Oreillyy(Minister for Health James Reilly)

Valerie Cox was on Today With Sean O’Rourke this morning to talk about allowances given to 191 senior managers in the HSE, which were revealed by the HSE in an audit presented to the Public Accounts Committee.

Find a seat. Get a tay.

It’s quite staggering.

Valerie Cox: “Well it’s quite extraordinary really because we’ve got details, for the first time, of the allowances being paid to 191 senior managers in the health services. And what’s very startling Sean is the full remuneration package of these senior managers. Now let’s put it in context, public pay policy states ‘one person, one salary’. And the salaries for public health service staff have been set out clearly in Department of Health salary scales. Now, under no circumstance they say, can an employee receive a greater amount than that specified. And it also states that public funding may not be used to top up or supplement these rates. But the HSE has found that this is exactly what is being done…

Sean O’Rourke: “Really?”

Cox: “..with both HSE funds and private funds.”

O’Rourke: “So, what, they’re actual, specific regulations, providers are not allowed to subsidise salaries?”

Cox: “Not at all, and in fact it’s very tight because even if a member of a public service body sits on a State board, they’re not paid for that when they’re representing their organisation or their own sector but the amount of money involved is quite staggering. Now we’ve got two separate sections here. We’ve got money that’s been coming for HSE funds up to now. And that comes to €3.2million being paid to senior managers. And then we…”

O’Rourke: “In how many agencies are there? 36?”

Cox: “36. It’s 36 agencies, yes. And then if we look at another 13 agencies, they’re paying extra funds to their senior managers from private sources and that comes to €914,472. Now, we’ve got lists of the kind of things that this money is going on. Examples of allowances paid to these senior managers. They get allowances for their qualifications, there’s clinical director’s allowances, on-call allowances and so on. But they also get paid health insurance, permanent health insurance, income continuance premia, motor allowances, on-call allowances. And, if we break it down a little bit, now we don’t have full details about exactly who’s getting this but contributions to private pension schemes, where the salary holder would not be covered by the public sector and that, in some cases, comes to 46.6% of their salary – which is an absolutely huge amount. Some consultants are being paid for holding administration sessions, that kind of thing. Now I’ve got a breakdown of some of them here. Health insurance, 12 managers between them are getting €34,654. If we look at an extra duty allowance, 15 managers are getting €82,436. Now an on-call allowance, this goes to about 44 people and it works out at about €5,000 each. A clinical director’s allowance, 35 people getting €1,113,000. A motor allowance, now the motor allowance crops up in a lot of these agencies, a lot of these hospitals and seven people are getting €90,000 between them. And that pension scheme? We’ve got 29 people getting €346,000. Now that is from HSE funds, Sean.”

O’Rourke: “Right.”

Cox: “Now, private funding. Fairly similar but some of them are a little bit different. In one case, the CEO of a board of directors was given an extra allowance to lead a fundraising campaign, in another instance…”

O’Rourke: “Are these agencies and individuals going to be identified?”

Cox: “Well, they’re not identified in the report that’s been handed in this morning and which they’ve given the go-ahead to publish. Their names are not there. But, actually, if you look at a list of the agencies you could probably nearly identify some of them. Three senior managers were paid for work carried out over and above their public service contract. So, Sean, you’d have to wonder, you know, when, how much work do you take on that you’re actually being paid for, as part of your salary?”

O’Rourke: “I see just one here on the list you’ve got Valerie. A director of a haemophilia unit allowance, one agency, one individual, €43,000.”

Cox: “Yeah.”

O’Rourke: “That’s a salary top-up”

Cox: “It’s a top-up, you’ve got to remember that it’s not their basic salary and the basic salaries, I mean they’re on public record and they would be fairly generous salaries already.”

Listen here

lonely beast

He’s done the alphabet.

Time to number crunch..

Lonely Beasts Chris, Simon and James write:

Our new app, The Lonely Beast 123, launches today. It is a follow up to The Lonely Beast ABC (which is free for a week btw to celebrate). Above is a trailer we made with the very talented, Alan Dunne, to showcase the app’s features including such things as a Real-Tim HD Egg-Frying Simulator.

 

Fast typer?

Here’s ten free promo codes

Token 1
Token 2
Token 3
Token 4
Token 5
Token 6
Token 7
Token 8
Token 9
Token 10

Previously:  The Lonely Beast on broadsheet

hughie

(Fine Gael Cllr Hughie McElvaney of Monaghan Council with Miriam O’Callaghan at The Local Authority Members Association Awards this year)

It can happen to the best of them.

The Local Authority Members’ Association [LAMA] met last week to debate reform of local government and how to attract female candidates to become public representatives.

When this happened.

Councillor Hughie McElvaney: “Deputy Noel Coonan asked what was the biggest change we would like to see introduced. I would like to see an extension of the period between one election and another. Five years is far too short. On the overall issue of reform mentioned by Senator Labhrás Ó Murchú, the office of the Minister, Deputy Phil Hogan, was wielding an axe against town councils and we all took cover in case we would all be wiped off the face of the earth, so to speak. If reform is required, we certainly have suffered as local public representatives. Deputy Marcella Corcoran Kennedy spoke about female participation in local government. LAMA would not be the right authority to encourage women to become involved in politics because we are all public representatives and one never knows who is coming up the back way, particularly a good-looking lady who might take one’s seat. I will not be hypocritical and say we should take it on board.”

Deputy Catherine Murphy: “At least Mr. McElvaney is being honest in not encouraging women to become involved in politics. However, I do not agree with him. We need diversity in councils to bring new ideas and so on. Female participation in politics is to be encouraged and it is disappointing to hear it is not being encouraged by Mr. McElvaney’s organisation…”

LAMA debate, November 7 (Oireachtas)

Pic Lama.ie

Thanks Nuala

childlineWould you like to be remembered by your niece/nephew as the Uncle/Aunty who gave them free tickets to see The Wanted, Little Mix and Conor Maynard?

Golden, melodic, scream-filled memories they will cherish for about a week FOREVER.

“Remember you got me tickets for The Wanted. Ha Ha,” they will recall fondly.

We have a PAIR of tickets to next Wednesday’s Cheerio’s Childline Concert at the O2, Dublin to give away.

To be that Aunt/Uncle, just please complete this short sentence

Would you ever just give the Cheerio’s Childline Concert tickets to my niece/nephew_______________because_________________

Lines close at 4.45pm

Thanks Gemma

No tickets, favours, cereal were given for this post.

MartinbigArchbishop Diarmuid Martin has made an “unprecedented” appeal for food, saying one of Ireland’s biggest charities Crosscare – which is the social care agency of the Dublin Archdiocese – can’t meet the demand.

In one community last week it could only provide 40 food parcels when 120 were needed.

RTÉ reports:

“The Dublin diocesan social care agency has said unless parishes provide urgent help more hungry people could be turned away soon.”

“Archbishop Martin said this year it expects to have distributed 750 tonnes of food, 50% more than last year.

“It will be sending collection vans to parishes each week during December. Among its urgent requirements are pasta and rice, fruit juice, tea and coffee, soup, sugar and powdered milk, canned meat, fish, vegetables and fruit, as well as packaged desserts and biscuits and hygiene products.

Archbishop Martin makes unprecedented food appeal (RTÉ)

Crosscare

(Laura Hutton/Photocall)

JuniorFF

Irish filmmakers under the age of 18.

Including the cannonball kid.

Laura Gaynor writes:

“The Galway Junior Film Fleadh kicked off yesterday and continues until the end of the week. Here’s a taste of the films entered by young Irish filmmakers. The winners get through to their main festival in July.”

More here

Enda Kenny’s EU bailout exit announcement to the Dail within the last hour.

I wish, as a matter of courtesy, to inform Dail Eireann of the outcome of a Government meeting this morning.

The Government has decided that Ireland will exit the EU-IMF assistance programme on December 15, without the need to pre-arrange a new precautionary credit line from our EU and IMF partners.

This is the right decision for Ireland, and now is the right time to take this decision.

This is the latest in a series of steps to return Ireland to normal economic, budgetary and funding conditions. Like most other sovereign eurozone countries, from 2014 we will be in a position to fund ourselves normally on the markets.

Minister Noonan is travelling to Brussels to convey this decision to our partners at a Eurogroup meeting this afternoon.

In preparing for this decision, both the Minister for Finance and I have engaged intensively with international institutions and our European and international partners on Ireland’s exit strategy, and all have indicated to us that we will continue to receive their strong support whatever our decision.

In that context, I have spoken on a number of occasions with Chancellor Merkel. She confirmed that this was a decision for Ireland to make, and whatever the decision that we made, the Chancellor was open to finding ways for Ireland and Germany to work more closely together to find ways to reinforce Ireland’s economic recovery by improving funding mechanisms for the real economy, including access to finance for Irish SMEs.

The German Government has asked KFW, the German development bank, to work with the German and Irish authorities swiftly, in order to deliver on this initiative at the earliest possible date.

We will exit the bail-out in a strong position.

This Government has been preparing for a return to normal market funding in 2014 for three years and the NTMA has built up a cash reserve of more than €20 billion.

Growth has returned as our economy regains its competitiveness. Exports have grown to all-time highs, and our balance of payments is in a strong surplus.

We are creating 3,000 jobs a month, and the Live Register has fallen for 16 consecutive months to below 400,000 for the first time in four years.

Our budget strategy is on track, and the Government deficit is now falling rapidly. Public debt will start to fall next year relative to the size of the economy.

As with all euro zone countries that have ratified the Fiscal Stability Treaty and that are pursuing responsible economic policies, Ireland is eligible for access to the €500 billion funding backstop provided by the European Stability Mechanism.

The very existence of this backstop for all euro zone countries has contributed significantly to improved investor confidence in Ireland and the euro zone as a whole.

Confidence in Ireland has improved considerably in recent months and interest rates on Irish Government bonds are at now highly affordable levels.

We still have a long way to travel, but clearly are now moving in the right direction.

Neither today’s decision, nor the exit from the bail-out in December, means the end of difficult economic decisions. There are still demanding times ahead.

It does not mean any windfall of cash. It won’t mean that our economic and financial challenges are over.

Alongside the bail-out exit in December, we will publish a new Medium Term Economic Strategy to set out a new sustainable economic pathway back to prosperity for the country.

This will include a recommitment to bringing Government borrowing down to sustainable levels during the remainder of this Government’s term of office.

It will be an economic plan based on enterprise, not speculation.

Never again will our country’s fortunes be sacrificed to speculation, greed and short-term gain.

And despite the economic challenges that people will continue to face in their daily lives, we will set out a path to a brighter economic future for our people, a path from mass unemployment to full employment; from involuntary emigration to the return of so many thousands of our people who have had to leave to find work

Nobody should doubt our commitment to finish the job we started when we took office. Today is just the latest step on that ongoing journey: a significant step, for sure, but also, just another step towards our ultimate objective of getting Ireland working again.

Rejoice.

(Video link: thanks Joe)

Broadsheet.ie