Government failing to provide details on child deaths in care, Dáil group told

THE GOVERNMENT is obsessed by a culture of secrecy and has failed to provide details of numerous reports into children who have…

THE GOVERNMENT is obsessed by a culture of secrecy and has failed to provide details of numerous reports into children who have died in the care system, an Oireachtas committee heard yesterday.

Fine Gael spokesman on children Alan Shatter said this failure to shine a light on the failings of the care system may ultimately result in an inquiry along the lines of the Ryan report in the future. “We need to shine a light on where things go wrong. There must be some level of monitoring and accountability if we are ever to learn any lessons,” Mr Shatter told the Oireachtas Committee on Health.

“The lack of social workers is resulting in thousands of cases of children at risk not being dealt with. We have serious deficits and a broken childcare system.”

He said there was also a major scandal of children who have been placed in the out of hours social work service in Dublin who have ended up being “pimped into prostitution or dying on our streets”.

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In particular, the reports into the deaths of two young people in the care system – 17-year-old David Foley and 18-year-old Tracey Fay – have never been published.

Minister for Children Barry Andrews told the committee that he had received both reports and hoped to publish the recommendations of at least one of them shortly.

On staffing levels, he said that the moratorium on recruitment to the health sector did not affect social workers and hoped that a total of up to 270 workers could be recruited over the next year and a half.

The Minister accepted that a total of 6,500 child protection cases have not been allocated a social worker, as highlighted in The Irish Times last month.

But he said that all cases received some form of assessment and that an increase in social workers would help address any shortfalls.

Also speaking at the committee, Minister for Health Mary Harney announced that more than €190 million in new services for people with disabilities, cancer care and immunisation will be formally authorised over the coming days.

She said that while the money had been allocated in last October’s budget, it would have been irresponsible to sanction the spending until there was greater clarity on the state of public finances.

Ms Harney said an additional €350 million had been made available for demand-led schemes such as medical card and the drugs repayment programme. However, she said there would be no extra funds available for hospitals who cannot keep within their budgets.

Labour’s equality spokeswoman Kathleen Lynch also told the committee that a total of 851 women on maternity leave in the Health Service Executive had not been replaced.

She said these kinds of measures were placing existing health workers under acute strain and undermining public health services.

“At the end of the day these kinds of events are very predictable, yet there is no cover available at all,” she said.

Responding, Ms Harney said such vacancies could typically be filled through redeployment of existing staff.

However, union resistance often made this very difficult to achieve.

Carl O'Brien

Carl O'Brien

Carl O'Brien is Education Editor of The Irish Times. He was previously chief reporter and social affairs correspondent