School Transport chaos continues for some Monaghan families

School Transport chaos continues for some Monaghan families – Matt Carthy TD

Cavan Monaghan Sinn Féin TD, Matt Carthy, has warned that some Monaghan families continue to deal with school transport chaos as their children have yet to secure a seat on their school bus.  He criticised the Department of Education for overseeing ‘the same repeated problems’ as last year which has resulted in children, who are eligible, for school transport being denied because of bureaucratic and technical issues.

Deputy Carthy raised the issue in the Dáil with the Minister for Education, Norma Foley.

He said:

“Last year, the biggest issue that my own office dealt with was the issue of school transport.

“I am aware of families where one parent had to give up their work because they went through the whole academic year with their child being unable to secure school transport for which they were eligible.

“There are often difficulties arising from the deadlines in place.  We know that deadlines are in place to make the management of the system a little more controllable but there are often valid reasons people cannot meet a deadline including, in some instances that I am aware of, where parents simply do not have the money at a particular point in time to pay for that school transport”.

Following a response from the Minister that 98% of ‘all valid and paid-on-time applicants’ had been issued with a ticket, Carthy stated:

“That means that 2% have not.  In percentage terms this may be a small number, but it is a substantial number in real terms and the impact is very real for those families.  I urge the Minister to ensure that this figure reach 100% as quickly as possible.”

Deputy Carthy also called on the Minister to ensure that when capacity increased from 50% to 100% ‘that the additional spaces that this will allow for is actually used to ensure that more students receive concessionary bus tickets and that those for whom other anomalies have emerged are catered for, rather than simply dividing in half the number of buses available?

“We should use the opportunity that this will present to ensure that more students can avail of their local school bus.”

This week the Sinn Féin TD said that he would continue to press the Minister in this regard.  “At a time when we are talking about climate action and the cost-of-living crisis it is crazy that, in County Monaghan, some parents have to get in their car to drive their children to school after watching the school bus drive past their front door – it is a chaotic situation that must be resolved” he concluded.

ENDS

Carthy criticises delays in establishment of Meat Regulator/ Food Ombudsman

Carthy criticises delays in establishment of Meat Regulator/ Food Ombudsman

 

Sinn Féin’s spokesperson on Agriculture Matt Carthy TD has criticised the ongoing delays with the establishment of a food ombudsman or meat regulator saying that Minister McConalogue ‘has effectively given processors a transition period to continue exploiting farmers.’

 

Deputy Carthy was speaking in response to a parliamentary question that indicated staffing levels at the Unfair Trading Practices Unit within the Department of Agriculture had reduced from a full-time equivalent of three to two staff members since it was created in May, while the enforcement authority has received no complaints and has spent none of it’s €1 million euro allocation other than on salaries.

 

Teachta Carthy said:

 

“By implementing the Unfair Trading Practices through statutory instrument rather than legislation Minister McConalogue took the most minimalist approach available to him.

 

“At that time, a unit with three members of staff was created in the Department of Agriculture, with assurance on a Head and others being assigned.

 

“The Minister also assured us at the time that he hoped legislation would be finalised by the end of the year.

 

“This week, in response to parliamentary questions it was been revealed that the same unit now has just two members of staff with a promise of ‘further resources.’  The updated Autumn Legislative Agenda also indicates that legislation to establish a full enforcement authority is at an incredibly early stage with no specifics in terms of timeframe.

 

“€1 million was budgeted for this office for this year yet the unit in the department has expended no money other than on salaries.

 

“This unit has apparently not received a single complaint, which is not surprising given that they haven’t even embarked on an information campaign.

 

“The only excuse for delay is a lack of political will.  The Minister has effectively given processors a transition period to continue exploiting farmers.

 

“Sinn Féin remain committed to the establishment of an Independent Meat Regulator to tackle unfair trading practices and cartel-like practices in the sector.  I will continue to press the Minister to deliver this in order to end the unfair market conditions in which our farmers have been expected to operate in for too long.”

ENDS

Government unlikely to deliver ANY affordable homes in Monaghan by 2025

Government unlikely to deliver ANY affordable homes in Monaghan by 2025 – Carthy

 

The government are unlikely to deliver a single affordable house in County Monaghan between now and 2025.  That’s according to Cavan Monaghan Sinn Féin TD, Matt Carthy, who questioned the Minister for Housing on the matter in the Dáil last week.

 

Deputy Carthy was questioning Minister Darragh O’Brien on the day it was revealed that just 8 affordable homes had been completed across the state last year.

 

Carthy told the Dáil that the current lack of ‘a where and when’ in the governments so-called housing strategy leaves it ‘hard to comprehend’ how any affordable homes will be delivered in Monaghan over the term of this government

 

During the debate with the Minister for Housing, Carthy highlighted that a family of two adults and four children would need an income of below €28,750 in order to be considered eligible for the housing waiting list while even if their income was twice that level they may still face problems in securing a mortgage.

 

The exchange went as follows:

 

Deputy Matt Carthy: “According to its most recently published strategy, the Government intends to provide 54,000 affordable home interventions, which is an interesting term, between now and 2030. How many of those affordable homes will be delivered in County Monaghan between now and 2025? Will the Minister outline his definition of “affordable” in those instances?”

 

Minister Darragh O’Brien: “As the Deputy stated, the Housing for All strategy delivers on a programme for Government commitment to step up housing supply and put affordability back at the heart of the housing system with an ambitious target of 300,000 homes over the next decade for social, affordable, cost-rental, private rental and private ownership housing. Measures to deliver this housing are supported by over €4 billion in funding annually, representing the highest ever level of Government investment in building social or affordable homes.  Some 54,000 affordable homes will be delivered between now and 2030, to be facilitated by local authorities, approved housing bodies, the Land Development Agency and through a strategic partnership between the State and retail banks.

 

“Delivery of affordable housing, in accordance with the schemes set out in the Affordable Housing Act 2021, which Sinn Féin supported, and the funding being made available, will be underpinned by the preparation by local authorities of housing delivery action plans, which they are currently preparing. Local authorities will be submitting their plans, to include measures relating to social and affordable housing, to me before the end of December 2021. This will allow each local authority, including Monaghan County Council, to determine any affordability constraints in their area based on the housing need and demand assessment and to plan provision accordingly. It is the first time local authorities have had this mechanism through the housing need and demand assessment.  Furthermore, a new Croí Cónaithe fund will be supporting home ownership in towns throughout the country by making serviced sites available at a reduced cost or by providing support towards the refurbishment of vacant properties where the level of vacancy or dereliction is high. A pathfinder programme, as I mentioned to colleagues earlier, will be initiated later this year to facilitate making some 2,000 sites available for homes.”

 

Matt Carthy: “In order for a strategy to work, and we can leave aside the debate on the wider strategy itself, it is crucially important that we know the where and the when.  It is hard for me to comprehend how we could say that the local authority will provide the Minister with a plan or vision by the end of this year and that, within that context, any affordable houses will be delivered in County Monaghan by 2025 considering that there are no proposals for that right now.

 

“The crucial difficulty is that in order for a family of two adults and four children in County Monaghan to even be considered eligible for the housing waiting list, their income needs to be below €28,750.  If a couple with four children had twice that income, even allowing for house prices in Monaghan, they would probably not secure a mortgage. Those income limits must be increased but there must also be a middle route for those who cannot get a mortgage or avail of social housing.”

 

Darragh O’Brien:  “This is kind of a different question but it is related. I agree with the Deputy on that. We have discussed this, and the review of the social housing limits is under way. We intend to publish that shortly. On affordable homes in Monaghan in particular, early delivery of affordable housing will arise from previously approved serviced sites funding of local authority schemes where construction has commenced. In the new year the first homes scheme, which will also be in place and which will apply to Monaghan, will begin to provide affordable homes in every county across the country. Under the serviced sites fund, which is being replaced by the affordable housing fund, Monaghan County Council submitted no schemes to the Department. That is a fact, not a criticism. Accordingly, there are no schemes in the pipeline in Monaghan. That is why we are asking it to bring forward any other measures it would envisage. We have to look at where we will be focusing affordability measures. In Clones, for example, the average house price is about €96,000 and the median price across the county is €161,500. Each local authority will have to identify areas where they believe they have affordability and viability constraints. Every local authority will have access to affordability measures, particularly under the shared equity scheme that would apply to all mortgage holders across the country.”

 

Matt Carthy:  “Therein lies part of the problem.  The Minister is correct that house prices in Monaghan are lower than in other parts of the State.  My fear is that local authority officials and the Department will consider that Monaghan is not a priority for affordable housing.  The difficulty is that we see the pressures that are already building, even in a county like Monaghan.

 

“House prices in County Monaghan, according to the most recent daft.ie report, have increased by 17.5% in the last year, the average house price is now €204,000, which is way beyond the means of many people in terms of mortgage supports.

 

“Crucially, rents in Monaghan have increased by 13.8% over the past year and are now at just under €900.  In the context of the position across the State, those might appear to be local issues that are of low priority.  The problem is, however, that we know that when the prices across the State reflected this and when action was not taken, we ended up with the overall prices we have now.  The solution is to start planning and to build and supply affordable houses now rather than when house prices are out of control.”

 

Darragh O’Brien:  “I do not disagree with the Deputy on that. If we go back to social housing, our Housing for All plan will ensure that we have an average of over 10,000 new homes built across the country each year, including in Monaghan. It is important that we are tackling our social housing waiting list there.

 

“On the provision of affordable homes, we passed the Affordable Housing Act 2021 before the summer recess. It was supported by Sinn Féin, and we are grateful for that. The Act is the most comprehensive affordable housing legislation ever passed by the Oireachtas. If the Deputy will excuse the pun, that puts in place the building blocks to be able to provide those affordable homes across the country. The latter will take a bit of time. We do not underestimate the challenge involved, but affordable homes will be delivered in Ireland next year and some will be delivered later this year. We already have the first tenants in cost rental homes from cost rental schemes that did not exist 12 months ago.

 

“We are ambitious for our country. We are also ambitious in the context of ensuring that people can live in affordable homes across the 26 counties of this State. We are asking each local authority to point to areas where they believe they have affordability constraints. Monaghan County Council will submit that report to me by December.”

 

Housing Income Limits

 

During a subsequent engagement with Minister of State Peter Burke TD, Deputy Carthy said that the income thresholds for eligibility for social housing needed to be increased.  He said:

 

“Many people are surprised to learn that income thresholds are a relatively new phenomenon.

 

“It was a Labour Party Minister, to its shame, that introduced them in order, I contend, to simply reduce the housing lists.  Rather than build houses, mechanisms were found to cut the lists.

 

“Prior to that, housing lists were determined on a raft of criteria, including income.  It was taken into account and allowed local authorities to recognise the realities.  In many counties, mine included, the income limit for two adults and four children is €28,750.  That means anybody above that has been told for the last decade that they have to rent for the rest of their lives if they cannot qualify for a mortgage.

 

The review has been ongoing for well over a year. It should not take that long for a review to be completed.  I urge the Minister of State to tell his officials to get the finger out and get this resolved.”

ENDS

Latest revelations fuel demand for independent inquiry into death of Shane O’Farrell

Latest revelations fuel demand for independent inquiry into death of Shane O’Farrell – Matt Carthy TD

 

Sinn Féin TD for Cavan Monaghan, Matt Carthy, has said that the weekend revelations that a Department of Justice briefing on the case of Shane O’Farrell to Fianna Fáil, provided during the period of the confidence and supply government, simply fuels the demand that an independent inquiry into the case must be established.

 

Shane O’Farrell, a young 23 year old Carrickmacross man, was killed in a hit and run on 2nd August 2011, by Zigimantas Gridziuska, a known criminal who had breached his bail conditions at the time and had 42 previous convictions in three different jurisdictions.

 

It emerged last weekend that the Department of Justice briefing omitted ‘significant information’.  The briefing, during negotiations in late 2018, withheld details regarding a 2017 Courts Service notification to the department of a ‘filing error’ which resulted in Gridziuska not been imprisoned on the foot a charges relating to heroin possession.

 

Deputy Carthy said this week:

 

“If details on the background to the investigation of Shane O’Farrell’s death can be withheld from a party that is keeping the government in power, how can his family or the public be confident that the Department of Justice is committed to the full facts of the case emerging?

 

“It has been over ten years since Shane O’Farrell lost his life.  His family have been fighting for justice ever since in the face of a department seemingly committed to obfuscate the process.

 

“Almost three years ago, a Dáil resolution was passed calling for a full independent inquiry into the issues that the O’Farrell family have raised, but have been met with delayed reviews, reviews of reviews all of which have simply serve to delay justice further.

 

“A lengthy GSOC inquiry was followed more recently by the announcement of a scoping inquiry in February 2019. That report has yet to be delivered to government some 31 months later.

 

“The man responsible for the death of Shane O’Farrell should never have been in prison at the time.  The person responsible had 42 previous convictions and was on bail related to other convictions at the time this ‘filing error’ set him free.

 

“His family have neither had peace nor the opportunity to grieve for their son because they have had to doggedly pursue the state every step of the way.

 

“It should not be the responsibility of families to ensure that the state adequately investigates circumstances such as these, but that is what the O’Farrell family have had to do as a result of state failings.

 

“There should be no more delays.  It is long past time for Minister Humphreys to begin preparing for a full and independent inquiry in line with the will of the Dáil as expressed by majority resolution in 2018.

 

“The circumstances of Shane’s death and the subsequent investigation and trial are littered with failings by state agencies and the absence of basic compassion.

 

“The O’Farrell family have raised several serious concerns regarding the handling of this case by an Garda Síochána, by the prosecuting solicitor and barrister, by the DPP and by the courts services.

 

“These matters of concern can be only addressed through a full independent public inquiry into the death of Shane O’Farrell, the actions of all relevant state bodies in response to his death and their respective roles in advance of and following his killing.

 

“After ten, and ongoing revelations – there should be no further delays”.

ENDS

Carthy supports students facing accommodation crisis

Carthy supports students facing accommodation crisis

 

Cavan Monaghan Sinn Féin TD, Matt Carthy, last week joined students from across Ireland who were protesting outside Leinster House at the accommodation crisis that many of them are facing.

 

Deputy Carthy outlined that he is working with dozens of students in County Monaghan who are in dire circumstances due to the lack of suitable accommodation available to them.  He said that this crisis has been a decade in the making but Fine Gael and Fianna Fáil refused to listen to concerns over that period.

 

Teachta Carthy said:

 

“The crisis facing many students in sourcing accommodation has been a decade in the making but successive governments have refused to heed the concerns over that period.

 

“In recent weeks I have been working with dozens of County Monaghan students who cannot source accommodation in the city of their university or college.  Almost all Monaghan third level students have to travel for college.  Many have to go as far as Galway or Cork – commuting daily is not an option for them.

 

“I was proud to stand with my party colleagues alongside students from across Ireland who participated in a protest and sleep-out outside Leinster House last week.

 

“It is time for a new student accommodation strategy that ends the over-reliance on the private sector that has delivered an inadequate amount of student accommodation at completely unaffordable rental prices.

 

“In 2017, Fine Gael brought forward its National Student Accommodation Strategy. Now, four years on from its publication, it is clear it has been an abject failure.

 

“The government will claim they met the 7,000 additional student beds set as the minimum target in the strategy.  But, in reality, this target was never capable of meeting the real student housing need.

 

“Even within the strategy itself it recognised there were 24,000 students relying on the general private rental market that could not access student specific accommodation.

 

“Not only did the government set completely inadequate targets for overall numbers of bed to be added to the system, the plan set no targets for publicly built student accommodation or criteria for affordability.

 

“Less than 8% of new student accommodation built since 2017 has been publicly owned, on-campus accommodation.  This amounts to only 679 beds.

 

“On top of this, colleges increasingly give priority to fee-paying international students for on-campus accommodation in line with government policy.  This has led to a situation where up to half of all on-campus student accommodation goes to the more lucrative international students.

 

“We need a new strategy for student accommodation that has affordability and public ownership at its heart. We need to increase recurrent and capital funding for institutes higher education to allow them to build on-campus accommodation and offer affordable rents.

 

“End the conversion of purpose-built student accommodation to tourist accommodation, and encourage colleges to strike a fair balance between attracting international students and meeting the needs of Irish students.

 

“In the short term government needs to intervene to resolve the crisis that students are facing today.  That means that all purpose built student accommodation should not be used for any other purpose.  All other options must also be considered.  I am aware of students that may need to leave their course of choice if their accommodation needs are not met.  That would be travesty and an indictment of government parties.”

ENDS

Matt Carthy’s first Dáil Bill will address pressures ‘Voluntary’ Contributions place on parents and schools

Matt Carthy’s first Dáil Bill will address pressures ‘Voluntary’ Contributions place on parents and schools

 

Cavan Monaghan Sinn Féin TD, Matt Carthy, has introduced his first legislative bill to the Dáil which, if passed, will regulate the collection of so-called voluntary contributions by schools.  Recognising that schools are often forced to seek these contributions for basic running costs, the Sinn Féin bill will direct government to resolve that situation while also placing obligations on schools in this regard.

 

Teachta Carthy told the Dáil:

 

“This bill, which I authored with the Sinn Féin Spokesperson on Education, Donnchadh Ó Laoghaire TD, is aimed at ending the pressure on families to pay for so-called ‘voluntary’ contributions.

 

“This is the time of year when many families, particularly those with school-going children, find themselves under financial stress, with many traditionally receiving home and motor tax insurance renewal documents at this time.

 

“Many of those under severe pressure are already planning for the Christmas period.  And many of these families are floored when they receive a letter from their local school requesting hundreds of euro in so-called voluntary contributions.

 

“These contributions are requested because schools believe they need to fund-raise in such a manner to simply keep the lights on.  We heard over the Covid period that some schools were unable to provide hot water for children to wash their hands.

 

“The Bill seeks to address the undue stress parents are being put under.

 

“It will oblige schools to make apparent that these contributions are indeed voluntary and make them truly voluntary by ceasing the practice of children being excluded from some activities as a result of a parent’s inability to pay, as unfortunately happens.

 

“It will prevent schools from contacting parents more than once a year seeking such contributions and ensure voluntary contributions are truly voluntary in the interim, while setting out a pathway to end the practice once and for all by ensuring the Government adequately and appropriately funds our schools.”

 

The Bill is now on the under paper of the Dáil and will require the support of a majority of TDs to pass the second stage and be brought to committee.

ENDS

Monaghan demonstration slams British government amnesty plans

Monaghan demonstration slams British government amnesty plans – Matt Carthy TD

 

Family members of victims of British state forces and agents, including family members of those killed in the Dublin Monaghan bombings, were among a large gathering at the County Courthouse last Saturday to protest against British governments proposals regarding conflict-related killings.

 

The Monaghan demonstration was among a series of protests, held in almost every county in Ireland, organised by the Time For Truth campaign.  The demonstrators are calling for the British government to abandon their proposals, announced by Secretary of State Brandon Lewis last July.  Under the proposals a statute of limitations will be introduced which will end all prosecutions related to conflict related incidents.  They would also end all legacy inquests and civil actions.

 

The British plans have uniquely been criticised by every single political party in Ireland, north and south, as well as the Irish government and all victims and survivors groups in the country.  At the Belfast demonstration ‘Time For Truth’ spokesperson Ciaran MacAirt claimed the proposals are “insidious and perfidious proposals which would have embarrassed Chile’s Pinochet dictatorship”.

 

The Monaghan demonstration was a dignified event, reflecting that many of those gathered were directly impacted by the conflict and particular the actions of British forces and their agents.

 

Local Sinn Féin TD, Matt Carthy, was in attendance.  He commended the organisers and all those who attended.  He said:  “The British government’s proposals are crass and disgusting.  The plans to introduce a statute of limitations for conflict related incidents aren’t just about denying victims of British forces and their agents access to justice – they are also, crucially, about hiding the truth about Britain’s dirty war in Ireland.

 

“We know from the British government’s refusal to release documents pertaining to the Dublin Monaghan bombings and many other actions carried out or directed by their forces, that Westminster fears the truth.  But, the message on Saturday when people gathered in almost every one of Ireland’s 32 counties, was clear – the demand for truth has not been dampened by the passage of time.

 

“The British government must abandon their outrageous proposals.  The Irish government must continue to resist this attempt to imprison the truth.  And, citizens of all political persuasions must remain united and must use all available avenues, legal as well as political, to ensure that the truth is finally told”.

ENDS

Ministers’ comments on ownership of forestry carbon credits ‘deeply concerning’

Ministers’ comments on ownership of forestry carbon credits ‘deeply concerning’

– Matt Carthy TD

 

Sinn Féin spokesperson on Agriculture Matt Carthy TD has said comments from the Minister for Agriculture, Charlie McConalogue, regarding the ownership of carbon credits resulting from forestry were ‘deeply concerning from a Minister that is presiding over a forestry participation crisis’.

 

Deputy Carthy said that if farmers are to be encouraged to enter forestry then they must have ownership of the associated carbon credits.  Minister McConalogue’s suggestion that farmers will not own carbon credits will drive potential participants further away than ever from afforestation.

 

Teachta Carthy said:

 

“Many farmers are refusing to enter the programme because of the negative experiences of existing participants.  The comments from Minister McConalogue regarding carbon credits will potentially make the situation worse.

 

“It is apparent that carbon credits will play a role in our response to the climate crisis.  This can act as an incentive for new farmers to engage in afforestation.  But, for the Minister to announce in a throw-away remark that farmers do not own these credits and that there will have to be ‘discussion’ on the matter is deeply concerning.

 

“The contracts that farmers have signed with the state have no mention whatsoever of carbon credits.

 

“The Minister should be examining ways to encourage additional farmers into forestry, not exacerbating those who are already participating.  This is just the latest example of incredibly poor communication and consultation from the department.

 

“There is a crisis in forestry, within the licencing system and in terms of new afforestation levels.

 

“The Minister is presiding over this crisis.  He needs to get it sorted.  Unfortunately, he has introduced a new area of concern for those who might be considering an entry into forestry.

 

“He now needs to immediately outline the basis on which he believes that farmers do not own these credits and also outline how he intends to lead ‘discussions’ with the most important stakeholder in the sector.”

ENDS

Freedom of Information legislation is being undermined by government actions

Freedom of Information legislation is being undermined by government actions – Matt Carthy TD

 

‘There is never a minute of a Minister’s meeting with their Secretary General outlining how decisions are made’ – this was an example provided by Cavan Monaghan Sinn Féin TD Matt Carthy last week in the Dáil when he challenged the government’s approach to Freedom of Information (FOI) requests.  He was speaking during a Sinn Féin motion on the matter last week.

 

While journalists have been highlighting issues with the FOI process for some time, the issue came to a head in recent weeks due to government mishandling of requests in relation to the appointment of Katherine Zappone as a Special Envoy to the UN, and the related Merriongate scandal.

 

Deputy Carthy told the Dáil:

 

“Freedom of information legislation has become a bedrock of democracy across the western world.  It is in place to provide transparency, accountability and confidence in government.  It is in place to allow citizens access the decisions made and the process that led to them.

 

“We have seen in recent weeks that, in Ireland, rather than providing such confidence, the actions of some Departments and organisations with regard to adherence to FOI legislation is diminishing it.  There are Ministers who have deleted and destroyed Government records related to how they carry out their work.  If we had a functional FOI system in place, that would not be tolerable.  Plenty of examples have been cited this evening of FOI requests being made which were denied, responded to with partial information or, in all too many cases, told information did not exist when it did.

 

“For example, a number of weeks ago I submitted an FOI request to each Department asking for all correspondence in relation to the infamous event in the Merrion Hotel.  I received a response from the Department of the Taoiseach which stated no record existed of any correspondence, documentation or minute related to that event.  But, from the Minister for Tourism’s, Department I received documentation that indicated that the Department of the Taoiseach was in correspondence with that very Department.  It was only when the FOI information was printed in national media and it was inferred that the Department of the Taoiseach had indicated that no such documentation existed, that that Department released the document we already had from another Department.  That happens all the time.”

 

“It beggars belief that in all the FOI information made available there is never a minute of a Minister sitting down for a meeting with a Secretary General deciding how decisions are made. The most basic small and medium-sized companies would have minutes of their chief executive talking to the chairperson of the board, which is a similar relationship, particularly when decisions are made that impact on finances or policy changes.

 

“Other organisations are particularly adept at avoiding transparency.  The State broadcaster, RTÉ, refused over half of all FOI requests last year.  I know from our interactions in the Committee of Public Accounts that if the RTÉ board continues to operate as it does, it will have no credibility in declaring “The truth matters” on the banners it employs.

 

“It is symptomatic of the way too many State agencies interact with requests for freedom of information.  This needs to change.  I commend Deputy Mairéad Farrell on bringing this motion to the House and all her diligent work to ensure more transparency, more accountability and better answers about how decisions are made.

 

“We ask that Ministers stop destroying records relating to their work.  That should not be too big of an ask but apparently it is.  It is also important we ensure that minutes are kept of key decisions, particularly when they relate to expenditure or policy changes, regardless of who is in that meeting.  In many cases, I am sure it will provide Ministers with cover.  When they come up with what might seem to be implausible stories, as we referenced earlier, would it not be helpful if a minute of conversations that had taken apparently place was available?

 

“We call on the Government and each Minister to ensure that all agencies and bodies under their remit answerable to FOI legislation adhere to the letter and the spirit of that.  We want to see government based on transparency and accountability. I think the people want that too and that the Government needs to start acting accordingly.”

 

ENDS

Carthy leads Public Accounts Committee engagement on HSE procurement

Carthy leads Public Accounts Committee engagement on HSE procurement – Matt Carthy TD

 

The Dáil’s Public Accounts Committee last week engaged with senior HSE representatives regarding deficiencies in procurement practices, particularly during the Covid pandemic.  In his interaction local Sinn Féin TD Matt Carthy focused his questions on the procurement of defective ventilators for which an internal HSE report had raised concerns in advance of the purchase.

 

Deputy Carthy had the role of lead questioner for the Public Accounts hearing which largely focused on pandemic related procurement of defective equipment, rising waiting lists, and the recent resignations from the Sláintecare Implementation Advisory Council.

 

A transcript of Deputy Carthy’s engagement with the HSE officials follows:

 

Deputy Matt Carthy:

“I want to be associated with this committee’s thanks to the staff of the HSE for their work on our behalf throughout the Covid emergency.  I am going to deal with the issue of procurement but, before I do, I acknowledge that every member of this committee and every member of the public recognises that Covid presented unique challenges.  Normal expectations did not apply but that did not mitigate the need for basic due diligence to be in place.

 

“This committee has asked on a number of occasions when the review of the 2019 procurement will take place and I ask that question again of Mr. Reid.”

 

Mr. Paul Reid:

“I thank Deputy Carthy for his comments, which we will relay to the staff and acknowledge in the context of procurement in general.  We had been progressing the 2019 review in the early stages of 2020. Subsequently, major elements of our resources moved from procurement to Covid. Many resources were redeployed to support our front-line activities against Covid.  Our assessment during 2020 was that we would do the assessment on the basis of the figures for 2020. We have done that assessment and it has been provided in the full report.  We do not have the detail for 2019.  We have made the pragmatic judgment that the best data available to be most efficient were for 2020.  That detail has been provided to the committee.”

 

Matt Carthy: “Do I take it from that reply that a review of 2019 procurement will not be carried out?”

 

Paul Reid:  “I will let one of my colleagues comment on that but, from my perspective that is the case.  We want to focus on the detailed findings of the thorough and diligent assessment of 2020.  That informs us better in terms of the big, key challenges we have in procurement.  I acknowledge those challenges.  There are legacy challenges that we are going to address through a range of initiatives.  Our response will be based on the full detail of our assessment for 2020.”

 

Matt Carthy: “Does Mr. Reid understand that 2019 is a good base year because it was a year that did not involve the Covid emergency?  That review would, therefore, be important to be able to assess the real lie of the land.”

 

Paul Reid:  “I will make the point that we have always done reviews of our procurement process in any given year.  We will continue to do so.  The detailed assessment of 2020 that was done was intended to get a better and deeper insight across all services and divisions within the HSE.  The assessment has given us those details.  In terms of baseline activity, we have extracted great Covid-related detail.  We can look at our baseline activity for 2020.  I will ask my colleague, Mr. Mulvany, the chief financial officer, to make a brief comment on that matter.”

 

Stephen Mulvany:  “The 2019 exercise we started would have been the first time we had done such extensive sampling of the entire procurement process across the HSE above the figure of €25,000.  As the CEO has indicated, we could not finish that because of Covid.  We did it for 2020.  We acknowledge the point made by the Deputy in terms of Covid versus non-Covid.  In the analysis for 2020, we have separated out Covid versus non-Covid and have provided those figures, so we would not disagree with the Comptroller and Auditor General’s assessment that the overall figure of 10% is unlikely to be representative overall.  We have already started the work and planning around the 2021 exercise.  Our sense is that we need to focus on that.

 

“To be clear, going back to 2019 would not be practical but we are also very clear and upfront.  We have lost ground due to Covid.  We have fewer contracts under management and spend under cover now because of Covid and Brexit before it because we diverted our procurement staff as we then did.  We see little value in going back to 2019 because we know we have lost ground since then.  The focus is on what we are doing now, which is planning the 2021 exercise, which we will seek to do in more detail.  As the Comptroller and Auditor General pointed out, we covered €25,000 and above, which is the norm in the public sector.  We will go below €25,000 in what we are doing for 2021.  It does not make sense to us to divert the limited resources we have to look at 2019.  The aim is to move forward, do 2021 next and build on what we have done so far.”

 

Matt Carthy:  “To be clear, we will never have a review of the procurement processes in the last full year pre-Covid.  I know an €82 million computerised procurement system is being built.  Do we have a timeframe for when this will be implemented across the entire HSE?”

 

Stephen Mulvany:  “The integrated financial management system, IFMS, project covers financial management and procurement.  As the Deputy noted, it is an €82 million capital approval.  The briefing we provided indicates that the current plan is to have 80% of the public healthcare system, including the larger voluntaries, covered by quarter one of 2025.  We can deal with more questions later but that is the intent.”

 

Matt Carthy:  “Does Mr. Mulvany expect it to be within that budget of €82 million?”

 

Stephen Mulvany:  “We do.  We have spent about 20% of that budget so we are at about €15 million or €16 million of the €82 million.  At this point, I am not flagging any threat to that overall budget.”

 

Matt Carthy:  “In the 2020 procurement review, the HSE reported 91% procurement compliance but of course that encompassed the emergency procurement measures that were allowable as a result of the pandemic.  What proportion of that 91% fell under emergency measures?”

 

Stephen Mulvany:  “If we look at the sample exercise, and it is probably wrong to call it a sample because it was a huge exercise that covered €1.9 billion, we can see that within that, €1.3 billion involved Covid.  If we ignore that, we can see €635 million involved non-Covid – what we call core.  Of that, 82% was compliant.  In other words, it was either competitive or it was compliant without the requirement to be competitive.  Therefore, 18% was non-compliant.”

 

Matt Carthy:  “We are told that the Minister for Public Expenditure and Reform raised concerns that some €1.25 billion that was spent by the HSE and had not been competitively procured could expose the State to legal action because it fell short of what was required under domestic and EU law.  Do we have any sense of how many legal challenges are ongoing with regard to our procurement process?”

 

Stephen Mulvany:  “That reference came from a meeting of the public sector interim procurement board, of which the HSE’s head of procurement is a member.  It came about as a result of us presenting the information, a summary of which I have given the Deputy there.  As far as I am aware, although Mr. Swords can tell me more, one company is taking legal action against the HSE and there are a number in respect of which we are involved in or considering legal action concerning a variety of items, some of which have already been referenced in the opening statements.  Only one company that I am aware of has taken legal action against the HSE.”

 

Matt Carthy:  “I will go back to Mr. Reid.  There is a distinction then – we can hear this in the CFO’s responses – between being non-compliant and being non-competitive, and that presents a number of particular challenges.  When you are in a process that is non-competitive, I think there is a need for additional diligence, even when we are in the midst of an emergency.  We know that the HSE paid €81 million for 2,200 ventilators.  We are told 1,735 of those were never delivered and none of them was ever used.  Has the HSE managed to recoup any of that €81 million that we paid?”

 

Paul Reid:  “I will make a broad comment first on procurement more widely and the issues around compliant versus non-compliant and competitive versus non-competitive.  We acknowledge we have significant work to do on our procurement processes overall, and there has been a very significant commitment by the executive team on our board to set out a range of actions, which we have covered in the report to the Committee of Public Accounts so I will not list them off, but I want to acknowledge that upfront.  It is something we are giving a lot of attention to and something the board is very focused on.

 

“Specifically regarding the ventilators and recovery of cost, I will give a little context from my perspective first.  I know the Deputy has covered this in his opening comments, but it is just to put into context what we were seeking, the volume we were seeking and the context in which we had to commit that spend.  We all know that at the start of this we were dealing with harrowing images from across the world that we were all seeing on our screens.  From an ICU perspective we do not benchmark strongly at all by international comparisons with our ICU facility.  We know about the early forecasts, and I have covered in the opening statement the early predictions that if certain public health actions were not taken, there would be up to 40,000 deaths, potentially.  We knew that was the context we were entering into. Specifically regarding ventilators, what was happening at that time was—–”

 

Matt Carthy:  “With due respect, I asked Mr. Reid whether or not any of that €81 million has been recouped.  We accept the context.”

 

Paul Reid:  “Okay. I appreciate that.  Specifically regarding the €81 million spend, we can give the Deputy the full breakdown.  The CFO will give it to him.  A significant part of that has been recouped so far.  We have covered the outstanding sum of about €42 million in the AFS.  Since then it has decreased to just about €35 million.  We are expecting imminently recovery of another €11 million; we expect to get that very shortly.  That is the current status of that.  Some other costs expended had been recouped as part of PPE supplies instead, but I will get the CFO to give the Deputy a full breakdown of where that stands right now.  We are not letting up on some of this spend.”

 

Stephen Mulvany:  “As the Deputy said, to the non-traditional suppliers we paid out €81 million.  As was said in the opening statements, by the time of the report in the AFS there was €42 million of that for which we had not got value.  That means there was €39 million for which we had at that stage got value.  We had got either ICU machines, refunds or conversions to other materials such as PPE, so €42 million was the piece we were working on at that point, which was back in May.  Today the figure is just under €35 million, so we have got value for some of the difference.  As the CEO said, there is a further €11 million or €12 million which is imminently going to arrive in terms of value.  The piece of the €81 million for which we have not got value, to answer the Deputy’s question, very shortly will be €23 million, and we are pursuing all avenues to get that.”

 

Matt Carthy:  “That was a very long time to get that specific answer, and I am trying to be specific in my questions.  Were any of the companies involved used by the HSE before or engaged with before? Is this the first—–”

 

Stephen Mulvany:  “None of the companies in respect of which we had to pursue refunds was used by the HSE before but, separately, we had ordered 581 machines at a cost of €22 million from our regular suppliers.  We had fully exhausted that before we went to the non-traditional suppliers.”

 

Matt Carthy:  “There is an internal HSE document that identified risks with one particular vendor.  In fact, of the nine parameters, three were deemed high-risk and there was a note in the document – this is prior to purchase – that there was a risk that expenditure of this magnitude would be wasted and that there were concerns about the quality of the machines.  Did the HSE go to the effort of compiling a report on a potential vendor and then actually proceed with the sale despite those concerns being raised?”

 

Stephen Mulvany:  “I do not have the specific detail of that case, but I will be clear.

 

“We are in the business of managing risks.  When it came to procurement of ventilators, the biggest risk was that of not having sufficient ventilators.  It is one thing to talk about what the criteria are today but back then, looking at what we potentially faced, we and every country in the world were seeking to secure ventilators.  At times we had to order more in quantities—”

 

Matt Carthy:  “Are any of the HSE guests aware of that case, involving Roqu?  That internal document was widely reported.  Is anybody aware of the specifics?”

 

John Swords:  “That is subject to legal process.  We are at risk if we disclose details of that. This is unfortunate.  I cannot comment.”

 

Matt Carthy:  “Okay.  I move on to hand sanitisers.  We know the case of Viropro.  We know there were some basic red flags.  The material safety data sheet the HSE requested and received did not match what was on the Department of Agriculture, Food and the Marine’s biological register.  In another case, the vendor had not provided a number of the product on the register; rather, it gave an application number.  In these instances, were companies being asked to provide documentation but nobody was checking the basis of the documentation that was provided?”

 

John Swords:  “We checked the documentation and the product met the world health standards.  The area we are talking about is where we had them in quarantine and were waiting for a PCS document or clearance from the Department of Agriculture, Food and the Marine.  That was subject to discussions between the company and the Department.  We await the outcome.  In the interim period, we have quarantined those products.  They will be in use and, bearing in mind the context we were working in, we took in the products to our national standards.  The Department of Agriculture, Food and the Marine has a requirement there.  The company did not have that so we placed them in quarantine.  We await the outcome of those discussions.”

 

Matt Carthy:  “The HSE had already purchased the—–”

 

John Swords:  “We had.”

 

Matt Carthy:  “I go back to the previous point where it was mentioned we could not get a response with regard to Roqu because of legal issues.  No legal papers have been served yet. Is that correct?”

 

Stephen Mulvany:  “We are not in a position to discuss specific suppliers because of the commercial arrangements we are trying to progress in the interests of protecting the State.  We are not going to be able to—–”

 

Matt Carthy:  “Is it commercial or legal?”

 

Stephen Mulvany:  “The two are often connected but we would not want to indicate which end of the spectrum it will end up on.  Where we can, we are seeking to resolve things amicably by negotiation with the suppliers, many of which were under pressure.  However, we also have to be robust in the interests of the public purse. Beyond that, it would—–”

 

Matt Carthy:  “To clarify what my question was, I outlined what the HSE document identified with regard to this vendor and asked whether the HSE was aware of the internal document outlining that there was a risk that an expenditure of this magnitude would be wasted but continued with the purchase nevertheless.  I do not think that would interfere would legal or commercial complexities.”

 

Stephen Mulvany:  “We will have to agree to disagree.”

 

Matt Carthy:  “So the witnesses will not answer my question.”

 

Stephen Mulvany:  “We are not in a position to discuss an individual suppler because we are trying to reduce any amount of money the HSE has not yet got value for.  We believe that would put that in jeopardy.  We are happy to give a full account in due course.”

 

Paul Reid:  “It was said the committee fully understands the context but it is really important that this is set straight.  I saw my procurement team working 24-7 for months on end.  We took a risk-based approach.  This was not a normal market or environment.  I said to the Deputy and other Oireachtas Members at the time that there was no doubt we would get 70% of the decisions right and 30% of them we would do differently again or even get wrong.  I said I would not stand for any of our teams not taking rapid action during that period on a risk-based approach.  There is no doubt there are some things we would do differently again but we did not shirk from taking action on procurement to protect lives, the public and patients.”

ENDS

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