D Monday, October 19, 2009 METRO Information correct as 1st October 09. 80% of Small Business accounts from 1st September 08 to 30th August 09. 75 off offer applies to eircom talktime for business orders accepted before 27th November 09. Terms and conditions apply and are available at www.eircom.ie/telecommunications_scheme. Price quoted ex VAT. More and more small businesses are switching back to eircom With a dedicated business service centre for all our customers, nobody offers better customer service than eircom. Perhaps thats why so many small businesses end up switching back to Irelands leading phone and broadband provider. In fact, in the last year 80% of small businesses who left eircom switched back. For real value and great service, call us today... Switch now and get 75 OFF your bill business broadband voice mobile data online solutions Call 1800 24 54 40 Singer Julie Feeney, snapper Lili Forberg and DJ Hix help launch the Miller Genuine Draft Give It A Twist photo competition, which is seeking entries for a photo with a twist. www.giveitatwist.com Picture: Patrick Bolger the frame game... Pipe bomb attack at auction house GARDA forensic experts were last night investigating a pipe bomb attack on an auctioneers office. The device was thrown through the window of the premises in Stone Court, Roscommon town shortly before 7am. No one was injured in the attack, but minor damage was caused inside the building. Beebs humpty Dumpty revision THE BBCs childrens channel has changed the ending of nursery rhyme Humpty Dumpty. Instead of reading All the kings men couldnt put Humpty together again the version for CBeebies reads that they made Humpty happy again. The BBC said the change was for creative reasons. Minister could have taken train ENVIRONMENT minister John Gormley could have saved the State and taxpayers more than 2,000 by taking a train and bus at a cost of 15 (16) to a climate change event in Wales, it has emerged. The Green Party leader last week claimed there were no direct public transport links available when he ended his eco- friendly trip with a chauffeur- driven journey costing 2,200 from Holyhead to the Welsh town of Hay-on-Wye in 2008. However, Mr Gormley could have caught a direct train from Holyhead to Hereford, and from there he could have taken a regular shuttle bus to the event, 35km (22miles) away. A spokesman for Mr Gormley said: That option was looked at but it had to be ruled out due to the time involved. Instead, a Mercedes people carrier and a driver were hired from London which dropped Mr Gormley at Cardiff Airport the following day. Replying to Mr ODonoghues let- ter, Mr Haugh said there was no rea- son to believe there had been a leak and that the correspondence in ques- tion had been released to a journalist at the Sunday Tribune under the Act. The newspaper claims that the vol- ume and detail of documentation re- leased decreased dramatically follow- ing Mr ODonoghues intervention. The Ceann Comhairles correspond- ence was made available to the news- paper under a separate Freedom of Information request. Mr ODonoghue was forced to re- sign his position last week over his lavish expenses, which included bills of more than 500,000 during his ten- ure as Minister for Sport and a further 250,000 during his two years as Ceann Comhairle. Meanwhile, constituency colleague Jackie Healy-Raes expenses have also come under the spotlight. Documents released under the Free- dom of Information Act show that the Kerry South Independent TD claimed more than 41,000 in travel and sub- sistence expenses in the first six months of the year. A loophole in expenses claims means members of the Oireachtas living more than 272km from the Dil can claim for three one-way journeys in a week. Mr Healy-Rae has availed of this. ODonoghue intervened in expenses info leakBY KATE McCARTHY ODonoghue: Asked to see info UNDER fire former Ceann Comhairle John ODonoghue was granted access to Freedom of Information documents before they were made public after he complained of possible civil service leaks, it has emerged. Mr ODonoghue wrote to both the secretary general of the Department of Arts, Sport and Tourism and the attor- ney general saying he was extremely concerned details of his previous ex- penses had been leaked to the press. He asked that any further informa- tion due to be released under the Free- dom of Information Act would be forwarded to ...[my office] as a cour- tesy prior to, or simultaneously with its release to the media concerned. Con Haugh, the secretary general of the Department of Arts, Sport and Tourism, agreed as a matter of cour- tesy to a former minister, even though he was not obliged to do so. Healy-Rae: In the spotlight index.html2.html3.html4.html5.html6.html7.html8.html9.html10.html11.html12.html13.html14.html15.html16.html17.html18.html19.html20.html21.html22.html23.html