Simon Carswell was one of INUSA’s Featured Speakers in Austin. Here is a recent article; “Ireland pitches tent in boom town Austin, Texas!”

by Simon Carswell, Irish Times.

http://www.irishtimes.com/business/ireland-pitches-tent-in-boom-town-austin-texas-1.1935087#.

Last Updated: Monday, September 22, 2014, 10:35

Austin revels in its kooky status and the Texan capital’s slogan “Keep Austin Weird!” has become a catch-all calling card for musicians and software coders, political liberals and start-up entrepreneurs.

So there is nothing weird about the Irish Government’s decision to establish a new Irish consulate and outposts forEnterprise Ireland and the IDA in Austin, where the organisations aim to help Irish firms win business there and attract more foreign direct investment out of Texas.

Austin, to which 110 people move each day, is America’s fastest growing city, with its strong employment prospects and attractive cost of living. This is lower than it is in America’s main tech hub, Silicon Valley and the San Francisco area.

Ireland will be the first EU country to set up a consulate in Austin and only the second internationally; Mexico has a diplomatic mission in Austin owing to the country’s proximity just south of the Texan border. The Irish Embassy is scouring for the right location for “Ireland House” amid ferocious competition for office space in this booming city.

“We are hoping for a prominent location, not far from the Capitol, to make a statement that we are here and that we are the first here from the European Union, ” says Adrian Farrell, the newly arrived Irish consul general.

Where Northern Ireland may have dominated Ireland’s diplomatic brief in the US in the past, the economic recovery at home has made strengthening business ties between the countries the priority for Ireland’s ambassador in Washington Anne Anderson.

Not having opened a consulate since the 1930s, the economic crisis forced a rethink on Ireland’s diplomatic frontiers to expand beyond the traditionally strategically important cities of New York, Boston, Chicago and San Francisco.

The embassy opened a consulate in Atlanta in 2010 to corner the southeast of the country where the dynamic consul generalPaul Gleeson has covered much ground since being dispatched to that corner of the country. Attention immediately turned to the southwest. Texas, the 15th largest economy in the world and the second most populous state in the US with 27 million people, was the obvious choice. Then, it came to choosing between Dallas, Houston and Austin.

“There was sifting through the facts and figures of the trade and business connections,” said Anderson.

“Finally, the feeling was that the fit was best with Austin in that it is a very fast-growing, future-focused, young city: it has very clear strengths that match our strengths.”

A vibrant life sciences industry and information, communications and technology sector, as well as being an entrepreneurial hub and the seat of government in Texas, made Austin the winner.

Anderson said, on her visit to the city to attend the annual meeting of the growing Irish Network group last weekend, she heard someone describing Austin as being “powered by creativity,” which, she says, is similar to Ireland.

The University of Texas in Austin and other colleges in the city draw thousands of students and have helped to fuel that creativity. The city has strong cultural foundations and is home to the South By Southwest music, film and technology festival: linking it neatly with Ireland.

“The kind of vibe you have here in Austin is very much what identifies Ireland as well,” said Anderson.

The Government has led two trade missions to Austin and other Texan cities in the last two years hosted by Minister for Jobs Richard Bruton to try to tap some of the growing business in the city.

Orla Battersby, Enterprise Ireland’s North America director, said that early last year it was receiving an increasing number of calls from client companies about Austin and setting up in Texas.

“There is only so much you can do when you are not on the ground there,” she says.

She expects exports to the US by Enterprise Ireland client companies to grow to €2 billion and maybe €2.2 billion this year, helped by new connections in Texas.

Texan companies already employ 4,000 people in Ireland and the Lone Star State is the largest exporting American state by volume so it made sense for the IDA to look at Texas to open the agency’s seventh US office and tap this outward-looking market for inward investment.

“The state has four of the top-10 fastest-growing cities. We felt we needed to be a bit closer to that and to be in the mix there,” said Pat Howlin, the director of IDA’s North American operations.

Will Wynn, who was mayor of the city from 2003 to 2009, puts Austin’s strong growth down to the city figuring out, about a decade ago, the “economic development model of the 21st century”. In the last century, the focus was in building massive infrastructure: airports, shipping channels, seaports that requires thousands of bodies, he said.

“The 21st century model, that we got lucky and discovered early, is the opposite: you attract the people – young creative talent – and the jobs follow them,” said the Democratic mayor who spearheaded the Keep Austin Weird campaign from 2002.

“We focus on quality of life, live music and progressive politics, pro-gay rights, lenient marijuana laws – I’m half-joking but serious. More 25-to-34 year olds move to Austin, Texas than in any other place in North America.”

The “talent” didn’t come here because social media, internet and technology giants such as FacebookGoogle and Applewere here, says Wynn; those companies came here because the talent was here. Dell’s headquarters in Round Rock, north Austin, has drawn many Irish from the computer company’s operations in Limerick.

Politically, Austin’s liberal blue credentials in a very red conservative state – “the blueberry in the tomato soup”, as one local described it last weekend – has made the city stand out in Texas as a place that is open to fresh ideas, turning it into a hub of start-ups.

Austin’s alternative ways of thinking made the city an ideal location for entrepreneur Sean O’Sullivan, a one-time investor on RTÉ’s Dragon’s Den, when he was looking to expand Carma, his car-pooling business that matches commuters with their neighbours’ empty car seats.

The Cork-based company employs two staff in the city. “That sort of orientation towards experimentation and towards open-mindedness has helped Austin become a pioneer,” he said.

The affordability of Austin, the city’s deep talent pool and higher quality of living for start-up companies makes it a top-tier city for technology alongside Silicon Valley, Boston and New York, he says.

Ciaran Connell, founder of DecaWave, a Dublin company that makes chips to track global positioning indoors, raised €9 million from investors in Austin out of the €25 million the company has banked. Connell lived there for 11 years, working for phone company Motorola.

Texas was dominated by the oil industry in the 1970s and 1980s and Austin made a conscious effort to diversify into technology from the 1980s onwards, offering a cheaper alternative to Silicon Valley, a move Ireland should consider replicating too, says Connell.

“It became known as the Silicon Hills. Every company that is worth anything in technology has a huge base in Austin – every Californian, American, Korean and Israeli company. There is an argument for looking at Austin which has successfully copied Silicon Valley, and copy them,” he says.

Pat Doab, president of the Irish Network Austin chapter (one of 19 branches in the US), estimates that there are between 400 and 600 Irish people living in the Austin area with more families moving over as people are hired for projects in Dell.

“There is so much construction going on here – there are cranes everywhere: it is a very vibrant city,” he says.

Steve Lenox, co-president of Irish Network USA, said the city’s energy, spirit and enthusiasm, combined with Austin’s strategic significance for trade and investment with and in Ireland, makes the city a logical choice for the network’s annual meeting this year.

Now, one of the challenges for Ireland’s new diplomatic and economic outpost is to continue to attract American businesses out of Austin into Ireland. The relationships are clearly growing.

Ambassador Anderson points to two statistics mentioned by officials working with the city’s mayor Lee Leffingwell at their meeting last weekend: a study of passengers flying to Europe showed that Dublin was fourth in terms of the numbers travelling from Austin.

Another statistic from the mayor’s office, she says, is that more than 60 per cent of companies in the city have a strong interest in doing business in Europe but are not operating in that market yet.

“This city is only truly beginning to go global and think of itself in terms of global terms,” she said. “So – being in here early and with the kind of partnerships you are going to be able to set up between Irish companies and some of the companies over here – they can grow together.” Ireland in the United States: Embassies and offices Diplomatic representation Embassy: Washington DC Consulates: New York, Chicago, Boston, San Francisco, Atlanta and Austin IDA offices IDA offices: New York, Boston, Chicago, Atlanta, Mountain View (northern California), Irving (southern California) and Austin Enterprise Ireland offices New York, Boston, Silicon Valley and Austin

 

‘Duffy’s Cut’ Symposium planned at Immaculata!

‘Duffy’s Cut’ Symposium planned at Immaculata!

A small sign welcomes visitors to the Duffy’s Cut Museum room in the Gabriele Library at Immaculata University. Staff photo by Jim Callahan – Daily Local News
Artifacts recovered from archeological the dig in East Whiteland for clues into the fate of Irish railroad workers the Duffy’s Cut Museum room in the Gabriele Library at Immaculata University.Staff photo by Jim Callahan – Daily Local News

 

EAST WHITELAND >> An arts focused symposium developed after the discovery of Duffy’s Cut, the burial site of about 57 Irish immigrant railroad workers who died in 1832, will be held at Immaculata University Oct. 11.

The Irish Network of Philadelphia and the school’s history department are sponsoring events involving music, literature and dance that have commemorated the tragedy.

“Some of the areas where the Duffy’s Cut story has found a voice is the arts, so we are hoping to offer a full day of live Irish music, including songs inspired by this event,” said Bethanne Killian, chair of Irish Network Philadelphia. “In addition to live music, there will be movie screenings, dramatic reenactments, and Irish dancing.”

Over the past 15 years the university’s history department has collected numerous documents and stories about the fate of Irish immigrant track workers who were building the Philadelphia and Columbia Rail Road through Chester County in the summer of 1832.

The Gaelic-speaking workers were recruited off the docks of Philadelphia in June after immigrating from Ireland. After an outbreak of cholera, some died, but others were said to have been killed to prevent spread of the disease.

Sets of eight skeletons, including one woman, have been discovered. Some signs of violence documented by the archeology department of the University of Pennsylvania. One man was shot through the skull.

If documents and stories uncovered by Immaculata’s History Department and associates are true, the remains of 50 more buried could be near the site.

Immaculata Professor William Watson said organizers are still lining up logistics to find the mass grave where remaining victims are believed to be buried underneath about 50 feet of rail embankment that has built up over the past 180 years for the main east-west rail line across Pennsylvania.

The symposium is to raise awareness and funds for the effort, said Watson.

“We are calling it “Duffy’s Cut and the Arts — A Symposium,” said Killian.

The Irish Network is still developing the final schedule but it will be available by emailing Killian at bethannekillian@comcast.net. Other public announcements are to follow.

“Our vision is to demonstrate the impact this important project has had beyond the world of academia and the passion that is evoked by this American immigrant story,” said Killian. “ Because there is still much work to be done (excavation, DNA testing, historical and genealogical research) by the Duffy’s Cut team, we are hoping to raise both funds and awareness to allow them to continue their work,” she said.

Besides various artistic performances, panel groups will include a discussion by The Pennsylvania Railroad Technical and Historical Society on the significance Duffy’s Cut in the context of railroad history, said Killian.

The Pennsylvania Railroad was the successor railroad to the Philadelphia and Columbia Railroad. The railroad did its own investigation in the early 1900s into stories about the 1832 incident that became a foundation for the Immaculata investigation 90 years later.

Reach the author at JCallahan@dailylocal.com .

To view the article, click here.

The Irish Times Highlights the Contrast between the Irish Diaspora Then and Now in the US.

The Irish Times Highlights the Contrast between the Irish Diaspora Then and Now in the US.

Sharp divide between old and young Irish in the US

The new generation of Irish people moving to the US is different from those who settled there decades ago

Photograph: Getty Images/Hemera, Sat, Aug 23, 2014, 00:01

Ciara Kenny

Despite the historical popularity of the US as a destination for Irish people, barriers to entry, tightened in the aftermath of 9/11, have prevented migration from Ireland to the US on the same scale as to other English-speaking countries, such as BritainAustralia and Canada, in recent years.

Just 28,900 people moved from Ireland to the US between 2008 and 2013, which pales in comparison with the almost 80,000 who moved to Australia and the 90,000 who have gone to Britain. About 21,500 have moved in the other direction, from the US to Ireland.But the year-long J1 employment scheme for graduates, as well as transfer opportunities with multinationals, has led to the growth of a small but vibrant group of young Irish professionals in the United States.They are generally aged from their early 20s to their early 30s, highly educated and well networked. They came from a modern Ireland much changed from the country their predecessors left.Does this make them better equipped to cope with the challenges of making a new home in the US? Are they assimilating into Irish-American enclaves or are they making their own way?

Identity

With more than 34 million people claiming Irish ancestry, the Irish-American diaspora is one of the largest and most developed in the world.

The long history of migration across the Atlantic has ensured a strong network of Irish communities all over the country, but the type of Irishness they are built around can be unfamiliar to the youngest members arriving from Ireland today.

“The Irish in America are so well established, which can be a help or a hindrance to the challenges emigrants face when they first arrive,” says Dr Martin Russell of Diaspora Matters. He recently went to the US to interview Irish people, and the organisations working with them, for a report on the changing needs of Irish communities abroad by the Clinton Institute at University College Dublin.

With so few young migrants arriving from Ireland to replenish and rejuvenate existing communities, the profile of the United States’ first-generation Irish America is ageing.

The older Irish population remains concentrated in established hubs of Irishness – areas such as South Boston and, in New York, Queens and Yonkers. The strong community organisations that still exist in these areas are crucial providers of care and support for more vulnerable Irish immigrants, particularly the elderly or those living illegally in the country.

But the younger, more affluent and upwardly mobile new Irish immigrants are settling outside these areas. Employment opportunities on the west coast, particularly in the tech sector in California, is the most significant factor influencing settlement patterns.

Rising rents in some Irish neighbourhoods, especially in New York, have led to the creation of new Irish areas in the big cities, and a more modern mindset also means that many new arrivals are reluctant to be associated with traditional Irish boroughs.

The divide between old and young is also highlighted in a recent study by Jennifer Nugent Duffy, quoted in the Clinton Institute report, which reported that older generations of Irish people in Yonkers resent new immigrants moving into the area, as it “threatens staples of their identity”.

Issues include binge-drinking, not going to Mass and “the lack of desire to be American” among younger Irish people. The difference in attitudes and cultural practices between the generations shows how experiences of being Irish in the same area in New York have changed so much.

“As new Irish arrive, there are new versions of Irishness at play, but there’s no one sense of Irishness better than another,” Russell says.

“The challenge for people working with Irish communities is maintaining the opportunity for everyone to negotiate and express their own sense of Irishness, whether that is as an elderly person who went in the 1950s or 60s or as someone arriving over today, who has left a very different Ireland.”

Irish boroughs may not be as popular, but long-established Irish organisations still play an important role for many young people fresh off the plane, looking for new friendships and networks.

“They are welcoming, which is crucial,” Russell says. “It comes up time and time again that the first six months are the most difficult for new emigrants. The sense of isolation is very strong. Being in contact with others who have been through the immigration process can be very therapeutic.”

Despite their “privileged” backgrounds, many of these young Irish display “familiar vulnerabilities” and are in need of this support structure, Russell says. Isolation and loneliness are as big an issue as ever; short-term visas are also causing new problems.

Men aged 18-30 were identified as being particularly vulnerable to mental-health problems, with a “clear increase in suicides” among Irish of all ages in the US. “Historical issues such as alcohol abuse are still very prominent. The problems mirror home in many ways,” he says.

An Irish centre in Boston reported a growing issue with substance abuse, centring on a “massive heroin and prescriptive drugs” problem that has replaced cocaine use, “which has always been there”.

“A lot of the traditional vulnerabilities tie into the status of being an emigrant or having left Ireland involuntarily. The emotional turmoil of being away from home can be very strong, especially for the undocumented. They are interlinked,” Russell says.

Unable to return

Mental-health issues are particularly prominent among the estimated 50,000 Irish living without legal status in the US; this group is more vulnerable to depression and suicide. Their ability to access healthcare and support services is limited because they are undocumented, which compounds the problem.

“The issue of not being able to return is the biggest,” Russell says. Because most undocumented Irish arrived in the late 1980s and 1990s, “their parents are now getting elderly and falling into ill health at home. These tensions and pressures can build up. Some of them are entering the elderly bracket now, and emigration for them has become final.”

The term “undocumented” is usually associated with emigrants who moved to the US in the 1980s and 1990s, but there has been a steady trickle of people overstaying visas ever since. Quantifying them is impossible – “because they are almost invisible”, Russell says – but Irish welfare organisations in the US believe the numbers overstaying work and holiday visas since the Irish recession hit in 2008 have been increasing.

Although there is some evidence of professionals staying on after their year-long J1 visas expire, most of those becoming undocumented now are still low-skilled workers travelling on holiday visas, who find cash-in-hand employment.

“When the opportunity arises to go the US on a short-term visa, the temptation can be very strong to stay, particularly in recessionary times, when there are no opportunities at home,” Russell says. “But they need to be aware of the difficulties that face them in the future. Education about this needs to begin in Ireland.”

This is the second in a series of country profiles based on the Clinton Institute report, and appears in Weekend Review today.

To view original news story click here.

 

IN-Seattle Featured in Irish America Magazine

By Noreen McCormack, Contributor
August / September 2014

2014 is proving to be an eventful year for Seattle Irish. Mayor Ed Murray, who lived in Ireland for a time, and whose four grandparents are from the old sod, was sworn into office in January. The Seattle Seahawks, led by Irish American coach Pete Carroll, won the Super Bowl. Seattle musicians Macklemore and Ryan Lewis, both proud Irish Americans, won several Grammys, including Best New Artist. And last month, our first female Chief of Police, Kathleen (Horton) O’Toole was sworn into office.

Chief O’Toole, who was born in Pittsfield, Massachusetts, became the first female police commissioner of Boston when she was appointed in 2004.

In May 2006, O’Toole moved to Ireland to assume the role of Chief Inspector of the Garda (Irish National Police). She had previously served on the Independent Commission on Policing for Northern Ireland under Chris Patten. The commission developed strategies that helped to shape the new police department of Northern Ireland. On May 19, 2014, she was nominated to serve as Chief of the Seattle Police Department.

O’Toole, who was honored as one of Irish America’s Top 100 in 2006, has roots in Co. Galway – her grandmother was from Athlone. Her husband has family in Roscommon and Mayo, and her daughter Meghan did her Master’s in screenwriting at the National University of Ireland, Galway.

When Mayor Murray addressed the attendees at the swearing-in ceremony, he quipped, “I didn’t select Chief O’Toole because she is a woman.  I picked her because she is Irish.”

Ireland’s Ambassador to the U.S. Anne Anderson was in Seattle for the occasion.

Seattle has a significant Irish-born population, as well as Irish American. and there are over 800,000 citizens in Washington state who claim Irish ancestry. Recently, the Irish government has demonstrated a keen interest in Seattle, not just due to Microsoft, but Amazon, Boeing and Expedia, to name a few Seattle companies operating in Ireland. Taoiseach Enda Kenny visited Seattle in March 2013.

Noreen McCormack is the President of Irish Network Seattle. To learn more about Irish Network Seattle, visit, Irishnetworkseattle.org

To view the link, click here. http://irishamerica.com/2014/07/seattle-gets-its-green-on/

IN-Boston Hosts Special Screening of film Calvary.

IN-Boston Hosts Special Screening of film Calvary.

Irish Network Boston held a special screening of the new film Calvary. Founding IN Board Member Dawn Morrissey, Director of the The Boston Irish Film Festival, organized the recent screening at the Kendall Square Cinema.  Guests met the film’s writer and director John Michael McDonagh and star of the film, actor Brendan Gleeson.  Calvary will be In theaters August 1st.

(Photo l-r, Brendan Gleeson, IN-Boston President and IN-USA Board Member Sean Moynihan, and John Michael McDonagh)

 

 

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