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Cllr Francis Timmons – Independent Voice

Back to School Clothing and Footwear Allowance scheme 2014

Parents who are on a social welfare payment/taking part in a training employment scheme or income is under the recommended income threshold and have children aged from four years may be eligible for this allowance.
The Department of Social Protection have stated that they will pay a number of customers automatically which means a lot of families will not have to apply for this payment manually. If you have not receiv…ed an automatic payment by the 9th of June 2014, I would recommend that you fill in an application form.

Income limits for couples 2014
Couple Income limit
1 child €563.60
2 children €593.40
3 children €623.20
4 children €653*
Income limits for lone parents 2014
Lone parent Income limit
1 child €410.10
2 children €439.90
3 children €469.70
4 children €499.50*
*The income limit is increased by €29.80 for each additional dependent child.

Closing date for this allowance is the 30th of September 2014.

NO JOY AT BAILOUT EXIT

Posted by Francis on November 27, 2013
Posted in Budget and Goverment issues 

My letter in todays Independent (http://www.independent.ie/opinion/letters/same-challenges-today-as-before-1913-29787082.html) – 27-11-13

NO JOY AT BAILOUT EXIT

* Ok, so Ireland is to exit the bailout process by the end of the year, but I am not overjoyed.

We have — due to the incompetence of Fianna Fail — severely cut home-help hours, had major cuts to disability, over 10pc of the population living in food poverty, and cuts to special needs etc.

We have also had the introduction of a property tax and upcoming water charges. We still have huge dole queues right around Ireland. We have also lost thousands to emigration.

The list is endless.

Many people who are contacting me are in dire circumstances, so I for one won’t be celebrating or congratulating such dire incompetence that has led to the misery of so many of the most vulnerable in our society.

FRANCIS TIMMONS

CLONDALKIN, DUBLIN

Budget 2014

Posted by Francis on October 16, 2013
Posted in Budget and Goverment issues 

“Budget 2014 marks the continuation of the war on the elderly, sick, disabled, bereaved, women and young unemployed people.” The budget cut dole €144 to €100 for 21 to 25 year olds 25 year olds cut €188 to €144 is disgraceful. The attack on the Elderly is un-forgivable. Many of the Cuts from Budget 2013 don’t come into effect to 2014. Its another year of Austerity that is crippling Ireland.  The people will have there first big say in the Local Elections in 2014. Don’t Forget the 7 Austerity Budgets and the pain they have caused.

SNAs Cuts in St Bernadettes National school

Posted by Francis on September 26, 2013
Posted in Budget and Goverment issues 

Cuts to special needs assistants are totally Unacceptable , the long term costs of such cuts must be measured up to short term savings. St Bernadettes National school in Rowlagh is undergoing such savage cuts – see page 4 of The Echo Newspaper. Its a disgrace again the most vunerable being hit. I for one support the parents in there fight. I understand there anger.

Letter re Budget 2013

Posted by Francis on September 3, 2013
Posted in Budget and Goverment issues 

Dear Minister Noonan
As Budget 2013 approaches these are a number of the areas I would not cut, here are just some and some of the reasons why.
• Disabilities: we have many people living in large group settings, many have little to call their own, and more live in the community living hand to mouth. How can we expect them to take more cuts? The cuts to the respite grant left people with a disability and their families without adequate respite every year. Large heating bills for some i.e. MS sufferers etc. is driving people into poverty. Please don’t touch people with a Disability.
• Poverty – Over 10% Living in food poverty and many more on the margins, the less well of cannot afford to take more cuts. There simply is nothing left to give.
• Frontline services – there is no room to cut hospital beds, nursing home places, disability places any further.  Also ambulance services are at dangerous levels.  Gun Crime etc. is on the rise, there be no more cuts to frontline guard services.
• Low to middle in-come families – any more cuts here will lead to more sinking into poverty. The property tax and water charges etc. are already threatening to drive more into the poverty trap.
A wealth tax is one option, cuts to management level grades in all services, cuts to layers of management in different services and departments.
But most of all we need a budget with a proper Budget plan that will not drive more to emigrate our current rate of one person leaving every six minutes is not sustainable.
We need our skilled workers to stay and pay tax. We need jobs, we need a government that can deliver or if they can’t to step down.
Francis Timmons

Investment Needed now

Posted by Francis on September 3, 2013
Posted in Budget and Goverment issues 

Without investment there will be no jobs, without jobs there will be no recovery and without recovery Ireland will be stuck in austerity. Time for action.

http://www.socialjustice.ie/

http://www.socialjustice.ie/content/social-justice-ireland-proposes-new-%E2%82%AC7bn-3-year-investment-programme-boost-growth-jobs-and

“THIS IS NOT A RECESSION – IT’S DAYLIGHT ROBBERY”
The Coalition government, and Fianna Fail before them, have been using the excuse of the Banking Collapse, and the subsequent bail-out, to impose what have been probably the harshest cuts and the most severe Austerity regime ever in the history of the State.
In fact, closer analysis of the situation shows that this is nothing more than a smokesc…reen to try and hide the fact that the so-called Austerity regime is merely an attempt to consolidate more and more wealth in the pockets of the rich at our expense.
In fact the income of the richest 1% in this country has actually risen during the economic crisis.
While we are struggling under the burden of unemployment, cuts, emigration, increased taxes, and the tragedy of hugely increased suicide rates, our two main banks – AIB and Bank of Ireland – guilty parties in our banking collapse – continue to pay huge salaries to their top executives.
Richie Boucher was Chief Executive of Bank of Ireland’s retail division during the pre-crash property frenzy. Best buddies with property developers such as Sean Dunne, he was personally responsible for overseeing development loans in the bank reaching a high of €7.1 billion, many of these based on overstated land values and insufficient security.
And the penalties he has suffered for his wrong-doings? Promotion to Chief Executive Officer, and a hefty salary of €843,000 per annum or over €16,000 per week………
Archie Kane, who was appointed part-time governor of Bank of Ireland in 2012, had been previously the Director of Lloyd’s insurance division in the UK when it mis-sold payment protection insurance on a stunning scale. By August 2012 Lloyd’s had to set aside £4.8 billion to cover claims from the victims of this scandal. Kane, along with 4 other directors, had parts of his 2010 bonus clawed back as a result.
So Archie bailed out of the UK, and came to Ireland, the haven for failed financiers……
In his present part-time job as governor of the Bank of Ireland, Kane gets an annual salary of €349,000, or €7,000 per week. He also has a consultancy arrangement worth €59,000.
24 of the Bank of Ireland’s top executives are on a salary of over €400,000, or a minimum of €7692 per week
19 of their top executives get over €300,000, which works out €5769 minimum per week
150 get over €150,000 or at least €2884 per week.
IS THIS HOW THEY ARE SPENDING OUR BAILOUT MONEY OF €4.7 BILLION?
AIB, now wholly owned by us, the taxpayers, pays similar salaries to its top executives:
4 top executives in the AIB get an annual salary of more than €400,000 which works out at a minimum of €7692 per week
8 receive more than €300,000, or €5769 per week
44 get more than €200,000 or €3846 per week
134 get more than €150,000, or at least €2884 per week
IS THIS HOW WE WANT OUR BAILOUT MONEY OF €6.5 BILLION TO BE SPENT?
In 1999, AIB’s part in the DIRT scandal was revealed, and it was forced to make a €90 million settlement with the Revenue Commissioners……
In 2007, AIB was awarded the prize for ‘retail banking excellence’ at KPMG’s Financial Services Excellence Awards……
By September 2008, the bank guarantee had been announced……
By January 2009 AIB had to be rescued in a bailout that eventually amounted to €6.5 billion of our money……..
Senior executives of the Trustee Savings Bank recently decided to cease contributions to defined pensions benefit scheme, which means that ordinary bank workers who expected a pension of €30,000 will now only receive €5,000 per year, while the pensions of top executives will remain untouched.
NAMA – the ‘bad bank’, set up to deal with loans which were not being paid back to the banks, pays an average salary of €102,579. This includes salaries and/or commission to between 110 and 120 developers whose loans have been taken over by NAMA. Two of these developers are being paid as much as €200,000 per year, or €3,846 per week.
As well as this, members of NAMA’s ‘advisory group’ ran up a €23,000 tab for hotel, travel and subsistence costs last year
POLITICIANS’ SALARIES AND PENSIONS
Enda Kenny gets an annual salary of €200,000, or €4,000 per week. If he were to resign today he would get an annual pension of €21,466 for the two years he has spent as Taoiseach, as well as more than €15,000 per year for his time spent as Minister of Trade and Tourism in the Rainbow coalition of 1994 – 1997. This would bring his pension up to nearly €37,000, or over €700 per week
Eamon Gilmore gets an annual salary of €184,405, or €3546 per week. If he were to resign today he would get €18,347 per year for his two years as Tanaiste, as well as nearly €7,500 for his time as junior minister in the Rainbow Coalition of the ‘90’s, bringing his annual pension up to nearly €25,847, or nearly €500 per week.
Michael Noonan’s salary amounts to €170,000 per year, or over €3269 per week, as well as a pension of €80,685 or €1552 per week, for his previous stints as TD and minister.
Bertie Ahern gets a whopping annual pension of €152,332, or over €2929 per week…..
Brian Cowen’s annual pension nearly matches Bertie’s: €151,062, or over €2,905 per week
All of the above are just some of the people who got us into this financial mess, and the architects of the so-called Austerity Regime under which you and I, the ordinary citizens of Ireland, are suffering…….
AUSTERITY FOR WHOM??
Here is a list of some of the recent cuts:
HEALTH CUTS
* The embargo on recruitment to the public service has reduced staff numbers in the HSE by 4%, or 4,000 workers
* Health Budget cut by €721m in 2013, or by more than 5%,thus bringing the health service to situation of crisis, more akin to the health service of a 3rd world economy, where the already hard-pressed tax payer feels compelled to fund-raise in order to maintain health services. This is in the wake of cuts of €1.75 billion in the previous two years…..
* A cut of €383m to Primary Care Schemes in the last budget
* Slashing of individual Hospital budgets by up to nearly 10%
* Ward and bed closures
* Long waits on trolleys in A and E
* Unacceptably long waiting lists, with patients waiting sometimes as long as 4 years to be seen by a consultant.
* Cuts to Medical Card eligibility
* Cancer patients now only eligible for medical cards if they are at a terminal stage of their illness.
* Prescription charges trebled, from 50c per item, to €1.50
* Disability Services cut by 1.2%
* Recent announcement by James Reilly of a further cut of €130m, with another €129m before the end of the year, and more cuts to come in 2014…..
* Reduction in Home Help hours
* Reduction in Home Care Packages
* Removal of Gluten-free products and others from Medical Card and other State Re-imbursement Schemes
* Closure of Elderly Care public beds in Community Nursing Units, with some Community Nursing Units closed completely
* Cuts in Day Services, Residential and Respite Services for the elderly and disabled
WELFARE CUTS
* Cuts to Carers’ Allowance, and more stringent qualification criteria
* Reduction in Carers’ Respite Care Grant, by €325
* Cuts in Respite Care places
* Cuts in Home Care Services
* Cuts in Domiciliary Care Allowance
* Future Cuts to Rent Allowance for pensioners
* Cuts to Rural Transport Scheme
* Tax introduced on Maternity Benefit
* Cuts to Phone Allowance and Electricity/Gas Allowance for pensioners and other recipients
* Child Benefit cut by between €10 and €20, depending on family size
* Cuts to Mobility Allowance
* Cuts to Mobility Grant
* A cut of €50 per child on Back to School Clothing and Footwear Allowance
* Cost of Education Allowance abolished
* The duration of Jobseeker’s Benefit reduced by 3 months
* Reductions in Exceptional Needs Payments
* Increases in PRSI for the self-employed, abolition of employees’ PRSI-free allowance
* One Parent Family Allowance only payable until youngest child reaches the age of 10yrs (to be reduced further to 7 yrs in 2014)
* Reduction in Income Disregard for One Parent Family Payment by €20 per week (to be reduced by another €20 per week in 2014, and €15 in the following 2 years, bringing it to a whopping €70 per week in total by 2016)
EDUCATION CUTS
* The embargo on recruitment to the public service has meant larger class numbers
* Cuts in Resource Teaching hours
* A cap on the numbers of Special needs Assistants, even though there is a 10% increase in the number of children in need of this service
* 4.8% increase in the cost of educating a child (on top of increase of 9.4% last year) (CSO figures)
* Reduction in 3rd Level grants
INCREASED TAXES
* Property Tax
* Carbon Tax
* Septic Tank Charges
* Water Charges ( to be imposed in 2014)
* Broadcast Tax – to replace the TV licence (to be imposed in 2015)
* Increased Motor Tax and VRT
* Maternity Benefit to be treated as taxable income
* Increased rates of DIRT, CAT, reduction in threshold for CAT
UNEMPLOYMENT
* Unemployment has risen to 435,200
* Official Unemployment Rates over the past 2 years have fluctuated between 13.6% and 15.1%, with emigration being arguably the single biggest factor in any reductions in the rate of unemployment. Official jobless figures only include those on the Live Register, and disregard other welfare recipients, or those on various back-to work schemes, such as Tus, Job Bridge, etc.
* Unofficial Rates of Unemployment are given as 20%
* The IMF warned in April that Ireland “faces an acute unemployment crisis”, saying the broad jobless rate is at “a staggering 23%”, despite emigration.
EMIGRATION
* Between April 2011 and April 2012, 87,100 people emigrated from this country. This works out at more than 7,000 per month, or over 200 per day, more than half of whom were Irish citizens. This is the highest emigration figure since the Great Famine.
* A 2013 survey commissioned by the National Youth Council has shown that over 300,000 people have emigrated in the last 4 years, and that over a quarter of Irish households have seen a close family member emigrate in the past two years.
* The Department of Social Protection website advertises nearly 1,000 jobs outside of Ireland, including excavation work in Iraq…..An unemployed man in his 60’s was encouraged to take up work as a bus driver – in Malta…..
SUICIDE
* The official suicide rate increased by an alarming 20% in 2012 (provisional HSE figures), though the HSE’s own suicide prevention officer stated that true figure is probably 20% higher again.
It is time we told them enough is enough, that we refuse any longer to be the fall guys for their mistakes, that we will no longer be hoodwinked by their ‘Austerity Programme’ while they and their likes continue to line their pockets and live obscene lifestyles on grossly inflated salaries
* Confront your Local Representative at every possible opportunity, make your voice heard.
* Keep yourself informed about what’s going on – through social media, other media. Talk to your friends and neighbours – tell them what’s going on. Get involved in the discussions on the social media. Encourage others to do so too.

Letter in the Irish Independent.

Posted by Francis on August 12, 2013
Posted in Budget and Goverment issues 

  * I have heard it all now – a Fianna Fail and Fine Gael coalition. Is Mary O’Rourke from this planet?
Fianna Fail brought this country to its knees. Fine Gael, propped up by Labour no less, continues disastrous policies that are wreaking havoc on a lot of Irish citizens….
Cuts to homecare, cuts to disability, cuts to special needs assistants and so on have left vulnerable people more vulnerable.
The property tax and upcoming water charges will drive more into poverty. A total 10pc already live in food poverty. We have a whole new level of poverty and a new Ireland thanks to this shower.
Come to think of it, is any one of the parties – Fianna Fail, Fine Gael, or Labour – really living on this planet?
I, for one, hope that the Irish people show all three parties how they feel come the local elections in May 2014.
Francis Timmons
Clondalkin, Dublin 22

Anglo Irish Bank Bailout

Posted by webmaster on June 25, 2013
Posted in Budget and Goverment issues 

surely there should be a police investigation after Independent Newspaper investigation printed today?. Absolutely disgusting that the taxpayer for generations is left paying.

Disgraceful pay and perks of your Local councillors

Posted by webmaster on June 23, 2013
Posted in Budget and Goverment issues 

This is a Disgrace – I want to change this , I want accountability , I want Fairness.

The pay and perks of your Local councillors