State care: Children in overcrowded emergency Tusla accommodation at risk of abuse
Many children in State care are living in overcrowded emergency accommodation, leaving some at risk of being abused as a result of having to share bedrooms with others, according to internal Tusla records.
About 170 children taken into care by Tusla, the child and family agency, are being accommodated in unregulated placements known as “special emergency arrangements”.
Internal Tusla documents reveal cases of children in the emergency accommodation contracting scabies and living in rooms with bed bugs. Others were accommodated in isolated locations away from their communities, leaving children facing commutes to schools of up to five hours a day in one case.
An Irish businessman in Singapore: ‘You’ll get a year in jail if you are in a drunken brawl, so people don’t step out of line’
Protestants in Ireland: ‘We’ve gone after the young generations. We’ve listened and changed how we do things’
Is this the final chapter for Books at One as Dublin and Cork shops close?
In Dallas, X marks the mundane spot that became an inflection point of US history
Top News Stories
- Israel will no longer approve UNRWA food aid to northern Gaza, UN agency says: The head of the UN Palestinian refugee agency (UNRWA) said on Sunday Israel had informed the UN that it will no longer approve UNRWA food convoys to the north of Gaza.
- Snapshot survey: Is the Government making the country go in the right or wrong direction?: The referendums on family and care, which were overwhelmingly defeated a fortnight ago, topped the list of issues that grabbed the public attention in the last month.
- Simon Harris rules out early election after taking over as Fine Gael leader: New Fine Gael leader and presumptive taoiseach Simon Harris has signalled no snap general election and that the Government will run its full term until early next
- Sagrada Família church, started in 1882, ‘will be completed in 2026′: Barcelona’s Sagrada Família basilica has a new completion date of 2026 that comes 144 years after the first stone was laid.
- Justin McAleese was ‘terrified’ as a gay teenager at Catholic schools, says former president: Former president Mary McAleese has spoken of how her son Justin, who is gay, was “terrified a lot of the time” while attending Catholic schools.
- Check out today's Most Read stories
- Join The Irish Times WhatsApp channel for breaking news straight to your phone.
News from around the World
- Gaza’s looming famine: Why is the humanitarian situation so dire in the Palestinian territory? Famine is looming by May in the Gaza Strip, a UN-backed report forecast on Monday, without an end to fighting that has decimated the Palestinian territory and cut off supplies.
- Islamic State takes responsibility for attack that killed 137 people in Moscow: Grieving Russians laid flowers on Sunday at the gutted shell of a concert hall in a Moscow suburb, two days after it was stormed by gunmen during a massacre that was claimed by the Islamic State group, but which the Kremlin has tried to link to Ukraine.
The Big Read
- Scammers drain woman’s Revolut account and fintech comes looking for more: Friday, October 13th turned out to be very unlucky for a reader called Clodagh, as that was the day the scammers came calling, writes Conor Pope
The best from Opinion
- Una Mullally: Simon Harris’s vacuous ‘live, laugh, lead’ online persona leaves me cold
- Conor Brady: Bizarre case of the garda, pensioner and bicycle a gift to those resisting reform
- Ireland can – and must – take action on Gaza
- Letter of the day: Over 63 years, our nest of Crowes was filled with love, fun, and lively debates
Today’s Business
- Gender pay gap most pronounced in legal profession, according to PwC Ireland: Analysis of gender pay gap reports submitted recently by large-scale employers in Ireland has revealed the difference between what men and women are paid on an hourly basis declined marginally last year but large discrepancies still exist in certain industries.
Top Sports news
- Ken Early: John O’Shea’s Ireland on-trend with a healthy nod to Bayer Leverkusen: “A boring game, not a good one, slow rhythm, slow passes, no sharpness ...” Belgium’s coach, Domenico Tedesco, could hardly have been more withering about the game, and a fair few of the 38,000 in attendance probably agreed.
Martyn Turner/Picture of the Day
Culture and Life & Style highlights
- Keys To My Life review: Eilish O’Carroll on finding love – ‘We were both straight women living a straight life ... My biggest problem was my Catholic guilt’: Mrs Brown’s Boys star was married twice before falling in love with a woman
Video & Podcast Highlights
Why not try one of our Crosswords & Puzzles?
Like this?
Get the best content direct to your inbox by signing up to one of our newsletters