GAA 'cautiously optimistic' about funding for Casement

A senior figure in the GAA has said the association is "cautiously optimistic" that the government will make a financial contribution to the Casement Park redevelopment.
Chancellor Rachel Reeves is due to announce a comprehensive spending review next Wednesday.
It is being billed as the juncture for the government to state if it will make a financial contribution to the redevelopment of the west Belfast stadium.
The sporting body held an event at Westminster, attended by MPs, UK ministers, and members of the House of Lords, to lobby parliamentarians ahead of the announcement.

What did GAA say?
The west Belfast stadium redevelopment is estimated to cost £250m - of which £120m in funding is in place.
The Stormont executive is contributing £62.5m to the project, the GAA will pay £15m, while the Irish government has pledged about £43m.
The GAA acknowledges they will need to increase their commitment.
"We are prepared to step up. It would be premature to start mentioning figures here. I think it will be higher than £15m", Stephen McGeehan, Project lead for Casement Park told BBC News NI.
He said Wednesday had "been a good day".
"It feels like something are beginning to fall into place - not before time. We are enthusiastic.
"We believe we are moving to a situation where we can finally bring this project forward."
'Red-letter day'
He said he was "cautiously optimistic" about a positive funding announcement.
He said conversations with MPs at the event, organised by Sorcha Eastwood, had shown the UK government "gets the project and the importance of it to the nationalist community and all communities in NI."
"I believe it will be a red-letter day for the project, for the GAA."
McGeehan said that the sporting body will seek to get all funding partners around a table once next week's decision is announced.
He said when a government contribution was clear the conversation would return to the NI Executive, with the help of the minister for communities.
"We'll talk again to the Irish government. The jigsaw of funding will begin to be put in place," he added.
The President of Ulster GAA, Michael Geoghegan, said it was an "important and timely visit" and the organisation felt "strong support for the work that we are doing across these islands" from the MPs they met.

First Minister Michelle O'Neill said it was "crunch week" for a decision to be made on Casement Park and for Northern Ireland's public finances.
She was speaking after meeting the Secretary of State Hilary Benn in Belfast.
On Monday, Sinn Féin's finance minister John O'Dowd said he believed the Treasury was in "solution-finding mode" when it comes to agreeing on a figure.
Asked for her view, O'Neill said they needed to "wait and see" the final outcome but that there needed to be a push from all sides to get Casement Park over the line.
Casement Park, with a proposed 34,500 capacity, had been earmarked to host football games at the Euro 2028 football tournament but, with the project on hold, the plan has been shelved.
Stormont's Communities Minister Gordon Lyons has defended his handling of the planned Casement redevelopment and insisted the hold-up is not his fault.
On Monday, he said the GAA would need to make its plans for Casement Park more affordable if the UK government fails to cover the gap for the current proposed rebuild.
"I've made it very, very clear as sports minister, I want to see more money for sports infrastructure in Northern Ireland," the minister said.
"But what we do need to make sure is that any additional public funding that comes forward for sport is done on a fair and equitable basis.
"I think we had a fair and equitable basis for the funding of sport back in 2011 when the funding for Windsor [Park] and for Ravenhill and Casement was set out.
"I welcome additional funding for sport, but it should be done on a fair and on an equitable basis."
Why has the Casement Park redevelopment taken so long?
In 2012, stadium designers were appointed to the project and it was expected the new Casement Park would be built by 2015. But it didn't turn out that way.
The first big obstacle came in 2014, when the High Court overturned planning permission for the project.
Local residents had lodged a legal challenge over objections to the stadium's size - they said it would block out light from local homes and cause serious traffic disruption.
Then, in 2015, came possibly the most contentious year of the Casement Park project.
Firstly, it emerged that a Safety Technical Group (STG) formed to oversee safety issues around the new stadium had not approved the design plans due to concerns over how long it would take people to leave the ground in an emergency.
Later, one of the STG members, safety expert Paul Scott, told a Northern Ireland Assembly committee that he had been put "under pressure" to approve the plans by government officials.
He also complained of bullying- he later settled an industrial tribunal case with Sport NI.
With the original Casement plan now scrapped, the GAA went to work on plans for a new stadium, revising the capacity down from 38,000 to about 34,500.
It submitted a fresh application for planning permission in 2017, which was granted in 2021.
Finally, in 2022, local residents lost a legal challenge against the new project against the plan - the stadium could now go ahead.
Since then funding issues have plagued the project.