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Information Society Commission.

Dáil Éireann Debate, Wednesday - 8 February 2006

Wednesday, 8 February 2006

Ceisteanna (79)

Ruairí Quinn

Ceist:

168 Mr. Quinn asked the Taoiseach the names of the persons who are members of the Information Society Commission; the date on which the Information Society Commission first met; the date on which it most recently met; the number of reports it has published for his office or any other office; the titles of such reports; the areas in which such reports can be viewed; the date on which the term of the current Information Society Commission will expire; his plans to renew this project; the names of members of the Information Society Commission who have resigned since it was established; the names of persons added to the membership of the Information Society Commission since it was established; the cost of the Information Society Commission for each calendar year since its inception; and if he will make a statement on the matter. [4484/06]

Amharc ar fhreagra

Freagraí scríofa

Since 1997, the Government has established two successive Information Society Commissions to act as an independent advisory body to Government on matters relating to the information society. The first Information Society Commission was established by the Government in May 1997, in response to the report of Ireland's information society steering committee, entitled Information Society Ireland: Strategy for Action. It ended in December 2000. The second commission was set up in November 2001 and ended its term of office on 31 December 2004.

The amounts spent in respect of the Information Society Commission are as follows: year 2005 —€333,900; year 2004 —€484,722; year 2003 —€600,456; year 2002 —€514,954; year 2001- €305,638; year 2000 —€635,726; year 1999 —€661,645; year 1998 —€647,832; and year 1997 —€195,122.

During its term of office, the commission has published a number of influential reports on a range of topics and conducted a number of policy seminars. All reports of the second commission are available at www.isc.ie. The membership of the first Information Society Commission was:

Name

Company

Ms Vivienne Jupp (Chairman),

Andersen Consulting

Ms Selina Bonnie

Communications Consultant

Ms Paula Carey

ICTU

Mr. Donal Connell

3COM

Mr. Seán Corkery

Esat Telecom

Dr. Eamonn G. Hall

Telecom Éireann

Mr. Paul Kavanagh

Mr. Dermot McCarthy

Department of the Taoiseach

Mr. Eugene Murray

RTE

Mr. Séamus Ó Canainn

Blackrock Education Centre

Ms Barbara Patton

Irish Permanent plc (Note: Ms Patton resigned in 1998)

Reports published by the first Information Society Commission include:

Information Society Ireland Identity Guidelines;

Information Society Ireland — the World is Changing Fast — Show that you're ahead — 1st Report of the Information Society Commission, December 1997;

General Public Survey 1998 — Ireland as an Information Society . . . what the public is saying, November 1998;

Business Survey 1998 — Ireland as an Information Society . . . is the business community ready, December 1998;

Implementing the Information Society in Ireland: An Action Plan, January 1999;

Second Report of the Information Society Commission, April 1999;

Learning Report — Building a Capacity for change, July 1999;

General Public survey 1 — Ireland's Progress as an Information Society, October 1999;

Business Survey 1 — Irish Business in the Information Society, December 1999;

General Public Survey 2 — Early and Late Adopters of Net Technology, February 2000;

IT Access for All Report, March 2000;

General Public Survey 3 — New Technology: Attitudes and Expectations, March 2000;

Business Survey 2 — eWork: an activity, not a place, April 2000;

Business Survey 3 — New Technology in Irish Business: Skills and Training, May 2000;

Business Survey 4 — Internet Access and Usage within Irish Businesses, May 2000;

Benchmarking Ireland in the Information Society Report, May 2000;

How the Business Community is adapting to the Information Society in Ireland, September 2000;

How the General Public is adapting to the Information Society in Ireland, October 2000;

Third Report of the Information Society Commission, December 2000; and

Innovation in Learning in the Information Society: A comparative International Study (CRITE Report), December 2000.

The Membership of the Second Information Society Commission was:

Name

Company

Danny O’Hare (Chairman)

Former President of DCU (Dublin City University)

Claire Cunningham

Director, Aura Internet Services Ltd

Dr. Chris Coughlan

Hewlett Packard

Michael Byrne

CEO, Ennis Information Age Services

Jerry Shanahan

ICTU/Amicus

Karen Hynes

Manager of E-Business Services, Chambers of Commerce of Ireland

Colm Reilly

PA Consulting

Inez Bailey

Director, National Adult Literacy Agency

Dr. Eamonn Conway

Head of the Department of Theology and Religious Studies, Mary Immaculate College, UL (University of Limerick)

Robert Johnston

JLS Software Solutions

Clodagh O’Donnell

Client Executive, Financial Services Sector, IBM

Dee Cari

Torque Management

Marion O’Neill

Manager, Kilkenny Information Age Town

Dr. Patricia O’Hara

Manager, Policy Division, Western Development Commission

Christopher Took

Web Developer (resigned September 2002)

Charles Stanley-Smith

Chief Technical Officer, Piercom

Brian Lennon

Guidance Counsellor, St. Oliver’s College, Drogheda

Donal Toolan

Forum of People with Disabilities

Kathryn Raleigh

Director of the Irish Software Association, IBEC

Joe Horan

County Manager, South Dublin County Council

Peter Ryan

Assistant Secretary, Department of the Taoiseach

Reports published by the Second Information Society Commission include:

Learning in the 21st Century: Towards Personalisation, December 2004;

Ethics & Values in a Digital Age: Conference Proceedings, December 2004;

Learning to Innovate. Reperceiving the global Information Society, January 2005;

Survey Assessments of the Information Society in Ireland, By James Williams, Sylvia Blackwell, Brendan J. Whelan, ESRI, December 2004;

An eHealthy State?, December 2004;

21st Century Infrastructure, November 2004;

Current Perspectives on the Information Society, April 2004;

Ireland's Broadband Future, December 2003;

eGovernment — More than an automation of Government Services, October 2003;

eInclusion: expanding the Information Society in Ireland, October 2003;

Modernising Public Procurement, September 2003;

Delivering a World Class Payments Environment, June 2003;

Building the Knowledge Society, December 2002;

Building Trust through the Legal Framework, December 2002; and

Information Society Commission Business and General Public Survey, April 2003;

As recommended by the ISC in 2005, a review of our e-strategy is taking place. While the shape of that strategy has yet to be fully defined, it is clear that new approaches will be needed to support the transition taking place from the information society to the knowledge society. It is envisaged that the new strategy will require different structures for its implementation, as also envisaged by the ISC.

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