User:FrenchToast16/sandbox

Hannah Quinn-Mulligan (born 9 February 1990) is an Irish farmer and journalist. She has worked for the BBC, RTÉ, and the Irish Times. She graduated from Trinity College, Dublin with a degree in Philosophy and Modern Irish, and has a Masters's Degree from the University of Limerick as well as a qualification in agriculture from Pallaskenry Agricultural College. She works as an agricultural journalist while running the family farm in Limerick.

Early life Hannah Quinn-Mulligan grew up on a beef farm with pedigree Hereford cattle with her mother and grandmother in Co Limerick.

Personal life Despite some confusion due to her double barrel surname, Quinn-Mulligan is not married. Her double barrel surname is a combination of her mother’s and father’s second names.

Career TV and Radio

BBC Following her Master's, Quinn-Mulligan was one of 12 people picked out of 4,500 applicants for the BBC’s gold-standard production trainee program in 2014 and began working in London across radio and TV, and remained working with the BBC for several years. She presented and produced a number of radio documentaries ) and presented the farming show on BBC Radio Ulster.

RTE

Hannah regularly features as a guest and reporter on a number of RTÉ shows, including RTÉ CountryWide. In March 2022, she presented and produced her first radio documentary for RTÉ on the life of St Patrick.

She is fluent in Irish and has featured in both Irish and English-speaking TV documentaries on RTÉ.

Print

Quinn-Mulligan has written extensively for the Irish Times, focusing on agricultural stories including animal feed shortages and water quality.

Pandemic and meat factories

Quinn-Mulligan was the first to break the story of COVID-19 in meat factories and covered the issue extensively throughout the pandemic. As part of her work in the area, she uncovered serious tax and payment issues for migrant workers, which was later picked up by RTÉ Primetime.

She charted her frustration with the authorities and health service in an extensive piece on the issue for The Currency.

Campaigning and volunteering

In September 2021, Quinn-Mulligan set up the Women in Agriculture Stakeholders Group (WASG). The group is voluntary and as Chairperson she brought together representatives from each Irish farm organization to campaign together for support for female farmers. Quinn-Mulligan leads the group in an appearance before the Joint Oireachtas Agricultural Committee and in meetings with Junior Minister for Agriculture Martin Heydon and in meetings with the Department of Agriculture. The group succeeded in securing a higher rate of sheds and machinery grants for Irish female farmers in the Common Agricultural Policy 2023 – 2027.

Quinn-Mulligan is also a long-term judge on the Farming for Nature panel.

Awards

Quinn-Mulligan has won several awards for her work as a journalist. She won an IMRO radio award for her Farm Diary series, which she presented and produced with her grandmother on their farm in Limerick. During her time with the Irish Farmers Journal, she also won four national agricultural journalism awards, including best news articles, rising star, and best feature article looking into the finances of the Irish beef baron Larry Goodman, which she did with her then colleague Lorcan Allen. As a result of their work with Larry Goodman, they won the overall national agricultural journalist award, nicknamed ‘The Bull’.