate and activism.
The decision by Minister for Education and Youth, Ms Hildegarde Naughton to pause the SNA allocation review is being presented as calm, careful engagement. In reality, it reads like an emergency brake pulled after the system lost public confidence. The Department today has now halted all review changes, including cases where schools had already been notified of reductions, and has halted further letters being distributed, until further talks conclude.
That climbdown matters because the damage was not theoretical. By mid-February, national reporting indicated a substantial number of schools had been advised of proposed reductions for September 2026, with reviews still ongoing across the system. In places like County Tipperary, where schools already balance long travel distances, limited specialist services and stretched staffing, even the suggestion of a cut can trigger immediate anxiety for families and staff, because replacing supports is rarely straightforward, and delays have real consequences.
The most serious criticism is not that reviews exist, but that the review appears to be anchored to a narrow definition of “primary care need”, while schools are trying to deliver genuine inclusion in busy, complex classrooms. This approach may suit an administrative model, but it struggles to reflect the daily reality of autism, anxiety, communication needs, sensory overload, behavioural regulation and safety supports that keep children present, learning and well in school.
Even where Government insists overall SNA numbers are rising nationally, parents do not experience “national totals”. They experience whether support exists in their child’s classroom, in their school, on their timetable, from next September. For principals, the immediate issue has been the uncertainty; letters arriving without clear explanations that schools and communities can trust, and an appeals-based system becoming the default route to preserve basic supports.
The result is a familiar pattern; schools forced into scramble mode, families left fearful, and SNAs living with insecurity, while Ministers attempt to restore confidence after the fact.
If Ireland can fund the world, it can fund inclusion here at home. Government has pointed to significant overall spending on special education and additional SNA posts. But the public anger here is rooted in a simple perception; children with additional needs are being treated as a variable in a resourcing exercise, rather than as young citizens, whose right to education should be guaranteed in practice, not merely promised in policy statements.
This is where the old phrase about Ireland as the “land of saints and scholars” starts to ring hollow. A country that prides itself on education should not run a core disability support through a process that leaves parents hearing developments informally, or forces schools into repeated fights to keep what they already have.
Political contrast is unavoidable. The State can move quickly and confidently when funding priorities relate to foreign policy, international commitments, or expanding the national footprint abroad. In Budget 2026, the State found record allocations to project Ireland abroad; a record €840m in overseas development assistance and new funding for expanded diplomatic footprints, championed by Mr Simon Harris, through the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade. It also committed a record €1.49bn for defence, through the Department of Defence. Separate reporting has put Ireland’s support to Ukraine since 2022 at €467m, with further commitments announced in late 2025. Those decisions may be defensible in their own right, but they sharpen the question parents keep asking; “Why does the system struggle so visibly when it comes to getting certainty right for children with special educational needs here at home?”
That question lands sharply at local level. In County Tipperary, as in many counties, schools are not arguing for luxury supports. They are arguing for stability, the ability to plan staffing, to avoid disruptions for vulnerable children to prevent September becoming a cliff-edge, where SNAs are central to keeping children safe, regulated and able to access learning, the idea of “review first, reform later” feels somewhat backwards.
The pause must not become a temporary quietening of the headlines, before the same review process returns with slightly amended language. If Government is serious about inclusion, it should redesign allocations around individual need, transparency, and proper multi-disciplinary supports and not around a narrow definition of care and an appeals mechanism that schools rely on to prevent harm.
If Ireland wants to be a land of scholars again, it needs to start by proving, in real staffing decisions, that children who need support will have it, without panic, without uncertainty, and without having to fight for it, every upcoming year.
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