
The Information Commissioner has denied an application to release information on the identities of former members of the Oireachtas who had Dáil bar/restaurant bills written off.
Continue reading “FOI Decision: Disclosure of Dail Bar debtors denied”
Access to Information Updates

The Information Commissioner has denied an application to release information on the identities of former members of the Oireachtas who had Dáil bar/restaurant bills written off.
Continue reading “FOI Decision: Disclosure of Dail Bar debtors denied”

This is the court filing from Delaware reported in the Sunday Business Post yesterday, concerning legal action between Paddy McKillen and IBRC.
The property developer has launched a massive legal action in the United States against the liquidators of the former Anglo Irish Bank.

An FOI of all business groups’ correspondence with the Taoiseach last year reveals growing concern from various business organisations over the risk of Brexit to Irish jobs.
Over 28 letters relating to the impact of Brexit were sent from groups representing Irish business interests to the Department of the Taoiseach’s office in 2017.
Continue reading “Brexit “biggest economic threat to Ireland in a generation”, business groups warn”

Firhouse residents responded with concern after comments by Leo Varadkar in December of last year defending the government’s approach to the ‘Church of Scientology’.
Continue reading “Communities local to new Scientology centres raise concern over Varadkar’s stance”

MORE than €27,000 was spent sending five politicians and three officials on a week-long trip to China and Hong Kong.
The entire delegation flew business class at a cost of at least €2,712 each and stayed in a string of five-star hotels, most of which were generously paid for by their Chinese hosts.
Continue reading “Politicians trip to Hong Kong and China cost €27,000”

A CONTROVERSIAL banner that adorned the Ha’penny Bridge has been put into permanent storage after Dublin City Council found it was in breach of its own planning guidelines. Continue reading “Dublin City Council’s ‘Up the Dubs’ banner in breach of its own guidelines”
A CRACKDOWN on learner drivers could leave waiting times for driving tests of up to 68 weeks unless extra staff were hired, an internal briefing report warned the Department of Transport.
The Road Safety Authority (RSA) said plans to fine and jail motorists who give their vehicles to unaccompanied learner drivers might lead to 150,000 extra driving tests.
In a “surge planning” report, they said they anticipated a huge spike in applications that could last for between a year and eighteen months.
They also warned there could be an upsurge in failure rates with some drivers attempting their test after years without having taken lessons.
According to internal documents, there were just over 247,000 people holding provisional licences and already waiting times for a test were running at 20 to 26 weeks at some centres.
The RSA had predicted what the changes might mean given a low, medium, or high volume of new applications for a driving test.
In their “high” scenario, 118,947 people would come looking for a test while another 29,737 people would fail and need another test.
That would leave them needing 148,684 additional tests, which would lead to average waiting times of 68 weeks without any intervention.
Read the full Report below
THE government signed off on a €473,000 pension deal for the ex-boss of Irish Water only after consulting with the Attorney General.
Documents released under FOI have revealed how Irish Water also had to pay for external legal advice over arrangements for their former managing director to retire on full pension at age 57 and with a €100,000 severance payment.
Speaking notes prepared for Housing Minister Eoghan Murphy explained that the retirement deal could not be sanctioned without sign-off from him and two other ministers.
A list of “redline issues” was prepared for Mr Murphy included an explanation of how the retirement package meant an internal pension scheme had to be amended and a new severance gratuity scheme created.
Mr Murphy was told to prepare for opposition comment suggesting he would be asked about the “extraordinary high costs involved in the establishment of Irish Water”.
The speaking notes said that the department should also be prepared for questions on whether the state would be “vulnerable to any potential legal challenges”.
The Department of Housing and Department of Public Expenditure had on several occasions refused to release documents relating to Mr Tierney’s pension.
Read the documents below.
By Ken Foxe
THE government took a €70 million hit on water charges because they feared legal issues over trying to recoup the water conservation grant.
The €100 grant had been paid to householders on a universal basis and many who claimed it never actually paid any water charges.
A briefing note prepared for the Department of Housing shows how three options were given on how to refund households that had paid their water bills.
The document was only released after nearly year-long battle with the Department during which they repeatedly refused to make it public.
The then minister Simon Coveney was told the cheapest option would be to refund customers while taking account of payment of the €100 conservation grant.
That would have cost €100 million for the refunds and an estimated €9 to €11 million in administrative costs in sifting out who was owed what.
The document was only made public after almost a year of effort to have it released under either FOI or EU regulations covering access to information on the environment.
Its release had been the subject of a review by the Office of the Commissioner for Environmental Information since last November.
However, the Department decided they would release it without being forced to saying they “no longer [had] any reason to withhold the note”.
Read the document below.
FINANCE minister Paschal Donohoe was warned that revenue from the introduction of a sugar tax would be unreliable and that the impact of its introduction would hit low income families hardest.
He was also told the tax could potentially be “subject to litigation” if it failed EU state aid rules and could cause administrative problems for Revenue in collecting it.
The new levy was subsequently approved by the EU Commission last month who said it did not involve state aid; it was then formally introduced on May 1.
Minister Donohoe was firmly behind plans for the tax, saying the only thing that stood in its way was if the same type of levy was not introduced in Britain and Northern Ireland.
In a note to civil servants, he said: “Yes we will do this … at a rate similar to the UK. Only thing that will stop this is it not happening in UK/NI. Please move ahead with it.”
His comments are contained in a ministerial submission on the sugar tax prepared ahead of Budget 2018. It has only been released now however following an FOI request.