Sean Fleming
Ceist:301 Mr. Fleming asked the Minister for Education and Science when an education welfare officer will be appointed in Portlaoise, County Laois [31166/03]
Vol. 577 No. 3
301 Mr. Fleming asked the Minister for Education and Science when an education welfare officer will be appointed in Portlaoise, County Laois [31166/03]
The Education (Welfare) Act was fully commenced on 5 July 2002. Under the Act, the national educational welfare board was established to ensure that every child attends school regularly or otherwise receives an education. To discharge its responsibilities, the board is developing a nationwide service to provide welfare-focused services to children, families and schools. It has appointed a chief executive officer, directors of corporate services and educational welfare services, and a management team of eight staff. To date, 53 educational welfare staff have been appointed. This includes 29 former school attendance officers who transferred to the board from the pre-existing service. The board has recently advertised a competition to fill a further 15 vacancies which will bring the total staff complement to 84.
At this stage of its development, the aim of the board is to provide a service to the most disadvantaged areas and most at-risk groups. Five regional teams have now been established with bases in Dublin, Cork, Limerick, Galway and Waterford and staff have been deployed since early December in areas of greatest disadvantage and in areas designated under the RAPID programme. Thirteen towns with significant school going populations, 12 of which are designated under the RAPID programme, also now have an educational welfare officer allocated to them. These towns are Dundalk, Drogheda, Navan, Athlone, Carlow, Kilkenny, Wexford, Bray, Clonmel, Tralee, Ennis, Sligo and Letterkenny. In addition, the board will follow up on urgent cases nationally where children are not receiving an education.