Skip to main content
Normal View

Seanad Éireann debate -
Wednesday, 13 Jan 2016

Vol. 245 No. 1

Order of Business

I wish the Cathaoirleach, Members and staff a happy new year.

The Order of Business is No. 1, statements on Innovation 2020, to be taken at 4.45 p.m. and adjourned not later than 6.15 p.m., with the time allocated for group spokespersons not to exceed eight minutes and the contributions of all other Senators not to exceed five minutes; and No. 73, non-Government motion No. 17 re Irish Water, to be taken at the conclusion of No. 1, with the time allocated for the debate not to exceed two hours.

A five-hour debate on flooding is taking place in the Dáil today. I will arrange for a similar debate to be held in this House next week.

I wish everybody a happy new year, the best of luck in their work in the next few weeks and varying degrees of success in that regard.

I raise with the Leader the issue of the rate of pay for new Garda recruits, which issue the Leader has also raised in the past. According to a recently published report, the starting salary for a garda is €23,171 per annum. The comparable rate of pay for a PSNI trainee, in euro terms, is €32,000. As Members will be aware, the rent allowance for gardaí of up to €4,000 per annum, with 29 other allowances, has been abolished. Some of our best and brightest are joining An Garda Síochána, within which a two-tier system in terms of pay now operates. This issue needs to be addressed. The Government, rather than continuing to reduce taxes for the highest paid workers in this country, needs to ensure protection of front-line services, particularly in this instance An Garda Síochána. The starting salary for a member of the London Metropolitan Police Service is €35,000, which means that pay scales here are way out of kilter.

Garda numbers also need to be increased significantly. Fianna Fáil, if returned to government after the next general election, is committed to increasing Garda numbers to 14,000 in the lifetime of the next Government. It is important there be pay equality in this area. Will the Leader raise this matter directly with the Minister for Justice and Equality? It needs to be addressed and the Government needs to make a statement in this regard. It is not equitable that a garda protecting the State would be paid significantly less than another garda doing the same job. Reform in this regard needs to start with Garda recruits. I do not think anybody would agree that it is right that the starting salary for a garda, on completion of his or her training in Templemore, would be just over €23,000.

I note the Leader's comment that a debate on flooding is being held in the Dáil today and that a similar debate will be held in this House next week. That is welcome. I am not sure if Members are aware of the OPW's catchment flood risk and management, CFRAM, study of flood risk areas throughout the country, which was commenced prior to the recent flood events and seeks to determine whether particular areas are flood plains. My concern in this regard is the lack of notice given to householders or landowners living in these areas. The deadline for the receipt of observations on the study was 23 December 2015, the day before Christmas Eve. I understand that in the case of the Leinster region, only 12 submissions were made by the public to the Office of Public Works.

The reason for this was people were not aware that the study was taking place.

I have further found out that the OPW in its draft report did not even use its own flood maps. They are desk surveys and it has been proven in a number of instances that it is not even using its own data. While we need to ensure we protect areas from flooding and that we map where future areas at risk of flooding may be, surely to God the OPW should be basing its study on its own maps and, more importantly, it should seek submissions from the public who have that information. Something has gone desperately wrong if only 12 submissions have been made in the whole of Leinster. That is because people do not know about it.

I ask the Minister of State, Deputy Simon Harris, to pause this process right now and to republicise what the OPW is doing in order to let people have their say and to let homeowners and landowners make their submissions. They have the local knowledge. The CFRAM started in 2009 and we are now in 2016.

The Senator is over time.

I would hate for a report to be produced based on incorrect evidence. I ask the Leader to raise the matter with the Minister of State.

I join others in wishing you, a Chathaoirligh, your staff and all present a happy new year. I also congratulate Mr. Peter Finnegan on his new appointment.

I thank the Leader for facilitating a debate on flooding next week. I express sympathy to all those who have been affected by the terrible floods of recent weeks. I hope we will see some resolution of the difficulties with insurance cover. It is very important that insurance companies be made to play their part in ensuring people are not so badly affected by floods.

I look forward to today's debate on Innovation 2020. I welcome the launch today by the Tánaiste and the Minister for Education and Skills of the Pathways to Work programme setting out 86 actions with the aim of increasing the numbers at work to 2.2 million by 2020. It is an ambitious target, but it is realistic and achievable, particularly in the light of the targets achieved in job creation and, as the Tánaiste said, in the light of the very welcome further reduction in unemployment in the past month, which has now come down to 8.8%.

I believe this issue will come up in this afternoon's debate. It is a concern to see high dropout rates, particularly in the STEM subjects, science, technology, engineering and maths, in third level institutions. I know Senator Sean D. Barrett, in particular, will agree with me. We need to focus in our debate on that aspect of the matter because clearly it has the potential to have a detrimental effect on job creation.

Senator Darragh O'Brien mentioned Garda recruitment. I wish to raise a particular issue that I may well submit as a Commencement matter next week. A number of constituents have raised with me the upper age limit of 35 years for Garda recruits and I am sure the issue has been raised with others. I raised it with the then Minister of State, Mr. Brian Hayes, MEP, in 2013. At that point, he said there would be a review of the upper age limit to see if it could be raised. I understand the age in Northern Ireland is higher and it seems to be a somewhat arbitrary cut-off point for recruitment to An Garda Síochána, particularly now that recruitment has reopened, which is a very welcome development.

I commend those United Nations workers who have been engaged in delivering aid to the besieged citizens in Syria. I support the Minister of State, Deputy Sean Sherlock, who spoke today about the need to end war crimes in Syria, noting that 400,000 Syrian people are living under siege in 15 locations across Syria and that besiegement of civilian populations is being used as a war crime by a number of parties to the conflict, notably by the Syrian Government. I commend all those humanitarian workers engaged in providing such much-needed assistance.

I propose an amendment to the Order of Business to call in the Minister for the Environment, Community and Local Government, Deputy Alan Kelly, to discuss the Environmental Protection Agency, EPA. There is a considerable amount to say and I think some other Senators will support me. Last week's "Prime Time" programme contained a very good report on the situation in Portlaoise. Senator John Whelan has worked hard on this issue and I congratulate him. For 15 years the residents around the Enva plant in Portlaoise have suffered from the effects of noxious fumes. They are powerless, as is Senator John Whelan, to have anything done about it.

Members will know from the debate on the Environment (Miscellaneous Provisions) Bill last summer that we tried to table an amendment to it to raise the issue of the immunity that protects the EPA under section 15 of the Act, which indemnifies the director general, other directors and authorised persons against legal action. The residents living in the vicinity of that plant have been trying to get their voices heard for 15 years, but such immunity protects the group which controls the environment. We are discussing the issue of flooding, but air quality is becoming an issue we must think about every day. We must make a huge commitment to the environment from here on. It ranks high up there with jobs and health because we are talking about the future of the health of the population and the future of the country for future generations. We can no longer ignore the environment. The Minister must intervene.

During the past five years as a Member of this House, I have represented a group in the case of the Aughinish plant. There is a nightmare scenario at that location. Since the plant has been in operation, there has been much pollution, ill health and animal ill health and farms have had to be closed in the area. This started in the early 1990s. The EPA commissioned a report in 1996 that cost the taxpayer €5 million-----

-----yet nothing has been done, but everyone who works high up in the EPA enjoys total immunity. This has to stop. The Minister of State, Deputy Ann Phelan, in her closing speech to the debate on the Bill, stated: "I can assure and inform Senator O'Brien that the Minister has confirmed to me that the Department will expedite the completion of the current review and a comprehensive report on this subject will be presented before the Houses of the Oireachtas within 90 days." Ninety days from the commencement of that Act was 4 November 2015 and today is 13 January 2016. I received a letter from the Minister of State's Department on 30 November stating final edits to the draft report were being made and that the Minister, Deputy Alan Kelly, would be reviewing it in the coming days. The Minister needs to come in to the House and lay the report before us. The issue of why the EPA has such immunity needs to be raised in order that we can have legal conversations, if necessary, about it.

I express our support for the many families who are in very difficult situations having been impacted on by the appalling floods over the Christmas period. Many families continue to suffer in parts of the country, including in parts of County Galway. The emergency services, particularly the local authorities, the Red Cross, the Army and the Garda, did amazing work in helping communities. They went above and beyond the call of duty and they were stretched, physically and mentally, as were many of the householders and landowners who were experiencing very difficult times.

As the waters subside, our attention must turn to putting solutions in place that will reduce the risk of flooding in the future. Senator Darragh O'Brien referred to the catchment flood risk assessment and management, CFRAM, study. I have a much more positive story to relate about the study, the OPW and Galway County Council. We had a fine gathering in Ballinasloe on Monday. It was the second such meeting to have taken place, the first one having been held in February, where five options were rolled out for comment by the local communities. Up to 100 people from Ballinasloe and the surrounding areas attended that meeting and they will come back in May or June with the preferred options for solving the problem in the Ballinasloe area.

With respect to the sum of €430 million the Government has allocated for the next six years, it is imperative that the deadlines for completing the CFRAM studies are met in prioritising projects and that the investment in the worst impacted areas take place as quickly as possible. The small schemes projects is a fine programme organised through the council councils. It is important that adequate funding be made available to ensure these schemes proceed quickly. It is welcome that €18 million has been provided for local authorities for a big clean-up, but much damage has been caused to roads throughout rural Ireland.

It is important that county councils quantify the damage as quickly as possible and inform the Department and that the Government then make funding available to repair roads as quickly as possible in order that a semblance of normality can be restored to rural Ireland.

I join in the happy new year wishes expressed by other Members and the congratulations offered to Mr. Peter Finnegan. I also congratulate Ms Maria Louise Fufezan and Ms Diana Bura who won the BT Young Scientist of the Year award last week with a project on enzymes in animal foods. They attend Loreto College in Balbriggan. The event was a huge success and, as Senator Ivana Bacik said, will feed into our discussion later on Innovation 2020.

I welcome the announcement yesterday of the development of a €1.5 million radio astronomy facility at Birr Castle. There is a significant tradition of astronomy and science in general among the Parsons family who own the castle and the future of that tradition is assured. This will also feed into the discussion on Innovation 2020.

Like the Cathaoirleach, I welcome Mr. George Hamilton to the House. He played the cello in Methodist College, Belfast, which suits him as he presents "Hamilton Scores" every Saturday and Sunday. He also studied modern languages at Queen's University Belfast, which means that he can pronounce all of those unpronounceable names of foreign footballers. His educational career suited him well for his two current posts. A tribute has been paid to him but because he was in Genoa at the time, he may not know about it. During the famous penalty shoot-out following two hours and 42 minutes of football the Taoiseach of the day, the late Mr. Haughey, suspended a press conference in Dublin Castle to mark the end of Ireland's EU Presidency because everybody wanted to see Packie Bonner and David O'Leary and hear George. We all wanted to hear a memorable phrase and his was, "The nation holds its breath." He is welcome.

The nation holds its breath and people in Portlaoise, in particular, are holding theirs. I commend colleagues who have approached this issue in a non-partisan, apolitical way because it is not only about pollution but also about public health. Our time in this Seanad is running out and it is time for action because the time for reports is over. We need answers to establish why the Environmental Protection Agency, EPA, behaves as a lazy, lax, limp and lame lapdog instead of as a watchdog in the public interest. No one watching Mark Coughlan's report on "Prime Time" last Thursday night could have had a scintilla of confidence in the so-called Environmental Protection Agency. I do not and those at the top, including the director of environmental enforcement and the director general, should step aside if they have any respect for their jobs or the organisation they purport to represent. The programme was a great example of public service broadcasting, but it should not have taken the perseverance of the journalist to bring this issue into public view.

We first tabled motions on the issue in the House two years ago when Mr. Phil Hogan was Minister for the Environment, Community and Local Government. Three reports were ordered by him and his successor, but on each occasion, the EPA came back stating, "There is nothing to see here. Everything is squeaky clean. You can sleep easy in your beds." The people of Portlaoise are not sleeping easy in their beds. One does not need to have won an award at the young scientist exhibition last week or to be a rocket scientist to know that if one boils oil at 80, 90 or 100 degrees, the toxins and carcinogens emitted will not good for people's health. This is wrong; it is a scandal and needs to be addressed. It needs to be stopped. We have a responsibility in that regard. I commend the Leader for running on orderly and good House. He has facilitated us previously by bringing in Ministers on umpteen occasions to address this issue, but the EPA continues to dodge and duck and fail to answer the question. It has failed to do its job and protect the public interest.

Is the Senator seconding the amendment proposed?

I am not in a position to second it.

I join Senator Sean D. Barrett in welcoming Mr. George Hamilton. He and I were colleagues as far back as the Moscow Olympic Games and the trajectory of his career has been much higher than mine. It could not have happened to a nicer person.

I will continue the theme initiated by my colleague, the leader of the Fianna Fáil group, Senator Darragh O'Brien, in the context of Garda pay. It is somewhat extraordinary that, on the one hand, the Labour Party speaks about inequality and unfairness in society and states that it is part of its philosophy to address it while, on the other, in the past week alone it has been statistically proven that young graduates are leaving this country in droves. They include young people involved in nursing and teaching who do not receive or enjoy proper pay or conditions. Gardaí putting themselves in the line of fire are being treated abysmally in terms of pay and conditions. It is rather interesting to hear the spin being put on the fact that recruitment has restarted because the reality in this regard shows a net reduction in numbers as a result of retirements, career breaks, etc. The Garda force is currently over 200 short of 12,000, which is way below the figure that we in Fianna Fáil have proposed if we are returned to government. We favour a restoration of the force's strength to 14,000. Such a move is necessary and anybody living in rural Ireland in particular will know that more gardaí are required on the ground.

There is a very well educated cohort in society that wants to stay, work and live in Ireland. The people concerned have graduated as nurses and were told there was a nursing shortage but the Government has failed abysmally to attract back nurses under a scheme proposed last year. One figure indicates that fewer than 50 people have taken it up. Why is this? It is because they are not receiving or enjoying the proper pay and conditions commensurate with what they have learned. Not only that, it is a competitive environment and they are being attracted elsewhere. It is extraordinary that a couple of years ago we had teachers who could not get jobs, but now we have a teacher shortage that will, according to the information publicly available, get worse. This is despite the Government's indication that it will provide a significant number of extra places next September. There will be no teachers around at that stage because they will be in Dubai where they can get more pay than they do here and it will be tax free.

I call on the Minister for Public Expenditure and Reform, Deputy Brendan Howlin, to come before the House to debate the position with regard to this group of people and what the Government, in its dying days, is planning to do in order to give some meaning to the question of how to treat people in society who have gone through the education system, who have a reasonable expectation of having jobs in their own country but who find they cannot do so because they will not receive sufficient pay and the conditions under which they are asked to operate are totally unacceptable. I am proposing an amendment to the Order of Business to call the Minister before the House.

I congratulate Ms Arlene Foster on her election as leader of the Democratic Unionist Party, DUP, and wish her well in that job. Great progress has been made. It is good to see a lady and somebody from west of the River Bann as leader of the DUP which is one of the largest parties in the North.

I support my colleagues, Senators Mary Ann O'Brien and John Whelan, in the comments they made about the Environmental Protection Agency, EPA, and its apparently dilatory nature in observing and inspecting the plant in County Laois, which was highlighted in the "Prime Time" programme. Judge Catherine Staines questioned why the EPA had taken the case to the District Court on learning that she did not have the power to suspend the operations of the plant. The EPA must answer questions on wider issues to answer in this regard. There are plants that can operate efficiently, effectively and within the rules. I am not suggesting this is happening, but if certain plants are taking shortcuts, perhaps for economic benefit, and, consequently, are a danger to the environment, not just an apparent danger but having a real and current effect as a result, the EPA must to be held to account and get its act together.

I agree with everyone else who has wished us all a very successful new year. Obviously, it will be shorter than in previous times.

I am impressed by some figures that have been given to me for visa length and tourist numbers. I grew up in the tourist business and believe we have not done enough to encourage tourism. Ireland is losing potentially hundreds of thousands of tourists compared to other countries. Schengen countries such as France attract many more tourists, for instance from China, as it is much easier for tourists to visit such countries. In Ireland holiday visas are only granted for short stays and never exceed 90 days. If we were to increase visa length, we would cut down on red tape and paperwork and encourage more people to visit. It would make sense to increase the length of visas, perhaps not to ten years as happens in the United States but to a period that would result in a decrease in red tape and an increase in tourist numbers. We also need to think about reducing the overall paperwork involved. A lot could be done on that basis.

The other issue being talked about today and which is on everyone's mind is flooding. We should look at a clean-up of rivers which contain masses of rubbish. It would have a massive benefit for the environment and also help tourism. There is potential for schoolchildren and volunteers to become involved. I will quote from an article in a British paper on a massive ongoing project in the United Kingdom which is experiencing great success:

There were shopping trolleys galore, of course, including 24 in a Sheffield lock alone; countless bikes and hundreds of tyres. Thousands of plastic bags, umpteen gas bottles, several car batteries and other debris were among the other objects removed from rivers, canals, locks and bridges during clear up operations across England and Wales by the Canal & River Trust.

The article in The Guardian is entitled, From a hand grenade to a Mercedes. It actually found a hand grenade dating from the Second World War in the clean-up of rivers and it still had the pin in it. We should not just ask the Government to do this, we should also encourage it to see what we could do in local areas to have rivers tidied up to help in the battle against floods.

I welcome the Leader's commitment to hold a debate next week on flooding. It is welcome that a number of Ministers, including the Taoiseach and the Minister for the Environment, Community and Local Government, Deputy Alan Kelly, yesterday met members of the insurance industry to see what could be done about insuring people who found themselves distressed as a result of flooding.

I raise an issue about a recent HEA report which is of enormous concern, given that we are now heading into CAO applications time. One in six students does not progress from first to second year in all areas of third level education, including ITs and universities.

The figure is as high as one in three for maths related courses such as computer science. There have been a number of questions asked about why this is happening. One is why do students make ill-informed choices. It is very late in the day to call for a debate, but if it was possible, it would be beneficial to have a debate with the Minister for Education and Skills on this issue. There are enormous costs to society, which have been identified in terms of the need for computer science, maths, construction and engineering graduates, but I am more concerned about the cost to individual students and their families. A number of students cited such reasons for not progressing as poor health, cost and the lack of accommodation.

It is very sad to see students who find themselves, after just one year of an educational experience, effectively removed from the opportunity of pursuing a third level education. There needs to be a national consultation on why this is happening in which second level students and students in universities through the Union of Students in Ireland will be engaged. It is not enough for the HEA to simply produce a report; a lot more needs to be done. The debate and discussion needs to be extended to really discover what can be done to prevent this dropout rate which is very high by international standards.

The House is in its final term and there will be a busy schedule, with a lot of legislation to be considered and debates to be held. Will the Leader arrange a debate on the HSE's programme for progressing disability services for children and young people? If not on that specific topic, perhaps the debate might be on the more broader themes of primary care facilities and disability services in general. Members are aware that €4 million for an additional 80 posts was provided under that programme in 2014 and that an allocation of €6 million was announced in 2015 for 120 new staff appointments. The rationale was to achieve a targeted reduction of waiting lists, but the reality is that this did not happen. In figures released to me in debates on Commencement matters in this House and through direct interaction with the HSE we find that waiting list numbers for appointments for children's physiotherapy, occupational therapy and speech and language therapy are phenomenally high. We need to make sure disability services are cognisant of demographic changes and that the funding provided has been increased to cope with additional demand.

I will highlight some waiting lists figures in County Cavan. There are 102 children who have been waiting for six months or more for physiotherapy; 177 children have been waiting for six months or more for occupational therapy, while 25 children have been waiting for six months or more for speech and language therapy. With regard to speech and language therapy waiting lists, national figures at the end of September 2015 showed that 12,587 were waiting for assessment, while 8,437 were awaiting treatment across all services. The issue is not confined to one region; it arises right across the State. I know that the Minister of State has addressed Commencement matters in this House, particularly issues affecting my county of Cavan, but it is important, in the context of the upcoming general election, from which none of us can hide, that this issue be at the front and centre and that children have access to assessments and services when needed. The children on waiting lists are in their formative years and there is no point in being given an appointment two or three years down the line if the services are needed now.

I join my colleagues in wishing everybody, on all sides of the House, a successful, healthy and, I hope, prosperous new year.

The rural GP is a bedrock of rural society. We have phenomenal GPs the length and breadth of the country. The GPs who operate in rural areas of County Clare have the absolute respect, loyalty and support of the people living in those areas. This was evident, in particular, in the past few weeks at public meetings called to discuss rural practices and the problem of attracting young doctors into rural practices. Young doctors have no confidence that they could make a living in rural practices. Owing to other commitments I was not in a position to attend either of the two public meetings held, but I received a full report on them. It is quite shocking to think GPs have to hold public meetings to gain basic benefits. At the last meeting held one week ago GPs requested that action be taken immediately and that commitments be made and honoured within two weeks. I do not see these commitments being made, honoured or followed up.

Will the Leader organise a debate on rural GPs in which the Minister for Health can update us not just on restoring what has been taken from GPs, which should never have been taken because of the vital role they play in society, but on his and the HSE's plans to support and develop rural GP practices? Health is what is most important to all citizens but those living in rural Ireland, particularly rural Clare, worry more about it because of the decline in many services. I want to see all the requests the GPs have made honoured and to hear the long-term plan for them. This House is the ideal place to have that discussion.

I do not know what happened over the Christmas break, but some of the Government Senators sound as if they are in opposition. Senator Martin Conway has just given out about the decline in rural GP services, even though the Government has cut services and made them unviable.

The Senator is absolutely right.

Senator Aideen Hayden gave out about dropout rates from college, but the Government cut the number of guidance counsellors. It is a little ridiculous. The Senators should get real.

Hunger strike has been a weapon of last resort in Ireland as far back as bards and poets who used it during the time of the Brehon laws and it has been used by political prisoners from Thomas Ashe to Bobby Sands. Even Mahatma Gandhi took the example of the Irish hunger strikers. A Palestinian journalist, Muhammad al-Qeq, is being held without trial in an Israeli jail and has been on hunger strike for 50 days. He has been moved to hospital and is near death. Will the Leader, please, express our sincere concern for this prisoner and make representations to the Minister for Foreign Affairs and Trade, Deputy Charles Flanagan, to convey this message to the Israeli Government? It is not a situation with which any of us should be comfortable.

I note the Cathaoirleach welcomed Mr. George Hamilton to the Visitors Gallery. Senator John Whelan spoke about a nation holding its breath and the people of Portlaoise holding theirs on the issue of pollution. Another of George’s famous phrases was “Danger here”. We have been looking for answers from the Environmental Protection Agency, EPA, which is one of the biggest bloody oxymorons in the lexicon of Government agencies because it does not protect the environment, high up or low down. The director general of the EPA has said she does not see her role as being one of a watch dog or of prosecuting polluters. We in this Chamber have called time and again for immunity to prosecution to be removed from the EPA. If the EPA is doing its job correctly, there is no need for it to be protected by immunity to prosecution. What is it afraid of? The Minister for the Environment, Community and Local Government, Deputy Alan Kelly, and the Minister of State at the Department, Deputy Ann Phelan, told us here that they would report to us on the immunity but they have not bothered to do so. They keep buying time and fobbing us off. I am sick of being fobbed off. I second Senator Mary Ann O’Brien’s amendment to the Order of Business that the Minister for the Environment, Community and Local Government come to the House today to answer questions about the EPA. Too many people are suffering ill health because the EPA is not enforcing the proper regulations on known polluters, as identified by the European Union.

I wish everybody a very happy new year. May all their gods go with them, in whatever way they come in the next few months.

I support Senator John Whelan. It is interesting that it is Fine Gael, the Labour Party and Independent Members who are coming together on this side of the House to find out how we can boil town-wide tankers of used oil in Portlaoise, the smell of which has a huge effect on health, without getting an answer from the Environmental Protection Agency, EPA. I am quoting the national broadcaster, but the most interesting aspect of the documentary was that the EPA had made the weakest defence I had ever come across, in trying to tell us what it was, why it was like that and whether it was good, bad or indifferent. It was so weak that one would despair.

It is interesting because when I came into this House as a young buck, and much thinner, I really thought that things happened much faster but one learns in politics that it takes a long time to bring about change and we accept that. Senator John Whelan spent two years examining and bringing forward reports on this issue, yet there has been an impasse. I would like the Minister to tell us - the Leader might facilitate us in this regard - where exactly this report is, what it states and why we have had such weakness from the EPA at a time when we are all talking about climate change, the effect of atmosphere on water and the need for cleanliness in our atmosphere for health regarding the explanations from companies such as this one previously fined for causing such pollution. I have to agree with Senator John Whelan in this regard.

I commend a recent article on IrishCentral to the Leader and Members of this House on a topic near and dear to us. On this day, 13 January 1800, Daniel O'Connell made the first of many speeches opposing Ireland's union with Britain. It was his first ever speech and it was made in Dublin at a protest meeting against the union. As Members will be well aware, the introduction of that Act was the exact opposite of the aims of the United Irishmen and the purpose of the 1798 rebellion which, it is important to remind ourselves, was supported by Protestant, Catholic and dissenter and it might be useful to draw on a short excerpt of a speech by Daniel O'Connell which expressed his sentiments in this regard. He stated: "Let every man who feels with me proclaim, that if the alternative were offered him of Union, or the re-enactment of the Penal Code in all its pristine horrors, that he would prefer without hesitation the latter, as the lesser and more sufferable evil." O'Connell went on to proclaim that he would rather confide in the justice of his brethren, the Protestants of Ireland who liberated him, than lay his country at the feet of foreigners. In this centenary year of the Easter Rising, it is appropriate that we rededicate ourselves to complete the final chapter in ending British involvement in Ireland or, more precisely, in the Six Counties, as De Valera famously put it at his meeting with Chamberlain in London in April 1938. A debate in this House on achieving that objective would be a fitting tribute to the sentiments of Daniel O'Connell, the memory of the patriots of 1916 and the subsequent patriots in the War of Independence. I hope the Leader can find time to accommodate that request before the general election is called.

I wish to briefly mention the issue of obesity which I have been raising for the past five years. A recent documentary on RTE One did the country some service. It was by Dr. Eva Orsmond who has a reputation as a hardliner on this issue and came to be known through "Operation Transformation" some years ago. Most people who watched the documentary would have found it shocking, although it came as no surprise to me. There was one good suggestion in the documentary. I am often accused of being somewhat like a nanny state in my approach to this issue, but it is clear that something must be done. We cannot continue to say "No" to all the small measures that might help this issue. Parents need a hand when it comes to the issue of their children's health. They cannot be totally in control of what their children eat. Everyone tells me that the problem comes back to the parents, but we are on track to be the fattest people in Europe in a relatively short period. I have stated in this House 100 times that one in four children is overweight or obese. Children are having their teeth removed at a very young age. Imagine them going through life without their primary teeth, which they are losing before the age of ten years. It is frightening and I am blue in the face talking about the issue. I feel as if I am bashing my head against a brick wall. We have not done enough about it.

The Government, of which my party is a member, has not done enough about it. We are not taking it seriously enough. The argument was made that a sugar tax on its own would not make a difference. The same argument has been made about various other suggestions, but if we do not introduce changes, we will not solve this problem. We cannot continue leaving it up to parents because clearly nothing is being done in the short or longer term by them. Education is very important. One of the documentary's participants is involved in a school in County Louth-----

The Senator is over time.

I am not the only one to go a little over time. I feel very passionately about this issue.

The Senator has gone a fair bit over time.

The Senator should give me a chance. Food companies have a role to play, as does wider society and the Government. This may come across as a nanny state, but the Government clearly has a role to play in dealing with this issue. I hope if the Government is re-elected, it will put it at the very top of its list of priorities. We talk about the health service every day of the week-----

The Senator is way over time.

I will finish on this point. I apologise for going over time. We talk about the health service every day of the week and its difficulties. If we did not have so many people who are unhealthy because of diet choices, we would not have as many people in hospitals.

First and foremost, I remember a great Galwegian, Irishman and sportsman, Mr. Christy O'Connor Jnr. It was a sad day for all of us when he departed this world. I also acknowledge my former colleagues in the Permanent Defence Force and the Reserve Defence Force for the work they do. I reiterate that they were out in the floods, not because they wanted to be but because they had to be. They were ordered to be there. They were out morning, noon and night and provided great relief for householders.

Senator Catherine Noone will be rather surprised to hear that I totally support her. As a rotund gentleman, some might argue that I would not have a lot to say about obesity, but I paid and I am paying the price for obesity. I have type 2 diabetes and I am grossly overweight, although I am trying to do something about it. The no fry zone movement is calling for chip shops not to be located within 500 m of schools. There are schools from which children are popping out every day of the week to buy bags of chips and bottles of cola. This is worthy of a discussion in this House and I support Senator Catherine Noone's call in that regard. She has been embarrassing me on the issue of obesity for some time.

That was never my intention.

The issue of dropout levels in higher education was raised. I know that new jobs have been announced and admire the Government for what it has done-----

I ask the Senator to conclude.

The Cathaoirleach is very anxious with his bell today.

Many other Senators have indicated that they wish to contribute on the Order of Business.

However, in truth, the jobs announced are not real jobs; they are hours, split across several jobs, in schools. The one area in which we have let down the education system, for which we are now paying the price, is the number of of guidance counselling in schools. We must have a debate in this House with the Minister for Education on the issue of guidance and dropout rates at third level. I ask the Leader to arrange such a debate, although I know that time is a bit tight. I note that Deputy Pat Rabbitte has suggested the general election will be held on 26 February; therefore, time is getting very tight.

He will not face the electorate. He is running away.

I join other speakers in wishing the Cathaoirleach, all Members and staff a very happy, successful and healthy 2016. I agree with Senator Feargal Quinn in his points about ways in which tourism numbers could be increased. We are all delighted that in 2015 Ireland had its best year ever in terms of tourism and we are on target for growth of 6% in 2016. We had 7.9 million visitors in 2015 and they spent more than €4 billion, a huge sum. However, there is a danger looming on the horizon, namely, price gouging to which the chairman of Fáilte Ireland recently referred. He said Dublin prices presented a danger and that the creeping upwards was unacceptable. The problem is principally manifested in Dublin and those Members of this House who hail from outside the Pale have become aware of it in the past year. This is an issue which we must watch closely. Fáilte Ireland has been very successful with its promotion of the Wild Atlantic Way, Ireland's Ancient East, conference business and so forth.

I am delighted to hear it is spending more and promoting that further. We have been very lucky with our zero tax on travel, the 9% VAT in the hospitality area, the strength of the dollar and sterling and the strong exchange rate. By and large, we have provided good value for money. However, if prices continue to rise unacceptably, particularly in the capital city, the current Government or the next one will have to review the 9% tax rate, which would be unfortunate for tourism.

On a point of order, in an effort to be kind, on what Senator Gerard P. Craughwell said, there has been no rise in the number of dropouts at second level or the correlation between the number and a decrease in the number of guidance counsellors.

That is not a point of order. We have limited time for the Order of Business.

It is a statistical point. The Senator cannot make such generalisations when they are statistically incorrect.

A comment from the Independent Senator on behalf of the Government.

I second the amendment proposed by Senator Marie Mooney and agree with her sentiments about the yellow pack salaries being paid to new teachers, gardaí and nurses.

I appreciate that time is short in terms of the end of the current Administration, but I call for a debate on agriculture as soon as possible within the next fortnight. As Members are aware, a variety of issues face farming families throughout the country and today one of the farming organisations is lobbying in the vicinity of the House. There is an issue, in particular, about anti-competitive practices, of which those living in Border counties are particularly aware. As a result of these practices, the export of cattle to Northern Ireland and elsewhere in the United Kingdom is impeded. Between currency exchange rates and the lower prices factories are prepared to pay here, the price of cattle north of the Border is 82 cent more per kilo than here. We are exporting weanlings to Italy, Tunisia and other countries, but we cannot sell our animals just a couple of miles across the Border where there are buyers and there is demand and where the benefit would be a greater yield and a return to farm families throughout the country. This issue needs to be examined as it concverns an anti-competitive practice.

Other issues of concern include the reduced competition among processors. With respect to all those involved in processing, it seems that the well known Slaney and Irish Country Meats plant at Camolin is set to merge with one of the larger players. I am not sure this best serves the industry as a whole, processors or farm families throughout the country. It would be useful to consider these issues in advance of the general election. Clearly, agricultural issues will be matters of debate for those seeking to be elected to the Dáil as farmers are putting them on the agenda. We could assist that process and the pursuit of a better regime for farmers, processors and consumers by debating them in this House.

I express my condolences to the O'Connor family following the sad passing of Christy O'Connor Jnr. while on a family holiday in Tenerife recently. I had the pleasure of being within 50 yards of him when he played that famous shot at the Belfry, which is recognised as one of the best golf shots ever played on any golf course. Subsequently, I met his opponent, Fred Couples, who was No. 1 in the world at the time. The Cathaoirleach is a golfer himself.

He is good with a two iron.

Does Senator Terry Brennan have a question for the Leader?

Fred Couples acknowledged to me that it was the best shot under extreme pressure he had ever seen.

Does the Senator have a question for the Leader?

I just wish to acknowledge the contribution made by Christy O'Connor Jnr. and express my condolences to his immediate family.

I join in the words of sympathy for the late Christy O'Connor Jnr. In a nutshell, he lit up every room he went into and that was widely felt at his funeral yesterday in Galway.

I support the call for a debate on the health impacts of excessive sugar consumption. That was quite a documentary broadcast this week by RTE. There must be legislative solutions in this regard. As we have said for a long time, there is an urgent need for a debate on career guidance, given the high number of dropouts in third level education, particularly in first year. However, the main reason I wish to speak is that I wish to refer to the human misery that has befallen those affected by flooding. Half of Ireland is under water and has been for the last month. The bottom line is that anyone whose property was flooded last year and in 2009 has been failed by the State and the Government. We have a great example of successful works in Moneymore, Oranmore, where we got all of the agencies into a room and the National Parks and Wildlife Service to agree that the OPW could take the lead. Some 52 farmers worked together and these families are relieved their properties have not been flooded again this time.

We must examine various solutions, some of which were mentioned by Senators Michael Mullins and Feargal Quinn. The Woodland League has approached me with an interesting solution that has worked in Wales, in particular. A Bangor University study, led by farmers, has shown that where uplands are planted by native trees with deep roots, they can absorb rainfall 67 times faster than grassland. In Wales they have experienced a 29% decrease in flooding in their lowlands with just an extra 5% planting of native trees. That is good news and something we should seek to replicate. Norway experiences almost no flooding because it has allowed for the natural regeneration of its forests for 50 years. We have not done this. I am glad that the Leader has said the Minister for Agriculture, Food and the Marine, Deputy Simon Coveney, will attend the House next week. The Minister should seriously examine this recommendation. We need to discuss planting perhaps 10% of uplands. At a conservative estimate, this could result in 40% less flooding. Last week Bob Geldof visited Thoor Ballylee and committed to help us to raise funds to alleviate the awful flooding there. While he is helping us, that is not a sustainable solution. I am talking about planting uplands with native trees because there is evidence to support it. We should incentivise farmers through grant diversion to be flood protectors. Would that not be a wonderful outcome since climate change is on its way and will be here to stay?

I support the amendment to the Order of Business proposed by my Independent colleague, Senator Mary Ann O'Brien. I also commend the work undertaken on this issue for some time by Senator John Whelan concerning the Environmental Protection Agency in Portlaoise. As the arguments have been well set out, I urge all Members to support the amendment.

As we are short of time, I will briefly mention two other issues. I call for a debate on the emergency department crisis. I raised this matter directly with the Minister for Health here before the Christmas recess, including the situation in Beaumont Hospital. However, things have deteriorated rapidly in the intervening period. Last week a wheelchair user had to sleep in a wheelchair in Beaumont Hospital for two nights because there were no trolleys or beds available. As the position is very serious, I ask the Leader to try to schedule a debate on it with the Minister for Health.

I ask the Leader to contact the Minister for Foreign Affairs and Trade to express concern about the health of a Palestinian journalist, Muhammad al-Qeq, who is currently on hunger strike. He was sentenced to six months without any trial under Israel's system of administrative detention. His health is deteriorating rapidly and there are serious concerns that he is near death. This is an issue Ireland should raise with the Israeli authorities, not just the individual circumstances but also Israel's blatant violation of international law in its use of administrative detention to send people to prison for months or years on end. Thousands of Palestinians have been sent to prison without charge, trial or due process. It is a very serious issue.

It is more than one year since the House unanimously passed a motion calling on the Government to recognise the state of Palestine. Will the Leader speak to the Minister about it and see to it that the will of this House and that of the Dáil, subsequently, is acted on?

I join colleagues in expressing my condolences to the family and friends of the late Christy O'Connor Jnr. He was a highly regarded sportsman and ambassador not only for Galway but also for Ireland.

I welcome the intervention of the Taoiseach with the insurance industry following the floods across the country. This is a huge issue in the case of houses prone to flooding. In the run-up to Christmas I spent many days in the Claregalway area, where a number of houses were flooded in 2009. There is a big question, in particular, in those areas where works have taken place. There needs to be an assurance that insurance cover will be available for homes and to families once works have taken place to deal with flooding issues. I welcome the Leader's indication that there will be a debate on the issue in the House next week as it is serious. We need to start dealing with it now, as well as planning for the future.

The Leader of the Opposition, Senator Darragh O'Brien, raised a question about the salaries of Garda trainees and new recruits. He is correct in that new trainee gardaí receive a basic allowance of €184 a week, plus a living allowance of €77.92. After 32 weeks training, they are attested and put on the first point of the garda salary scale, €23,171, rising to a maximum of €45,793 after 19 years service. The garda pay scale does not include allowances and does not reflect the full earnings of a garda. Newly attested gardaí are assigned to front-line duties and work the garda roster, work which attracts unsocial hours payments. Such payments amount to between 25% and 30% of their earnings. Even at the entry level of €23,171 and the lower end of the unsocial hours scale, the payments will add almost €5,800 to the salary of a new garda. This was the reply given by the Minister in the other House. I take on board what the Senator and Senator Paschal Mooney mentioned about salaries. The Leader of the Opposition is welcome to table a Commencement matter on the issue. However, these are the facts as outlined by the Minister in the other House and I do not think the answer would be any different.

Senator Darragh O'Brien also mentioned Fianna Fáil's policy on what he called "higher earners". Fianna Fáil describes those on salaries of €32,000 or more as higher earners. In the past two budgets it voted against provisions for tax increases and benefits for those earning less than €32,000.

We are saying there is a fairer and better way.

The Leader to continue, without interruption.

Whom Fianna Fáil describes as higher earners include those on €32,000-----

The Leader is giving incorrect information on the floor of the House.

-----but it can join Sinn Féin in having the same policies in this respect.

On the CFRAM study, I would worry if people were not given sufficient time and notice in the public consultation process, a point made by Senator Darragh O'Brien. I will raise the matter with the appropriate Minister, but the Senator will have the opportunity to raise it with the Minister next week.

Like the Cathaoirleach, Senator Ivana Bacik congratulated Mr. Peter Finnegan on being appointed to his new position. I join in the congratulations.

Senator Ivana Bacik also outlined the fact that the unemployment rate was down to 8.8%. It is extraordinary that we have such figures. When the Government took office, the unemployment rate was in excess of 15%. While it is now down to 8.8%, there is still an amount of work to be done. It is still the No. 1 priority of the Government to reward people in work and to get more people back into employment.

I also note Senator Ivana Bacik's comments on the upper age limit for entry into the Garda - 35 years - which she suggested should be examined. I will certainly bring the matter to the attention of the Minister for Justice and Equality.

Senator Ivana Bacik also raised the question of ending war crimes in Syria, something on which we would all agree. We commend all the humanitarian workers involved in that area.

Senators Darragh O'Brien, John Whelan, Jim D'Arcy, James Heffernan, Marie-Louise O'Donnell and Averil Power - I hope I did not miss anybody - spoke about the Environmental Protection Agency, EPA, and called for a debate with the Minister for the Environment, Community and Local Government, Deputy Alan Kelly. All of the Senators have raised very important issues about public health and the plant in Portlaoise and so on. I have a note from the Department which states:

The role of the Minister and his Department is to provide a comprehensive environmental legislative framework through which the relevant authorities can operate effectively.

The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is an independent public body established in July 1993 under the Environmental Protection Agency Act, 1992. It should be noted that the Minister is precluded under section 79(3) of the Act from exercising "any power or control in relation to the performance in particular circumstances by the Agency-----

The Leader to continue, without interruption.

I am replying. The note continues:

...of a function assigned to or by it under this Act", including the issuing and enforcement of licences by the EPA. As such, it would be inappropriate for the Minister to discuss the specific case raised as he has no statutory role in the relevant EPA decision making process. The Department is aware that, following concerns raised about the emissions from the facility in question in Seanad Éireann on 9th July 2014, the EPA was requested by the previous Minister to prepare a report on the operation of the facility in question, and that a report was subsequently published on 13th May 2015, and is available to the public on the EPA website.

As regards the future of the EPA, it should be noted that an independent Review of the EPA was carried out by an expert Review Group and was presented to the Minister in May 2011. The Report's general finding was that the EPA overall has provided "considerable benefit for Ireland's environment and for the health and well-being of its people". The EPA Review report, which is available from www.epa.ie, made a total of 58 recommendations, with an implementation plan developed to address these. A progress report on the implementation of the recommendations was published in August 2014, which shows that substantial progress has been made in terms of their implementation. Of the 58 recommendations, 43 have been fully completed/implemented with the remaining 15 being addressed either as on-going activities or still needing to be progressed for completion. Also, in the context of the Government's programme to reduce and rationalise statutory bodies, the EPA was further restructured as recently as 1st August 2014, when it was merged with the former Radiological Protection Institute of Ireland (RPII).

In the circumstances, there are no plans to undertake any further restructuring of the EPA at this time, though it is the case that public bodies under the aegis of the Department are kept under regular, on-going review, and are also subject to scrutiny by the Oireachtas.

The Minister is confident that the EPA will continue to meet its mandate to safeguard and improve Ireland's environment.

That is the reply I received from the Department as the Order of Business progressed. I cannot facilitate a debate on the issue. While I saw the programme and certainly have grave reservations about the matter, I cannot support the amendment to the Order of Business as proposed in view of the Department's reply.

Senator Michael Mullins outlined his support for the families affected by flooding and commended all of the emergency services and voluntary workers involved. In addition, he outlined the damage caused to roads and the need for all local authorities to contact the Department and submit the reports requested of them by it.

Senator Sean D. Barrett congratulated all of the winners, as well as all of the contestants, in the Young Scientist Exhibition. It truly was remarkable and wonderful to see so many young people involved in this event.

As I mentioned, Senator John Whelan raised the public health issue in Portlaoise. I have addressed the matter.

Senator Paschal Mooney raised the issue of Garda recruitment and referred to the need for more gardaí. He is right; there certainly is a need for additional gardaí because even with the additional gardaí being provided by the Government through the reopening of the Garda College in Templemore, a number of gardaí have retired, others have taken leave of absence and so on, with the consequence that we are in a negative position. There is, therefore, a need for further recruitment of gardaí. However, it was bound to happen that numbers would fall. If one closes the training facility, one will not have new gardaí.

I am not sure it actually was closed.

That is precisely what the previous Government did.

I do not believe it closed it. The Leader should check his facts first.

The Leader to continue, without interruption. He is trying to reply to questions raised on the Order of Business.

Moreover, it continued to recruit to the Army.

If the Senator wants to deal with the semantics of it, either closing it or having no garda trained in it-----

The previous Government continued to recruit to the Army.

Whatever the case may be, there were no new gardaí.

I wonder what the Government would have done.

That is what the Senator's party presided over when it was in office.

What about pay and conditions? The Government has been in office for five years.

That is exactly what happened.

That was five or six years ago.

Please, Senator. The Leader to continue, without interruption.

Members are talking about the present. It is Government spin as fewer gardaí are on the beat.

Senator Jim D'Arcy complimented Ms Arlene Foster on her election as the new leader of the DUP. I believe all Members would wish to join in complimenting her on her appointment.

Senator Feargal Quinn referred to tourism and the need to increase the length of holiday visas, as other European countries in the Schengen area have done. I will certainly bring that matter to the attention of the relevant Minister. The tourism figures released for the past year far surpassed anybody's projections. A point was raised by Senator Paul Coghlan who used the phrase "price gouging". I can certainly testify, as can other Members present, that in the past two to three years hotel prices have increased by up to 40% in Dublin.

They are still rising.

Consequently, there is a need to retain value for money as otherwise there is no question but that it will be necessary to reconsider the VAT rate of 9%.

Senator Feargal Quinn also spoke about flooding and the need to clean up rivers and how in many cases this could be done on a voluntary basis. It is a point he should certainly raise next week when the Minister is present.

Senator Aideen Hayden referred to the dropout rate of students in third level education. She said it was due to many reasons, including the cost of accommodation, etc., and called for a debate on the issue.

While time is running out for Members in seeking debates on various issues, I will try to facilitate as many of them as possible, with the co-operation of the Ministers involved.

Senator Kathryn Reilly called for a debate on disability services for children and specifically mentioned Cavan in that regard. She could seek to have the issue addressed by way of a Commencement matter.

Senator Martin Conway spoke about the plight of rural general practitioners and their paramount importance to rural communities. As in the case of Senator Kathryn Reilly, this matter could be tabled for discussion as a Commencement matter, at which time the Senator could obtain the up-to-date position from the Minister for Health.

Senators James Heffernan and Averil Power referred to the plight of a Palestinian journalist imprisoned in Israel. I will bring the matter to the attention of the Minister for Foreign Affairs and Trade. I am sure the Senators, individually, will also bring it to his attention.

Senator Marie-Louise O'Donnell also referred to the Environmental Protection Agency, EPA, and the position in Portlaoise, an issue I have addressed.

Senator Jim Walsh referred to the call made on 13 January 1800 by Daniel O'Connell for independence for Ireland and its right to have its own parliament. His call was followed on by Parnell and Redmond in seeking Home Rule. The Senator also spoke about the unification of Ireland. It is recognised by all sides that should a majority of the people of Northern Ireland vote in favour of a united Ireland, the British Parliament will agree to it. Relationships between Ireland and Britain have progressed and long may it continue.

Senator Catherine Noone raised the issue of obesity, a matter she has raised in the House on numerous occasions. She has suggested we are not doing sufficient in this regard and called for the introduction of a sugar tax. Her call was supported by Senator Gerard P. Craughwell. As we have previously debated the issue, perhaps she might consider tabling it for discussion as a Commencement matter, at which time she could obtain the up-to-date position from the Minister for Health.

Senators Gerard P. Craughwell, Terry Brennan and Hildegarde Naughton spoke about the untimely death of Christy O'Connor Jnr. who was a wonderful ambassador not only for his sport but also for the whole country. The presence of the Ryder Cup in the church during his funeral mass was seen as a great gesture.

Senator Gerard P. Craughwell also raised the issue of having no-fry zones in schools in tackling the problem of obesity, a matter I have addressed.

Senator Marc MacSharry spoke about agriculture and called for a debate on the need to address anti-competitive practices in the meat industry. I will try to arrange for the Minister for Agriculture, Food and the Marine to come to the House for such a debate. Deputy Simon Coveney has been one of the best Ministers for Agriculture we have had in many a long year. Naturally, I would say that, but I also believe it to be the case.

The Senator has been the best Leader of the Seanad for many a long year, too.

Senator Fidelma Healy Eames raised a number of pertinent matters related to flooding, an issue on which we will have a debate next week. I hope the Senator will avail of the opportunity provided to raise with the Minister the issues she has highlighted.

Senator Averil Power called for a debate on the crisis in emergency departments. She also noted the need to recognise the state of Palestine, as was outlined in the other House last year.

Senator Hildegarde Naughton also raised the issue of flooding and referred to the meeting held yesterday with insurance industry interests.

The Taoiseach mentioned that the meeting had been very constructive, with all parties acknowledging the exceptional nature of recent events and the considerable distress caused to the victims of flooding. They agreed to work together to find the best possible ways to provide maximum insurance cover for all concerned. That would be the wish of everyone. We can have the debate sought next week.

I am afraid I cannot accede to the requests made to amend the Order of Business.

I wish to be associated with the expressions of sympathy to the family of the late Christy O'Connor Jnr.

Senator Mary Ann O'Brien has proposed an amendment to the Order of Business, "That a debate with the Minister for the Environment, Community and Local Government on the need to remove the immunities accorded to certain officials of the Environmental Protection Agency be taken today." Is the amendment being pressed?

Amendment put:
The Seanad divided: Tá, 17; Níl, 21.

  • Barrett, Sean D.
  • Craughwell, Gerard P.
  • Cullinane, David.
  • Daly, Mark.
  • Healy Eames, Fidelma.
  • Heffernan, James.
  • MacSharry, Marc.
  • Mooney, Paschal.
  • Ó Murchú, Labhrás.
  • O'Brien, Darragh.
  • O'Brien, Mary Ann.
  • O'Donnell, Marie-Louise.
  • Power, Averil.
  • Quinn, Feargal.
  • Whelan, John.
  • White, Mary M.
  • Wilson, Diarmuid.

Níl

  • Bacik, Ivana.
  • Brennan, Terry.
  • Burke, Colm.
  • Cahill, Máiría.
  • Coghlan, Paul.
  • Comiskey, Michael.
  • Conway, Martin.
  • Cummins, Maurice.
  • D'Arcy, Jim.
  • D'Arcy, Michael.
  • Hayden, Aideen.
  • Henry, Imelda.
  • Keane, Cáit.
  • Moloney, Marie.
  • Moran, Mary.
  • Mulcahy, Tony.
  • Mullins, Michael.
  • Naughton, Hildegarde.
  • Noone, Catherine.
  • O'Neill, Pat.
  • Sheahan, Tom.
Tellers: Tá, Senators James Heffernan and Mary Ann O'Brien; Níl, Senators Paul Coghlan and Aideen Hayden.
Amendment declared lost.

Senator Paschal Mooney has proposed an amendment to the Order of Business, "That a debate with the Minister for Public Expenditure and Reform on the levels of pay applicable to teachers, nurses and members of An Garda Síochána be taken today." Is the amendment being pressed?

Amendment put:
The Seanad divided: Tá, 15; Níl, 25.

  • Barrett, Sean D.
  • Craughwell, Gerard P.
  • Cullinane, David.
  • Daly, Mark.
  • Healy Eames, Fidelma.
  • Heffernan, James.
  • MacSharry, Marc.
  • Mooney, Paschal.
  • Ó Murchú, Labhrás.
  • O'Brien, Darragh.
  • Power, Averil.
  • Quinn, Feargal.
  • Walsh, Jim.
  • White, Mary M.
  • Wilson, Diarmuid.

Níl

  • Bacik, Ivana.
  • Brennan, Terry.
  • Burke, Colm.
  • Cahill, Máiría.
  • Coghlan, Paul.
  • Comiskey, Michael.
  • Conway, Martin.
  • Cummins, Maurice.
  • D'Arcy, Jim.
  • D'Arcy, Michael.
  • Gilroy, John.
  • Hayden, Aideen.
  • Henry, Imelda.
  • Keane, Cáit.
  • Moloney, Marie.
  • Moran, Mary.
  • Mulcahy, Tony.
  • Mullins, Michael.
  • Naughton, Hildegarde.
  • Noone, Catherine.
  • O'Brien, Mary Ann.
  • O'Donnell, Marie-Louise.
  • O'Neill, Pat.
  • Sheahan, Tom.
  • Whelan, John.
Tellers: Tá, Senators Paschal Mooney and Diarmuid Wilson; Níl, Senators Paul Coghlan and Aideen Hayden.
Amendment declared lost.
Question put: "That the Order of Business be agreed to."
The Seanad divided: Tá, 26; Níl, 14.

  • Bacik, Ivana.
  • Brennan, Terry.
  • Burke, Colm.
  • Cahill, Máiría.
  • Coghlan, Paul.
  • Comiskey, Michael.
  • Conway, Martin.
  • Cummins, Maurice.
  • D'Arcy, Jim.
  • D'Arcy, Michael.
  • Gilroy, John.
  • Hayden, Aideen.
  • Healy Eames, Fidelma.
  • Henry, Imelda.
  • Keane, Cáit.
  • Moloney, Marie.
  • Moran, Mary.
  • Mulcahy, Tony.
  • Mullins, Michael.
  • Naughton, Hildegarde.
  • Noone, Catherine.
  • O'Donnell, Marie-Louise.
  • O'Keeffe, Susan.
  • O'Neill, Pat.
  • Quinn, Feargal.
  • Sheahan, Tom.

Níl

  • Barrett, Sean D.
  • Craughwell, Gerard P.
  • Cullinane, David.
  • Daly, Mark.
  • Heffernan, James.
  • MacSharry, Marc.
  • Mooney, Paschal.
  • Ó Murchú, Labhrás.
  • O'Brien, Darragh.
  • O'Brien, Mary Ann.
  • Power, Averil.
  • Walsh, Jim.
  • White, Mary M.
  • Wilson, Diarmuid.
Tellers: Tá, Senators Paul Coghlan and Aideen Hayden; Níl, Senators Paschal Mooney and Diarmuid Wilson.
Question declared carried.
Top
Share