A number of TDs, Senators and former ministers have chosen to retain pension entitlements from teaching roles alongside their current salary, according to Department of Education records.
Fine Gael’s former minister for the Gaeltacht Dinny McGinley opted to continue accepting payments related to his time as a primary school teacher for two years while on a ministerial salary of €130,000.
According to official Oireachtas documents, the Donegal deputy donated his pension payments to the State for one year in 2013, but reclaimed them in 2014 after he was removed from his ministerial post.
TDs in Dáil Éireann receive a salary of €87,000 per year, with Ministers for State entitled to an extra €30,000 following a reduction in 2013. Senators currently earn €65,000.
Independent TD Tommy Broughan and Fianna Fáil Senator Ned O’Sullivan are the only members of the Oireachtas in receipt of a Department of Education pension who have chosen not to register their source of income in a yearly members’ interests list.
Regulations set by the Standards in Public Office commission (Sipo) mean TDs and Senators are expected to declare any remuneration worth more than €2,600 which is not related to their current occupation.
Not disclosed
Both individuals chose not to disclose the value of their pensions when contacted by
The Irish Times
, meaning they could fall either side of the declaration threshold.
“I gift back to the State a very large portion of my entitlement, so the vast bulk of it stays with the State,” said Mr Broughan, a TD for Dublin North-East and a former member of the Labour Party.
Kerry-based Senator O’Sullivan, who came to national prominence last year for his comments on the threatening behaviour of seagulls in Dublin city centre, was not available for comment.
Other Oireachtas members who are entitled to claim a teacher's pension include Labour's former minister for trade and development Joe Costello, Fine Gael Senator Jim D'Arcy, Fianna Fáil TD and Leas-Cheann Comhairle Michael Kitt and Fine Gael TD John O'Mahony.
Both Costello and Kitt have opted to defer their pensions, but only the latter put his entitlement on record. They declined to comment as to whether they would take up their departmental pensions in future in conjunction with other State pensions or payments.
“I have declared the pension in line with requirements set by Sipo and am happy to do so in the interests of transparency. It should be noted that I have retired from my position and paid into the pension during my time in the teaching profession,” said Mayo TD O’Mahony, a former All-Ireland winning coach with Galway.
Sanctions
According to Sipo regulations, anyone who elects not to declare interests worth more than €2,600 may face sanctions including “censuring” from the Oireachtas, or suspension if the infringement is ongoing.
Serious cases may result in salaries being withheld if the person in question deliberately avoided disclosing a registrable interest, or if the contravention is “of a grave nature”.
Nearly 40 members of the Oireachtas held teaching posts at some stage prior to entering politics, including Taoiseach Enda Kenny and Minister for Finance Michael Noonan.