Fianna Fáil’s manifesto deception puts jobs and the recovery at risk

Minister for Finance, Michael Noonan, today (Thursday), exposed Fianna Fáil’s attempt to deceive the Irish people with their manifesto.

Today Fine Gael published an analysis of the Fianna Fáil manifesto that exposed a black hole of €1.24 billion in its election promises.

Minister Noonan said, “Fianna Fáil want voters to think they’ve changed since they crashed the economy and destroyed 300,000 jobs.

“However they have been caught out trying to hide the cost of their spending promises by not making any provision for their commitment to increase public service pay.

“This reckless approach to politics will put jobs and our recovery at risk.

“The Irish people have worked too hard and sacrificed too much to hand power back to the same old Fianna Fáil. They still cannot be trusted to manage the economy on behalf of the Irish people.

“Fianna Fáil now need to admit that all their election promises are based on a lie and explain honestly how they intend to fund all their spending commitments.”

Every worker in Dun Laoghaire will be better off under Fine Gael’s plans to make work pay

Fine Gael candidate for Dun Laoghaire, Mary Mitchell O’Connor, has today (Thursday) encouraged workers in Dun Laoghaire to check out Fine Gael’s new online income calculator, which demonstrates how much better off they will be as a result of the Party’s plans to make work pay. You can access the calculator at www.finegael.ie/calculator to see how much you will benefit.

“Every worker in Dun Laoghaire will be better off as a result of Fine Gael’s plans to make work pay. Our top priority is to make work pay more than welfare, to help create more jobs and to keep the recovery going. Putting more money in people’s pockets will households and businesses across Dun Laoghaire.

“I know that workers in Dun Laoghaire want to be able to take home more of their hard earned money. When the USC was introduced by Fianna Fáil, it decimated local people’s packets. High personal taxes are bad for job creation and bad for economic growth.

“Fine Gael is committed to abolishing the USC, committing to sensible and affordable increases in the minimum wage, and introducing a new Working Family Payment to help make work pay for low income families.

“Fine Gael will also introduce a range of worker-friendly measures which will benefit families in Dun Laoghaire, such as making childcare more affordable, which will ensure that people get to take home more from their pay packet.

“Abolishing the USC will help us to deliver on our target to create an extra 200,000 jobs by 2020. Fine Gael has a strong track record on the economy and now we can have Long Term Economic Plan which will spread the recovery and create opportunities for people right across Dun Laoghaire.”

FG’s plan to grow exports will boost jobs in Dun Laoghaire

Fine Gael candidate for Dun Laoghaire, Mary Mitchell O’Connor has today (Wednesday) said that Fine Gael’s plans to grow the number of jobs in export orientated companies over the next five years, will have a positive impact on job creation in COUNTY.

Fine Gael will allocate at least €500 million to accelerate export led job growth across the country from the €4bn Future Jobs Investment Fund, with a specific focus on regional job creation. Fine Gael’s exports plan will target growth from three key export streams:

  • Exports from Irish owned companies,
  • Exports from foreign owned companies based in Ireland,
  • By growing our tourist numbers and revenues.

Speaking today Mary Mitchell O’Connor said:

“Fine Gael is aiming to create 200,000 extra jobs over the next five years, and we want 80,000 of those jobs to be in export-orientated companies. That will help to ensure that the unemployment rate in REGION dips below 7% by 2020.

“To help ensure that those ambitious targets are achieved we will allocate €500m from our €4bn Future Jobs Fund towards developing the capacity of Irish exporters in Dun Laoghaire to grow their business. This is an integral part of our plan to make sure that every region feels the benefit of the recovery

“Building on the success of the Regional Action Plan for Jobs, which has funding of €250 million, our new Future Jobs Investment Fund will commit €500 million of extra funding in the years ahead. This will allow Enterprise Ireland to provide additional support to Irish owned companies focused on exports and will provide extra funding to the Local Enterprise Office in Dun Laoghaire.

“Under Fianna Fáil, the Irish economy steadily lost its competitiveness and our economy became increasingly dependent on buying and selling houses and apartments to each other. Fine Gael, on the other hand, has a Long Term Plan for the Economy built around enterprise, innovation and – crucially – exports.

“By helping companies in Dun Laoghaire to grow their export markets, we can build a sustainable recovery where jobs are created and maintained in every region.  Fine Gael has the plan and it is committing the resources to help our Irish enterprises to grow and create even more jobs in the years to come.”

Fine Gael’s plans to get Ireland working will end welfare dependency and tackle long-term unemployment in Dun Laoghaire

 

FG will put long-term unemployed at top of jobs queue in Dun Laoghaire with new and improved supports

FG candidate in Dun Laoghaire, Mary Mitchell O’Connor today said that the party’s plan to get Ireland working will help end welfare dependency and tackling long-term unemployment in Dun Laoghaire.

“Getting Ireland working is the top priority of Fine Gael in Government. We believe in the value of work; we understand the sense of independence and pride that comes from earning a living. We have seen 135,000 extra jobs created since we launched our Action Plan for Jobs. Fine Gael is the only party with a funded jobs plan which we will use to break the endless cycle of poverty by getting people off welfare and into jobs in Dun Laoghaire.

“During Fine Gael’s first term in Government we started to transform our passive welfare system into an active employment service that has directly benefited Dun Laoghaire. Today there are almost 95,000 fewer long-term unemployed people since the launch of our Action Plan for Jobs. But in the next Government we need to be more radical and do more to provide everyone with the opportunity to access work in Dun Laoghaire.

“Fianna Fáil cannot be trusted on jobs. Not only did their disastrous economic policies cost us 300,000 jobs but they abandoned people on the dole queues right here in Dun Laoghaire and forced tens of thousands of our young people to emigrate. Fianna Fáil still has no plan to help the long-term unemployed get off the dole and into work. Instead they want to hike welfare payments without any corresponding policy to make work pay, which will only make it more unaffordable for people to enter work.

“Fine Gael’s plan involves a whole new approach to eliminating chronic joblessness, welfare dependency and long-term unemployment. We’ll put long-term unemployed people to the top of the jobs queue in Dun Laoghaire by increasing the incentive for employers to hire those who have been out of work for more than 12 and 24 months. We will prevent young people from falling into the welfare trap by ensuring school leavers have access to further education and training.

“As the economy recovers we cannot repeat Fianna Fáil’s mistakes. During the height of the Celtic Tiger, Ireland experienced one of the highest rates of jobless households in Europe, even when unemployment was at its lowest. Building on the success of the Pathways to Work Action Plan during our first term, Fine Gael will publish a Specific Pathways to Work Plan for Jobless Households which will help to tackle long-term unemployment in Dun Laoghaire.

“Fine Gael’s Long Term Economic Plan offers our people the stability and certainty needed to keep the recovery going, by creating more and better jobs, making work pay and investing in better services in Dun Laoghaire”.

Fine Gael €2bn Plan for Health will benefit everyone in Dun Laoghaire

Fine Gael candidate in Dun Laoghaire, Mary Mitchell O’Connor says the party’s new €2 billion Plan for Health will benefit everyone in Dun Laoghaire.

“This plan, which is being launched by An Taoiseach, Enda Kenny and Minister for Health, Leo Varadkar today, is built on four pillars: Healthy Ireland, Building Capacity, Universal Healthcare, and Health Service Reform.

“Fine Gael will continue rebuilding our health service here in Dun Laoghaire.  Our plan requires both further investment and further reform. It’s only by Keeping the Recovery Going and the economy strong that we’ll be able to generate the revenue that we need to invest in public services like health here in Dun Laoghaire and ensure that patients are always the absolute priority.

“The plan allocates €2 billion extra to health over the lifetime of the next government. It sets realistic targets for incremental improvements in our public health service in Dun Laoghaire and around the country, investing in new infrastructure and technology and hiring 4,400 new frontline staff, taking at least one big step every year towards Universal Healthcare, and formally setting up Hospital Trusts and Community Healthcare Trusts. In the last five years we showed that even in tough times, real progress could be made in key areas. We intend to build on that over the next five years.

Highlights include:

  • Extending free GP care to all children in Dun Laoghaire
  • New programmes to manage common chronic diseases in the community
  • A full medical card for all children in Dun Laoghaire on Domiciliary Care Allowance
  • A dedicated fund of €50 million a year to reduce waiting lists
  • Measuring and improving patient experience times in Emergency Departments
  • A tax on sugar sweetened drinks
  • Further measures to reduce smoking
  • Implementing Healthy Ireland initiatives to improve the nation’s health
  • Investing at least a further €750 million in primary care
  • A detailed five year budget for the health service will be set out in 2017
  • 100 extra GP training places
  • Providing faster access to mental health services in Dun Laoghaire
  • Continued increase in acute hospital beds
  • A new programme to help more people with disabilities to work
  • A new dental benefits package
  • Dismantling the HSE and establishing Hospital Trusts and Community Healthcare Trusts on a statutory basis

“The Government has allocated €3 billion to the capital budget for health for the next six years allowing us to proceed with major flagship projects like the new national children’s hospital, primary care centres all over the country, an ambitious programme to replace or upgrade community nursing units to comply with HIQA standards, and much-needed investment in IT.

“Fine Gael inherited a health service in freefall – funding cuts of €2 billion, thousands of staff gone, and 1,245 hospital beds closed. Because of the economic recovery in the last two years, we have been able to start rebuilding the health service here in Dun Laoghaire. We have increased the budget by €900 million in the last two years, excluding supplementaries. That is a €300 million increase this year, on top of a €600 million increase last year. We reversed the previous Government’s policy of cutting 1,245 beds by adding 300 new beds in the last 12 months.

“We have taken on more staff, including record numbers of consultants, doctors, midwives and therapists. We have taken the first steps towards Universal Healthcare by introducing free GP care for the youngest and oldest in Dun Laoghaire – those who need to see their doctor the most.

“Economic recovery isn’t only about more jobs and more money in our pockets, it’s also about better public services for everyone in Dun Laoghaire and we have a plan to do that in health.”

 

Ends

* Note to Editors:

The four pillars of the Fine Gael Plan for Health

Healthy Ireland

We need to improve our health as a society and as individuals. It’s the only way in the long term that we can reduce the burden of disease, ensure that people live longer and healthier lives, and control the cost of healthcare. Healthy Ireland is the Government-led initiative to enable people to make the right decisions about their own health. This includes further actions to reduce smoking, cut back on alcohol consumption and binge drinking, tackle obesity, implement the National Physical Activity Plan, extend the vaccination programme to include Meningitis B and the rotavirus, and extend screening programmes where evidence-based and cost-effective. Among the newest measures will be a tax on sugar sweetened drinks.

Building health service capacity

Fine Gael is committing to increase the health budget by an average of €400 million a year, which means the health budget in 2021 will be at least €2 billion higher than it is now. Budget 2017 will set out a detailed five year budget for the health service, providing financial certainty and allowing for better planning and long term decision making. We will hire 4,400 frontline staff including 600 consultants, dentists and specialists, 2,800 nurses and midwives, and 1,000 health and social care professionals (physiotherapists, occupational therapists, paramedics and radiographers). We will increase the number of GP training places by around 100 over the next five years. We will provide a dedicated fund of €50 million a year to reduce waiting lists. We will conduct a full hospital bed capacity review to be completed by 2017 to provide a strong evidence base from which to plan for increasing bed capacity in the context of the capital review in 2018.

We will improve patient experience in our emergency departments by ensuring that between 93% and 95% of patients spend no longer than six hours in an ED from the time they check in at reception, to the point at which they are discharged. Currently 68% of patients spend less than six hours in an ED. We will improve this by 5% a year and publish the figures on a monthly basis.

The next steps to Universal Healthcare

We will take at least one big step every year towards UHC. The first big step was taken last year with free GP care for the under sixes and over 70s. This shall include but will not be limited to: free GP for the under-12s, the remaining under-18s, comprehensive management of chronic disease in general practice, reduced prescription charges for medical card holders and everyone else, and a dental and oral health package. We will target the most common chronic diseases such as diabetes, COPD and heart failure with a view to managing them in the community rather than hospitals, where clinically appropriate. The dental package will include the restoration of PRSI-related dental benefits which were scrapped by the last government, including a children’s dental health programme, and a preventative oral health package for medical card holders. We will extend full medical cards for all children in receipt of the Domiciliary Care Allowance who don’t already have one. We will expand the role of community pharmacy.

Reforming the health service

We will complete the break-up of the HSE by establishing the hospital trusts and community healthcare trusts on a statutory basis, with their executives reporting to their own boards. The HSE will evolve into a Health Commission with specific national functions including shared services and the National Clinical Programmes, the National Ambulance Service, HSE Estates and Health & Wellbeing. We will complete the major financial reforms already underway including Activity Based Funding.

Other priorities

The public health service will be funded from taxation – as it is now – for the duration of the next government. However, further research will be conducted on other funding models and the ESRI will conclude its research into the various forms of Universal Health Insurance. We will publish a plan for faster access to comprehensive mental health services and improved mental health status, building on A Vision for Change. The Departments of Health and Social Protection will pursue a “Fit for Work Programme” to support more people to get back to work if they have an illness or disability. We will legislate for family consent and an opt-out register for organ donation, and establish an expert group to report within six months on a better way to deal with compensation claims for catastrophic injuries. We will set up an independent Patient Advocacy Service, legislate to support Open Disclosure and expand the role of HIQA to include the licensing of hospitals.

Note: the €2 billion allocation excludes pay restoration or pay increases which are negotiated centrally for the public service as a whole.

Fine Gael General Election Manifesto

Today we launched our Election Manifesto, which offers people the stability and certainty needed to keep the recovery going.

Our manifesto is built on the three steps of our Long Term Economic Plan:

·         More and Better Jobs

·         Making Work Pay

·         Investing in Better Services

It is a detailed, fully-costed and ambitious set of proposals, designed to keep the recovery going. We are the only party offering a plan for Ireland’s future.

There is a clear and undeniable link between the recovery we are now experiencing and the economic policies pursued by this Government.

Fine Gael is determined not to let Ireland go back – not to those who wrecked our economy in the first place, and not to those who would kill jobs with new taxes on work.

Our policies are in stark contrast to Fianna Fáil, the party who has no plan, plain and simple.

In an uncertain world, our Long Term Economic Plan will reinforce Ireland’s position as a pro-jobs and pro-family country of stability, growth and opportunity for all.

Our commitment to you is to keep it that way. Together with the Irish people, Fine Gael will keep the recovery going.

Thank you for your continued support and for all the work many of you are doing to help us on the doorsteps, in the backrooms and kitchens all over the country during the campaign.

We very much appreciate it and please continue to help us spread the message of our Long-Term Economic Plan and how, if we are re-elected it will ensure a better life for all.

The reality is that without this plan there will be no extra jobs, no recovery and no additional investment in services.  That’s what people need to understand between now and February 26th.

Yours sincerely,

Mary Mitchell O’Connor TD

Supporting Older People in Dun Laoghaire – Fine Gael plans to ensure older years are better years

Fine Gael TD in Dun Laoghaire Mary Mitchell O’Connor has highlighted Fine Gael’s plans to support older people in Dun Laoghaire and ensure that older years are better years.  The plan will safeguard and improve State entitlements for older people, and will provide enhanced supports for older people to live independently in their homes amongst their own communities in Dun Laoghaire.

“Fine Gael has a Long Term Economic Plan to keep the recovery going in Dun Laoghaire with three connected steps: more and better jobs; making work pay; and investment in better services.

“Today we are focusing on services to support older people. We plan to ensure that older years are better years. Our package of measures for older people is worth €870 million, and is the second largest commitment in our Long Term Economic Plan after the abolition of USC.

“Fine Gael wants Ireland to be one of the best countries in the world in which to grow old. We can achieve this if we keep the recovery going and create the resources to support better public services.

“There are five key elements to our plan to support Dun Laoghaire’s aging population:

  • Older people can be confident that State entitlements will be safeguarded and improved as the economic recovery continues. This includes their medical card; free travel; an increase of €25 in the State Pension by 2021; an extra €5 for the Living Alone Allowance by 2021; and a cap on the prescription charge at €17.50, which represents a 30% reduction.
  • Enhanced supports for older people will allow them to live independently in their homes for longer. These include 2.2 million more home help hours and increases in housing adaption grants and senior alert grants.
  • More care will be provided in the community which will benefit older people. This includes building more primary care centres; providing additional front line staff in the health system; and ensuring that chronic conditions can be cared for closer to home.
  • The Fair Deal Scheme waiting list will be kept to four weeks for those who need residential care.
  • Finally, older people can be confident that their voice will be heard. We will establish a Citizens’ Assembly to discuss and plan for the needs of our ageing population.

“In 2007, Fianna Fáil promised to increase the State pension to €300. Instead they presided over a catastrophic economic crash and decided to cut the Christmas bonus, a move that really affected vulnerable older people.

“By contrast, Fine Gael’s Long Term Economic Plan to keep the recovery going will ensure that older years are better years, as we spread the benefits of the recovery to everyone and ensure that older people across Dun Laoghaire can experience meaningful improvements to their quality of life.”

Inheritance Tax to increase to €500,000 per child

Fine Gael TD for Dun Laoghaire, Mary Mitchell O’Connor, has said that increasing the threshold for Inheritance Tax, as planned by Fine Gael, will come as a relief to thousands of family in Dun Laoghaire and the greater Dublin area.

“The Minister for Finance, Michael Noonan, today (Sunday) outlined Fine Gael’s plan to increase the inheritance tax threshold from €280,000 to €500,000 over the lifetime of the next government.

“This will mean that the majority of families living in modest homes will no longer be burdened with massive tax bills when they inherit family homes.

“For some time I have been highlighting what I felt to be the extremely unfair rates of inheritance tax affecting ordinary families and I very much welcome the news that, under Fine Gael, the threshold  will increase.

“It is thanks to our recovering economy that we can cut taxes and improve services all over the country. Fine Gael has a long term economic plan designed to keep the recovery going which will ensure we can continue to make these kinds of investments.

“The plan has three steps: more and better jobs, making work pay more than welfare, and investment in better public services, which will only be possible as a result of the increased revenue generated by creating more jobs. This plan will ensure that more people feel the benefits of a recovering economy in their own lives.”

Gaelscoil Phádraig Ballybrack

The unacceptable delay of eleven years in providing suitable and adequate accommodation for Gaelscoil Phádraig Ballybrack must be urgently addressed.

I have submitted Parliamentary Questions and a letter to the Minister for Education and Skills urging for the matter to be resolved. Please see a copy of the Parliamentary Questions and response and letter below.

I have made representations to Mr. Alan Mc Intyre in the School Capital Appraisal Section of the Department of Education and Skills and have asked him to make this a priority for his section.

I also recently attended the demonstration in the school playground on January 25th, 2016 and met with concerned and frustrated parents.

As a former school principal, I am acutely aware of the importance of providing an educational environment that is safe, secure and conducive to learning.   Please be assured of my ongoing effort to ensure that Gaelscoil Phádraig receives the school building they have been promised and that the children deserve.

I will update you as soon as I receive a response to the below letter to the Minister for Education and Skills

Yours sincerely,
Mary Mitchell O’Connor TD

PARLIAMENTARY QUESTIONS

To ask the Minister for Education and Skills when Ballyowen Meadows new school building will be completed, and if she will make a statement on the matter.

Minister Jan O’Sullivan response:

The Major Building Project for this school is at an advanced stage of  architectural planning, Stage 2(b) – Detailed Design, which includes the 

applications for Planning Permission, Fire Safety Certification, Disability
Access Certification and the preparation of tender documentation.

All statutory applications have been granted and the design team are in the
process of completing the stage 2(b) tender documentation. Once the Stage 2(b)
Tender documentation is submitted my Department will carry out its review of
the project. Following completion of stage 2(b) and subject to no other
issues arising the project will then be progressed to tender and construction.

To ask the Minister for Education and Skills when precisely will Gaelscoil Phadraig Ballybrack move into their promised building, given that in 2005 Gaelscoil Phadraig Ballybrack were promised a premises, formerly known as Archbishop McQuaid School; that Ballyowen Meadows Special School moved in to that premises at the end of 2005, that in 2010 Ballyowen Meadows School was at the Advanced stage of the Department of Education building programme and yet are still in 2015 only at Advanced Stage 2B, and if she will make a statement on the matter.

Minister Jan O’Sullivan response:

I wish to advise the Deputy that my Department remains committed to providing
permanent accommodation for Gaelscoil Phadraig. It is my Department’s intention
that the gaelscoil will relocate to the premises currently occupied by
Ballyowen Meadows school following the construction of its new school. All
statutory applications have been granted for the new school and the design team
are in the process of completing stage 2(b) tender documentation. Once this
documentation is submitted, my Department will carry out its review and subject
to no issues arising, the project will then progress to tender and construction.

LETTER

Dear Minister,

In 2005, Gaelscoil Phádraig was allocated a permanent school building, formerly known as the Archbishop McQuaid’s school. Three years later, Ballyowen Meadows School moved into the building temporarily. However, due to the ongoing delays of Ballyowen’s building project, the students of Gaelscoil Phádraig remain without a school building.

Students at Gaelscoil Phádraig have been waiting over ten years for essentials such as proper classrooms, a school hall, a library, and a sports field. Without a school hall, assembly takes place in a small courtyard outdoors regardless of the weather. If it is raining, students not only remain damp throughout the day because of assembly, but Physical Education is also cancelled and students must remain in their rooms for lunch.

Minister, this is an extremely important matter that requires urgent attention as children are attending a school that is unacceptable in 2016. 

I look forward to receiving your prompt response and hope that my constituents’ concerns can be clarified.

Yours sincerely,
Mary Mitchell O’ Connor TD

Closing Dates for Voting

Closing date to get on the supplement to the 2016/2017 Register of Electors is 5th February for postal/special voters and 9th February for other eligible voters. 

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