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Programme for Government
8, Mar 2011 - 08:52

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Below is the text cut and paste from the official pdf document - not all symbols are correctly represented but the pdf document is attached for those who wish to read it in detail.



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Statement of Common Purpose...............................2-4
Economy ...........................................................5-17
Reform ...........................................................18-13
Fairness .........................................................32-55
Progress .........................................................56-64




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STATEMENT OF COMMON PURPOSE
On the 25th February a democratic revolution took place in Ireland. Old beliefs, traditions
and expectations were blown away. The stroke of a pen, in thousands of polling stations,
created this political whirlwind. The public demanded change and looked to parties that
would deliver the change they sought.
In that election record numbers of Irish people turned to, and chose, Fine Gael and Labour.
The people chose our two parties to begin mending the pieces of a fractured society, a broken
economy and to provide a sense of collective hope in our shared future.
It is no exaggeration to say that we now face one of the darkest hours in the history of our
independent state. To deal with this unprecedented national economic emergency, our
country needs an unprecedented level of political resolve. What is needed now after a long
period of reckless, ill disciplined Government is strong, resolute leadership.
That is why Fine Gael and Labour, the two largest political parties in the State having
achieved historic levels of support in the general election, now seek to use their mandate to
form a Government for National Recovery.
A Government that will be built on partnership and parity of esteem between our two parties.
Its key objective will be to repair our society over the next 5 years and get our people back to
work.
We have a secure and stable mandate and we will use it to build a secure and stable
Government. A Government that will restore our country’s finances, will radically reform an
outdated system of administration and will rebuild Ireland’s reputation on the international
stage.
In doing so, both our parties are committed to protecting the vulnerable and to burdensharing
on an equitable basis. Fianna Fáil presided over an unequal and increasingly divided

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Ireland. We are both committed to forging a new Ireland that is built on fairness and equal
citizenship.
The Government for National Recovery will strive to ensure that every one of our citizens
has an effective right, free from discrimination, to contribute to the economic, social and
cultural life of the nation. Our aim, when our legislative and constitutional changes are
implemented, is that Ireland will be a transformed country. By the end of our term in
Government Ireland will be recognised as a modern, fair, socially inclusive and equal society
supported by a productive and prosperous economy.
Both parties approach the task ahead with a combination of humility and hope, underscored
with an absolute resolve to bring the change the people so clearly demand. The new
Government will seek to match the spirit, courage and pride of the people, so that our country
can confidently begin a period of renewal.
But the old ways, the old politics that created the crisis from which we seek to release
ourselves from, will not do. Both our parties have long recognised this reality and we
campaigned hard and sought and secured a clear mandate to break from the past and start
anew.
With this in mind new ways, new approaches and new thinking will form the constant
backdrop to the coalition’s style of governance. In all the major areas of public life this
determination to modernise, renew and transform our country will be evident over time as
our shared programme is implemented.
The Government will get our economy moving, restore confidence, fix our banking system
and support the protection and creation of jobs. The success of our economic plans will lay
the foundation for the rest of our agenda for change.
In parallel, there is a clear need for our political system to embrace change, share the burden
and lead by example. Every section of our society is facing hardship. Our political system, if

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it is to regain credibility and relevance, must change too. Wider than that, our system of
Government must modernise, adapt to new financial circumstances and start to deliver better
services with scarce resources.
The challenge facing the new Government is unlike any other. Our economy and our politics
have been shattered. But our people’s spirit has not. And that is the spark. The spark that
encourages a new Government to look to the future with a sense of hope. A sense of hope
that with the right plans, the right people, and with a unified sense of purpose our country can
recover.
The Government for National Recovery faces an historic challenge. The trust of the nation
has been invested in it. It is committed to honouring that trust. At all times it will meet each
task guided and informed by some words first spoken by Albert Einstein:
“Learn from yesterday, live for today, hope for tomorrow.”
The new Government has to show too that it has learned from the past. Our Programme
reflects the new reality that our politics and our government can, and must, change. The new
Government is determined to make each day count as we begin a slow but deliberate renewal
of our country.
Our country deserves a fresh start from the failed politics of the years past. It also deserves a
new hope that a new Government guided by the needs of the many rather than the greed of
the few can make a real, positive difference in their lives.
There isn’t a moment to be lost.

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Economy
Banking and Re-Negotiation of the IMF/EU Programme of Support
As a result of reckless mismanagement of the Irish economy by recent Governments, Ireland
faces a profound banking, fiscal and jobs crisis, and has been forced to seek external financial
assistance. This has been provided by the IMF and the EU through an assistance programme
that provides a loan facility to Ireland.
At the core of the loss of domestic and international confidence in Ireland’s economy has
been the outgoing Government’s commitment – between NAMA asset purchases and the
subsequent recapitalisation – of over ??100 billion of State resources to bank rescues. This is
three times the national debt before the crisis.
Much of this taxpayer commitment reflected the policy to crystallise – through asset transfers
to NAMA – massive losses in banks under taxpayer guarantee at a time of extraordinary
financial distress.
If it were not for the historical and potential future losses for Irish taxpayers from the
outgoing Government’s banking policy, Ireland’s public finance problems would be acutely
difficult but nonetheless entirely manageable.
The outgoing Government’s “blank cheques for banks” policy must now be ended. We must
step back from the edge of national insolvency.
The new Government supports the objectives of the EU/IMF Programme of Support i.e.
restructuring and recapitalising the banking system, achieving fiscal stability and returning the
Irish economy to growth.
However, it is observable to all that the Programme of Support has – to date – failed to restore
confidence in the Irish economy. In the view of the new Government, this reflects uncertainty
over the affordability of the rescue package, and in particular the unknown but potentially
enormous cost to the Irish taxpayer from the continuation of existing policies aimed at
resolving the banking crisis.
Moreover, the failure of the Programme of Support to restore confidence in the financial
health of Irish banks or the Irish State continues to contribute to wider euro-zone financial
instability.
On this basis, both parties to the new Government sought, and secured, a strong mandate from
the Irish electorate to renegotiate a more credible package that is better for both Ireland and
Europe
The overall aim of renegotiation must be to secure a Programme of Support and solution to
the banking crisis that is perceived as more affordable by both the Irish public and
international markets, thereby restoring confidence, growth, job creation and the State’s
access to affordable credit from private lenders. The Parties to the Government recognise that
there is a growing danger of the State’s debt burden becoming unsustainable and that
measures to safeguard debt sustainability must be urgently explored.

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In our engagement with the lenders, we will pursue a number of different strategies to achieve
this end.
• We will seek a reduced interest rate as part of a credible re-commitment to reducing
Government deficits to ensure sustainability of our public finances.
• We will re-commit to structural reforms required to accelerate growth, job creation and
debt sustainability.
• We will attach the utmost priority to avoiding further down-grades to our sovereign credit
rating by setting further capital spend by the State on bank re-capitalisation at a level that
is consistent with national debt sustainability.
• In this regard, we will defer further recapitalisation of the banks until the solvency stress
tests are complete and known to the new Government. Earlier recapitalisation in advance
of publication of the stress tests will not contribute to market stability and confidence.
• We remain committed to a smaller banking system that reduces its reliance on funding
from the Irish and European Central Banks and volatile market sources. In order,
however, to limit further calls on the State to cover bank losses from distressed asset sales,
bank deleveraging must be paced to match the return of more normal market conditions
and demand for bank assets.
• As an interim measure, we will seek to replace emergency lending to our banks with
medium-term, affordable, official financing in a way that can restore confidence among
other potential lenders in the liquidity position of our banks.
• We will end further asset transfers to NAMA, which are unlikely to improve market
confidence in either the banks or the State.
• We will ensure that an adequate pool of credit is available to fund small and mediumsized
businesses in the real economy during the re-structuring and down-sizing
programme.
• We will introduce a comprehensive special resolution regime for dealing with bank
insolvencies.
• The Government accepts that enabling provisions in legislation may be necessary to
extend the scope of bank liability restructuring to include unsecured, unguaranteed senior
bonds.
• The new Government will seek to dispose of the public stakes in the banks as soon as
possible at the best possible return to the taxpayer.
• We will create an integrated decision making structure among all relevant State
Departments and Agencies to replace the current fragmented approach of State bodies in
dealing with the financial crisis.

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A key challenge for the new Government will be to make our banking system an engine of
economic recovery by restoring public and market confidence in its financial health,
management competence and ethical integrity.
• The new Government will re-structure bank boards and replace directors who presided
over failed lending practices. We will ensure that the regulator has sufficient powers of
pre-approval of bank directors and senior executives. To expedite this change-over we
will openly construct a pool of globally experienced financial services managers and
directors to be inserted into key executive and non-executive positions in banks receiving
taxpayer support.
• We will insist on the highest standards of transparency in the operation of NAMA, on
reduction in the costs associated with the operation of NAMA, and that decision-making
in NAMA does not delay the restoration of the Irish property market.
• Once the banking sector has been restored and is functioning effectively, we will
introduce a bank levy based on the size of a bank’s liabilities (other than shareholder
capital).
• We will establish a Strategic Investment Bank
• We recognise the important role of Credit Unions as a volunteer co-operative movement
and the distinction between them and other types of financial institutions. In Government,
we will establish a Commission to review the future of the credit union movement and
make recommendations in relation to the most effective regulatory structure for Credit
Unions, taking into account their not-for-profit mandate, their volunteer ethos and
community focus, while paying due regard to the need to fully protect depositors savings
and financial stability.
• We support the future development of the IFSC as a source of future employment growth,
subject to appropriate regulation. We will establish a taskforce on the future of the
financial services sector to maximise employment opportunities in financial services for
staff leaving employment as a result of downsizing.
• We will ensure that the investigations into failures in the banking system are adequately
resourced.
• All remuneration schemes at banks subject to state support will undergo a fundamental
review to ensure an alignment of interest between banks, their staff and the taxpayer.
2011 Jobs Programme
The big challenge for Ireland is to develop a strategy that will allow job growth and
sustainable enterprise. Job creation is central to any recovery strategy. Every person who
leaves the dole and goes back to work reduces the deficit by an estimated ??20,000, spends on
average an additional ??15,000 on goods and services and also reduces the risk on the banks
mortgage books.
We will - within the first 100 days – resource a Jobs Fund which will

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• Provide resources for an additional 15,000 places in training, work experience and
educational opportunities for those who are out of work;
• Cut the 13.5% rate of VAT to 12% up to end 2013;
• Halve the lower 8.5% rate of PRSI up to end 2013 on jobs paying up to ??356 per week;
• Reverse the cut in the minimum wage;
• Abolish the Travel Tax as part of a deal with airlines to restore lost routes;
• Implement a number of sectoral initiatives in areas that will create employment in the
domestic economy;
• Initiate a long-term strategy to develop new markets in emerging economies;
• Secure additional resources for the national housing energy retrofitting plan, as part of
plans to phase out subsidies in this area by 2014;
• Expand eligibility for the back to education allowance; and
• Accelerate capital works that are ‘shovel ready’ and labour intensive including schools
and secondary roads.
Labour Market Policy
We will a develop new graduate and apprentice internship scheme, work placement
programmes and further education opportunities for our young unemployed providing an
additional 60,000 places across a range of schemes and initiatives. We will provide a range of
initiatives to increase access to further higher level education for the unemployed.
We will make Literacy and basic workplace skills a national priority, with literacy training
incorporated into wider variety of further education and training.
Within this total, we will provide 30,000 additional training places across the education and
training system, distributed in line with the recommendations of the Expert Group on Future
Skills Needs.
We will replace FAS with a new National Employment and Entitlements Service so that all
employment and benefit support services will be integrated in a single delivery unit managed
by the Department of Social Protection. This integrated service would provide a ‘one stop
shop’ for people seeking to establish their benefit entitlements; looking for a job; and seeking
advice about their training options.
It will process citizen entitlements such as supplementary welfare allowances, higher
education grants and welfare allowances. It will manage as much as possible means testing for
State entitlements. It will also be responsible for employment referral and training supports
provided by FÁS. This service will offer users a higher level of personalised employment
counselling, with more frequent face-to-face interviews. Those on the live register who are
identified as being most at risk of long-term unemployment will receive priority treatment for
more intensive support. It will ensure active case management for people in need of
assistance.
Increasing Exports
Ireland’s economic recovery must be export-led. We will take a number of actions to achieve
the maximum growth in exports, including the long-term development of new markets.

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We will establish an Export Trade Council to strengthen cooperation and coordination across
all key departments and agencies involved in promotion and development of trade and
exports, whose membership will be divided equally between government and private sector
representatives who have experience in establishing and growing export-oriented business.
We will create a new ‘Home to Export’ programme to share the expertise of exporting
companies with firms currently reliant on domestic markets. A ‘Source Ireland’ portal will be
developed to market Irish goods and services abroad.
We will position Ireland to develop better trade relationships with emerging economies,
including the establishment of local trade and investment teams. These teams will execute
detailed local market plan, with progress against targets reviewed annually. We will develop
cultural and diplomatic links with emerging markets including a scholarship scheme. We will
actively develop the export of educational services.
We will exempt from VAT service companies that export more than 90% of their output.
Innovation and Commercialisation
We will implement innovation and commercialisation policies as outlined below subject to
cost benefit analysis.
• We will progressively implement the recommendations in the Trading and Investing in
the Smart Economy Report
• We will support our indigenous digital game industry by reforming R&D supports
available to the industry, setting aside funding from Innovation Fund Ireland for a seed
capital scheme for Irish digital gaming start-ups, introduce a digital media component
to Transition Year programmes and promote Ireland as digital gaming hub.
• We will develop Ireland as a ‘digital island’ and first-mover when it comes to
information technology by ensuring more progress on e-Government and moving
Government services online, investing in ICT in schools, and investing in information
technology in the healthcare sector.
• We will make Ireland a leader in the emerging I.T. market of cloud computing by
promoting greater use of cloud computing in the public sector, organising existing
State supports for cloud computing into a package to promote Ireland as a progressive
place for I.T. investment, establishing an expert group to address new security and
privacy issues arising from the use of cloud computing and reviewing the adequacy of
current legislation and identify what steps need to be taken to ensure a supportive
regulatory environment.
• We will develop a National Intellectual Property (IP) protocol to give predictability
about the terms on which business can access IP created in Higher Education
Institutions and the wider digital sector.

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• We will promote and support investment in technology research, development and
commercialisation beyond basic research supported by Science Foundation Ireland, as
well as removing barriers to innovation and accelerate exploitation of new
technologies.
• We will target key technology areas and sectors where innovation can be applied
including but not limited to high value manufacturing, advanced materials,
nanotechnology, bioscience, electronics, photonics and electrical systems and
information and communication technology. We will also focus on the application of
technological innovation in established sectors of the economy like energy generation
and supply, transport, creative industries, high-value services and architecture and
construction by identifying challenges, establishing priorities and developing
strategies which specify necessary actions to transition to more innovative approach.
• We will promote Ireland’s full engagement with the ‘Innovative Union’ proposals
issued by the European Commission in October 2010 as one of the seven flagship
initiatives under EU2020 Strategy, with the specific aim of refocusing R&D and
innovation policy on major challenges and at turning inventions into products.
• The critical gap between basic research promoted and funded by Science Foundation
Ireland and third level institutions and its subsequent development into commercial
opportunity for investors can only be closed by making new technologies ‘investment
ready’. We will establish a network of Technology Research Centres focused on
applied technological research in specific areas, to be linked to appropriate highereducation
institutions. The centres will accelerate exploitation of new technologies by
providing infrastructure that bridges gap between research and technology
commercialisation. We will initially establish 3 additional centres foccussing on
biotechnology, nanotechnology and high value manufacturing. Further centres from a
number of other areas will be selected at a later time.
• We will support the development of an International Content Services Centre to make
Ireland world leader in managing intellectual property.
• We will pioneer within the EU a model of ‘fair use’ in European Copyright Law, like
in the USA, which effectively permits the use of portions of a copyrighted work so
long as the normal economic exploitation of the originating work is not undermined.
This will allow internet companies and other digital innovators to bring their services
to market.
Subject to a cost benefit analysis, we will amend the R&D tax credit regime to make it more
attractive and accessible to smaller businesses, in the following ways:
• Companies with R&D expenditures of under ??100,000 will be entitled to full tax
credit on those entire expenditures as opposed to just the increment over the base year,
with marginal relief for companies with expenditure just over ??100,000.
• We will allow companies to offset the R&D credit against employers. PRSI as an
alternative to corporation tax.
• To cut down on red tape in the applications process, companies in receipt of a
Research, Technology and Innovation (RTI) grant from one of the development
agencies will be automatically deemed as entitled to the R&D tax credit.

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Supporting SMEs
We will reform public procurement to become a tool to support innovative Irish firms and to
allow greater access to Irish small and medium sized businesses.
We will fast-track the substantial reforms needed for our bankruptcy legislation to bring us
into line with best international standards, focusing on a flexible personal bankruptcy system
that reduces discharge time for honest bankrupts.
We will reform the Joint Labour Committee structure, beginning with the appointment of
independent chairpersons to JLCs, who will retain a casting vote. Reform options will
examine the rate of pay for atypical hours.
We will legislate to end upward only rent reviews for existing leases.
We will direct the Revenue Commissioners to examine the feasibility of introducing – on a
revenue neutral basis – a Single Business Tax for micro enterprises (with a turnover of less
than ??75,000 per annum) to replace all the existing taxes on sole traders and small businesses
to cut compliance costs and make starting a business much less daunting.
We will reduce the cost of Government imposed red-tape on business, in part by streamlining
regulatory enforcement activities out of a merger and rationalisation of existing structures. We
will create a Business Inspection and Licensing Authority that absorbs the existing business
inspection activities of the Health and Safety Authority, and the National Consumer Agency.
We will create a single food safety monitoring agency, building on the existing Food Safety
Authority, responsible for food safety inspection from farm to fork. This will enhance the
food traceability system and reduce the burden of red tape on business.
We will develop a Unique Business Identifier for use by all government departments and
agencies that will facilitate the sharing of information within Government and reduce
repetitive information requests from businesses.
We will require Departments to publish Regulatory Impact Assessments (RIAs) before
Government decisions are taken, thereby offering a further channel to obtain the views of civil
society on new rules and regulations.
We will introduce new legally binding voluntary commercial debt plan structures to allow
small businesses to restructure debts without recourse to expensive court procedures.
We will introduce new legislation to protect all small building subcontractors that have been
denied payments from bigger companies.
Financial Services and Credit to Business
We will implement a temporary, partial credit guarantee scheme that will provide a level of
insurance to banks against losses on qualifying loans to job-creating firms to get banks
lending again to industry and entrepreneurs.

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We will construct a ??100 million Microfinance Start-Up Fund that will provide start-up loans
and equity that draws funding from the NPRF and private institutional funds.
We will support the development of a more dynamic, venture capital industry in Ireland by
seeking to attract top tier venture financing and investment companies to Ireland, such as
Silicon Valley Bank.
We will work to promote a greater appreciation of the co-operative model as a distinct form
of organisation, ensure a level playing field between co-operatives and the other legal options
for structuring enterprise activities, and provide a conductive framework for the full potential
of the co-operative model to be realised, including in areas such as childcare, education,
housing, energy retrofitting, environmental protection, transport and healthcare.
Sectoral Strategies
Together with significant reforms and initiatives to improve the overall competitiveness of the
economy, its capacity for innovation, its export performance, and the skills of our labour
market, as outlined in this Programme for Government, we will also undertake a number of
specific sectoral strategies for job creation in the domestic economy. These include initiatives
in the retail and SME sectors, and in ICT. Other sectoral strategies include:
Growing the agri-food sector
• CAP reform will be vital for the future development of the agri-food sector. Our
primary aim is to secure a fair overall funding envelope for agriculture under the CAP
and a fair share of this budget for Irish agriculture.
• We will prioritise a Single Farm Payment system which best benefits active Irish
farmers and the Irish grass based system of production.
• Further expansion and innovation in our dairy and meat sectors will be a key priority
under a reformed CAP and we will work with industry to achieve more intensive
levels of production.
• We will facilitate cooperation in the sector to move towards market-based pricing in
order to reflect improved products and innovation in the meat and dairy sectors and
the development of more integrated supply chains.
• We will promote greater land mobility and involvement of young farmers by
investigating new farm models and farm partnerships between farmers, while retaining
our family farm structure.
• We will work at an EU level to ensure that programmes targeting the involvement of
young farmers in agriculture will be a key policy of the CAP.
• We will legislate to ban a number of unfair trading practices in the retail sector, such
as ‘hello money’ from food suppliers.
• New food businesses will be developed through a series of coordinated efforts across
the food sector and state agencies, such as building pilot plant kitchens to allow food
producers develop and manufacture products on small scale and development by
Enterprise Ireland of scaleable manufacturing solutions for food businesses that have
the capacity to expand.
• We will develop a single brand for the Irish agri-food sector globally. Bord Bia will
also work in cooperation with producers and small businesses to develop value-added
Irish food brands, such an eco brand, and local brands.

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• We will put in place an Irish seafood strategy to develop Ireland as a European hub for
seafood processing, and to grow market profile and demand for Irish seafood products.
Bord Iascaigh Mhara will be tasked with assisting Irish companies in adding value to
products through innovation.
Improving our tourism product
• International access is vital to tourism recovery. We will abolish the ??3 travel tax
subject to a deal being agreed with Ryanair and Aer Lingus to re-open closed routes
and bring more tourists into Ireland. If no deal can be done, there will be no reduction
in the tax.
• We will prioritise the Tourism Marketing Fund as an essential pillar of our tourism
strategy and will ensure the best return on Exchequer spending.
• We will explore the possibility of a new agreement on visitor visas with the UK,
offering tourists the opportunity to visit the UK and Ireland with one visa, at a
reasonable cost to tap into the tourism market for significant events such as the
forthcoming London 2012 Olympics.
• Marketing campaigns will be developed in emerging long haul markets such as China,
Russia, India, Japan and the Middle East, using the Tourism Marketing Fund.
Recovery of market share in Britain will also be a key priority in a revamped tourism
strategy.
• Improving the e-capability of our tourism product will be a priority.
• We will target available resources at developing and co-ordinating niche tourism
products and activity packages that are attractive to international visitors focusing on
food, sports, culture, ecotourism, activity breaks, water-based recreation and festivals.
• Event tourism will be prioritised to continue to bring major fairs and events to Ireland
such as the Volvo Ocean Race or Solheim Cup.
International Education
• A National Strategy for International Education will be implemented, to develop the
‘Education Ireland’ brand, to encourage more international students to study here and
to create new jobs in the sector.
• Our objective will be to double number of international students studying in Ireland,
particularly targeting students from India, China and the Middle East.
• This policy will be pursued in line with employment, academic and skill requirements
of overall economy and education sector.
• We will overhaul the student visa system and ensure advertising, diaspora policies and
quality assurance systems are strategically developed to best position the international
education sector.
• We will permit postgraduate students to be allowed work here for up to a year after
they complete their studies. High-value research students will be permitted to bring
families if they are staying more than two years.

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Green jobs
• We will double funding for home energy efficiency and renewable energy
programmes until the end of 2013, after which time these schemes will be ended.
After 2013, we will roll out a ‘pay as you save’ scheme to continue home energy
efficiency retrofitting work without recourse to public funding. We will explore the
use of funding options such as an Energy Efficiency Obligation on energy suppliers.
• We will tender for a ‘pay as you save’ contract to insulate all public buildings in the
state, where the contractor provides the capital.
• We will seek to establish Ireland as a renewable manufacturing hub to attract
international and domestic investment. We will also position Ireland as a leading
player in the global carbon market, and a centre of excellence in the management of
carbon.
• We will facilitate the development of energy co-operatives to make it easier for smallscale
renewable energy providers to contribute to our renewables target.
Social Enterprise
The Government will promote the development of a vibrant and effective social enterprise
sector. We will instruct agencies to view social enterprises as important stakeholders in
rejuvenating local economies. We will continue support for social innovation projects for
young people trough education, community and voluntary structures.
Investment Strategy
We will draw up a new National Development Plan that reflects Ireland’s changed economic
circumstances, covering the seven-year period 2012-2019.
The plan will be based on a comprehensive study of Ireland’s public investment priorities
over that period.
In the initial years, when resources will be most heavily constrained, we will prioritise
investment in school building, non-national roads, healthcare, and in job-creation.
We will insist that major capital projects are subjected to proper cost-benefit analysis and
evaluation, improving future productivity and growth prospects, and that the value-for-money
obtained is significantly enhanced compared to the most recent period.
The new NDP will be based on traditional exchequer capital spending, plus other resources to
be invested from the National Pension Reserve Fund, on the basis of obtaining a return on
investment and that does not impact the Government Balance Sheet.
In developing the new NDP, we will re-examine the investment programmes of the semi-state
companies to ensure that they are in line with new economic circumstances.
In order to ensure that public enterprise plays a full role in Ireland’s economic recovery, we
will create a holding company to manage the state’s holdings of the semi-states, and to coordinate
investment in key priority areas identified by the Government, including energy,
water and forestry.

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We will create a Strategic Investment Bank that will become a provider of finance to large
capital projects, a conduit for venture capital and a lender to SMEs.
NewERA
The Government will put in place a parallel, commercially-financed investment programme in
key networks of the economy to support demand and employment in the short-term, and to
provide the basis for sustainable, export-led jobs and growth for the next generation.
Under the NewERA plan, streamlined and restructured semi-States will make significant
additional investments, over and above current plans, over the next four years in “next
generation” infrastructures in energy, broadband, forestry and water.
These investments – and the accompanying semi-state restructuring process – will be financed
and pro-actively managed by a New Economy and Recovery Authority (NewERA), which
will absorb the National Pension Reserve Commission.
Subject to finalisation in the National Development Plan, we propose to make additional
investments in the following areas:
A New Water Network: The new Government will create Irish Water, a new State company
that will take over the water investment maintenance programmes of the 34 existing local
authorities. It will supervise and accelerate the planned investments needed to upgrade the
State’s inefficient and leaking water network so has proved so unreliable during the recent
harsh water conditions.
A Next General Telecoms Network: NewERA will co-invest with the private sector and
commercial semi State sector to provide next generation broadband to every home and
business in the state. This will be achieved by delivering fibre to the home or kerb for 90% of
homes and businesses in Ireland with the remaining 10% provided with high speed mobile or
satellite broadband.
A 21st century “Smart Grid”: Beginning with the hand-over of ESB’s transmission assets to
Eirgrid, we will create a new ‘Smart Grid’ company with ultimate full ownership and
responsibility for the development of Ireland’s electricity and gas networks.
Bio-Energy and Forestry: To accelerate the development of Ireland’s forestry and bioenergies,
NewERA will merge together Bord na Mona and Coillte to create a new State
company called BioEnergy Ireland to become a global leader in the commercialisation of next
generation bio-energy technologies, including an annual 14,700 hectare afforestation
programme.
Sale of State Assets
Over time, we also propose to finance the investment programme from the sale of certain state
assets.
We will target up to ??2 billion in sales of non-strategic state assets drawing from the
recommendations of the McCarthy Review Group on State Assets when available.

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Assets will only be sold when market conditions are right and when adequate regulatory
structures have been established to protect consumer interests.
Fiscal Policy
We believe that sustainable public finances are a pre-requisite for economic stability and
growth. To this end, the State must pursue a determined deficit reduction strategy. This must
not, however, undermine short-term recovery, or investment for long-term growth, which
would have the effect of undermining debt-sustainability.
The new Government also recognises the unusual degree of uncertainty regarding the short
and medium term growth prospects for both Ireland and out trading partners.
We believe it is appropriate, in order to enhance international credibility, to stick to the
aggregate adjustment as set out in the National Recovery Plan for the combined period 2011-
2012.
In preparation for Budget 2013, we will review progress on deficit reduction, and draw up a
plan which will achieve the objective of reaching the 3% of GDP target for the General
Government Deficit by the target date of 2015.
Should Ireland succeed in obtaining a lower interest rate on its loans, this should be offset
against the aggregate adjustment required over the term of the programme.
We believe that achieving the 3% of GDP deficit target should be seen as an intermediate step
in the process of restoring the public finances, and that further reductions in the general
government deficit as a share of national income will be required thereafter.
As part of our fiscal strategy the new Government will:
• Keep the corporate tax rate at 12.5%;
• Maintain the current rates of income tax together with bands and credits. We will not
increase the top marginal rates of taxes on income. We will reduce, cap or abolish
property tax reliefs and other tax shelters which benefit very high income earners. We
will also ensure the implementation of a minimum effective tax rate of 30% for very
high earners;
• Consider, arising from the previous Government’s deal with the IMF, various options
for a site valuation tax. Any site valuation tax must take into account the significant
number of households in mortgage distress and provide local government with a
reliable stream of revenue;
• We will limit the top rate of VAT to 23%;
• There will be no increase in the standard 10.75% rate of employers PRSI;
• We will review the Universal Social Charge;
• We will ensure that tax exiles make a fair contribution to the Exchequer;
• Re-prioritise capital funding for smaller projects that deal with specific immediate
problems. Smaller projects are more labour intensive and more likely to be carried out
by local contractors increasing short-run domestic economic impact. Investment
priorities will include education, health and science and technology;

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• Undertake a full review of the Hunt and OECD reports into third level funding before
end of 2011. Our goal is to introduce a funding system that will provide third level
institutions with reliable funding but does not impact access for students;
• Bring in a range of measures to tackle the problem of welfare fraud. As part of this we
will create a new “one-stop shop” Payments and Entitlements Service to process all
major welfare and other entitlements;
• Conduct a Comprehensive Spending Review to examine all areas of public spending
and to assess effectiveness of spending programmes and value for company;
• Establish a Tax and Social Welfare Commission to examine entitlements of self
employed and the elimination of disincentives to employment.

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Constitutional Reform
The context for reform
Building on the well-established and tested Constitution of Ireland, and decades of judicial
determination of rights under that Constitution, we will establish a process to ensure that our
Constitution meets the challenges of the 21st century, by addressing a number of specific
urgent issues as well as establishing a Constitutional Convention to undertake a wider review.
Parliamentary reform issues
We will prioritise putting to the people by referendum a number of urgent parliamentary
reform issues:
• Abolition of the Seanad
• A referendum to amend the Constitution to reverse the effects of the Abbeylara
judgment to enable Oireachtas committees to carry out full investigations.
• A referendum to protect the right of citizens to communicate in confidence with
public representatives.
Other specific priority amendments
We will also give priority to the following specific constitutional amendments:
• A referendum to amend the Constitution to allow the State to cut the salaries of judges
in restricted circumstances as part of a general cut across the public sector.
• A referendum to amend the Constitution to ensure that children’s rights are
strengthened, along the lines recommended by the All-Party Oireachtas committee.
Broader constitutional review
We will establish a Constitutional Convention to consider comprehensive constitutional
reform, with a brief to consider, as a whole or in sub-groups, and report within 12 months on
the following:
• Review of our Dáil electoral system.
• Reducing the presidential term to 5 years and aligning it with the local and European
elections
• Provision for same-sex marriage.
• Amending the clause on women in the home and encourage greater participation of
women in public life.
• Removing blasphemy from the Constitution
• Possible reduction of the voting age.
• Other relevant constitutional amendments that may be recommended by the
Convention.

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Political Reform
Change must start at the top
The political system cannot ask others to change and make sacrifices if it is not prepared to
do the same. We will significantly reduce the size of the Oireachtas by abolishing the Seanad,
if the public approve in constitutional referendum, and we will reduce the number of TDs
following the publication of the results of the 2011 Census of Population. In addition
ministers’ salaries will be reduced, political expenses vouched for and severance payments
for ministers axed. No political pensions will be paid to sitting TDs and in future no retired
politician will get a political pension until the national retirement age. Politics must be about
service to the public, not financial gain for politicians.
We will ensure our Government is seen to be held to account
We believe that in recent years an over-powerful Executive has turned the Dáil into an
observer of the political process rather than a central player and that this must be changed.
We will:
Amend the Constitution to Give Dáil committees Full Powers of Investigation: The
Abbeylara Supreme Court decision currently limits the ability of Dáil committees to hold
investigations into crucial issues of public concern, such as the banking crisis.
Reduce the number of committees and give key committees constitutional standing: the
Dáil needs fewer but stronger committees, resourced properly.
We will introduce a role for the Ceann Comhairle in deciding whether a Minister has failed to
provide reasonable information in response to a question.
We propose a radical extension of the parliamentary question system, so that it shall be a statutory
duty on any body established by or under statute, or with a majority ownership or funding by the
State, to submit to the same parliamentary questions regime as applies to Government
departments. This will involve a liability to provide answers to written questions within a
specified number of Dáil sitting days. (We will however recognise the special position of bodies
with a commercial mandate operating at arm’s length from Government.)
In addition we propose a new procedure for answering oral questions by state bodies. The chief
executive of every state funded body will be required to attend the relevant Oireachtas committee
on a regular basis to answer oral parliamentary questions that can be submitted by any member,
on a similar basis to the attendance of Ministers before the full Dáil.
We will amend Dáil standing orders to ensure that replies to written questions are furnished
within a specified number of days, even during Dáil recess.
To make the oral question process more effective, we propose to increase the time allocated to
oral question. To provide balance there will be a reduction in the number of oral questions being
submitted to one per member. A member must be present in the chamber when his or her question
is reached, although they may defer to another member the right to ask a supplementary question.

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We Will Overhaul the Way Politics and Government Work
We will radically overhaul the way Irish politics and Government work. The failures of the
political system over the past decade were a key contributor to the financial crisis and the system
must now learn those lessons urgently.
Government is too centralised and unaccountable. We believe that there must also be a
real shift in power from the State to the citizen.
We will legislate on the issue of cabinet confidentiality.
We will legislate to restore the Freedom of Information Act to what it was before it was underined
by the outgoing Government, and we will extend its remit to other public bodies including the
administrative side of the Garda Síochána, subject to security exceptions.
We will extend Freedom of Information, and the Ombudsman Act, to ensure that all statutory
bodies, and all bodies significantly funded from the public purse, are covered.
We will introduce Whistleblowers legislation.
We will introduce spending limits for all elections, including Presidential elections and
constitutional referendums, including for a period in advance of scheduled Local, European,
General and Presidential Elections.
We will significantly reduce the limits on political donations to political parties and candidates to
??2,500 and ??1,000 respectively, and require disclosure of all aggregate sums above ??1,500 and
??600 respectively.
We will introduce the necessary legal and constitutional provisions to ban corporate donations to
political parties.
We will amend the Official Secrets Act, retaining a criminal sanction only for breaches which
involve a serious threat to the vital interests of the state.
We will introduce a statutory register of lobbyists, and rules concerning the practice of lobbying.
Our open government legislation will also establish an Electoral Commission to subsume the
functions of existing bodies and the Department of the Environment.
We will amend the rules to ensure that no senior public servant (including political appointees) or
Minister can work in the private sector in any area involving a potential conflict of interest with
their former area of public employment, until at least two years have elapsed after they have left
the public service.
Restrictions on the nature and extent of evidence by civil servants to Oireachtas committees will
be scrapped and replaced with new guidelines for civil servants that reflect the reality of the
authority delegated to them and their personal accountability for the way in which it is exercised.

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We propose an Investigations, Oversight and Petitions Committee of the Oireachtas. It would be a
powerful committee, constructed on the lines of the Public Accounts Committee, bi-partisan in
structure and chaired by a senior member of the opposition.
The Committee would be the formal channel of consultation and collaboration between the
Oireachtas and the Ombudsman, responsible for receiving and debating her annual and special
reports and for ensuring that her criticisms and recommendations are acted upon. For that
purpose, she would attend as a regular witness before the committee.
The Committee would receive parliamentary petitions from individuals and groups in the
community seeking the redress of grievances connected with the public services of the State and
with the public administration generally. Its functions would be to act as a "clearing house",
directing complaints to those bodies most competent to act on them: the Ombudsman, the Data
Protection Commissioner, the Local Government Auditor, the Oireachtas committee that has
oversight of the relevant Department, and so on.
We will refer to the Constitutional Convention the issue of reducing the Voting Age to 17
and giving citizens the right to vote at Irish embassies in the presidential election.
We recognise that there needs to be a substantial increase in the number of women in
politics. We will ask the Constitutional Convention, which is examining electoral reform,
to make recommendations as to how the number of women in politics can be increased.
Public funding for political parties will be tied to the level of participation by women as
candidates those parties achieve.
We will make good corporate governance the law, not an optional extra, and enact legislation to
provide for binding code of practice for corporate governance, which will be obligatory for
companies wishing to be listed on Irish stock exchange.
We intend to end the heavy dependence on a very limited pool of extremely expensive private
solicitors firms providing legal services to the State and agencies, look at ways to require agencies
to seek legal advice from the CSSO and not from the private sector in order to save costs, and
ensure that legal work at the bar for the State is spread more equitably rather than confined to a
very limited pool as at present. We will progress the Statute Law Revision Project in order to
enhance public accessibility to the statute book.
Showing Leadership
Politicians should be treated in the same manner as all other public servants.
We will abolish the additional pay for Ministers who leave office. We will restrict the payment of
pensions to politicians so that in future a member can only qualify for a pension at the national
retirement age (currently 65) and upon leaving public life. We will cap taxpayers’ subsidies for all
future pension schemes for politicians (and indeed for everybody) that deliver income in
retirement of more than ??60,000.
We will halve the cost of the existing provision of ministerial transport. We will provide for the
efficient use of transport including the release of garda drivers to normal policing duties. We will
end the automatic right to state cars for former office holders and other state officials.
We will introduce a new code of practice for the use of the government jet, ensuring transparent
and cost effective travel.

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Dáil Reform
We are proposing radical reform of the way the Dáil operates. Our objective is to make Dáil
Éireann fit for purpose in the 21st century. To carry out this task we must identify the
fundamental goals of a properly functioning Dáil. These include:
• to legislate,
• to represent the people on issues of national concern,
• more effective financial scrutiny, and
• to hold the executive to account.
On each of these headings the Dáil falls short, sometimes far short, of what is required. We
will institute a programme of short-term and urgent Dáil reform, within the existing
Constitution, to make the Dáil fit for purpose.
• We will give committees the power to introduce legislation, while a new 10 Minute
Rule will allow backbench TDs to introduce their own Bills. We will also tackle the
huge over-use of guillotines to ram through non-emergency legislation
• We will introduce a package of changes that will bring about a 50 per cent increase in Dáil
sitting days. Dáil Éireann will in future meet four days a week. There will be a summer recess
of just six weeks and significantly reduced breaks at Christmas and Easter. We will abandon
the practice of providing a “mid-term break” – a full week off at St Patrick’s Day and
Hallowe’en. When the Dáil is not in session the Committees shall agree by roster that a
particular Committee shall meet in the Dáil Chamber.
• We propose to break the Government monopoly on legislation and the stranglehold over the
business of the Dáil, by providing that the new Friday sittings will be given over exclusively
to committee reports and private members business except where urgent government business
must be taken.
• We will enhance the democratic process by involving public representatives at an earlier stage
of the legislative process, particularly before Bills are published. We will amend cabinet
procedure instructions so as to allow government to publish the general scheme of a Bill so
that Oireachtas Committees can debate and hold hearings at an early stage.
• While recognising that there may be exceptional circumstances in which debate may need to
be concluded by a given deadline, we will restrict the use of guillotine motions and other
procedural devices that prevent Bills from being fully debated, so that guillotining is not a
matter of routine as it has become at present, particularly at the end of a session.
• We will also deal with the related problem of legislation being shunted through at high speed
and will ensure that Dáil standing orders provide a minimum of two weeks between each
stage of a Bill, except in exceptional circumstances.
• In order to enhance the role of the legislative committees, we will organise a committee week
every fourth sitting week. The Dáil plenary will sit only for questions, including Leaders’

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Questions and the order of business and the remainder of the day will be taken up in
committee.
• We will establish a petition system to the Dáil, similar to that operating in the European
Parliament, to be managed by a specific Dáil committee that will investigate and report on
petitions which raise issues warranting attention.
• We will enhance the parliamentary relationship with the European Parliament in conjunction
with Ireland’s MEPs. These arrangements will include regular attendance by MEPs at
relevant Dáil committees.
• We will legislate and change Dáil standing orders to ensure the absolute confidentiality of
information entrusted to members of the Dáil by their constituents or informants, and ensure
that such information cannot be compulsorily disclosed through the legal process except with
the consent of the informant.
• We will significantly revamp the adjournment debate format. It will be renamed the topical
issue debate. There will be a minimum of 5 topical issues. These will be taken in the middle
of the day and there will be provision for questions at the end. A Minister or Minister of State
from the relevant Department will be present and there will be an end to the practice of one
junior Minister reading out scripts on behalf of a number of Departments about a range of
issues of which he or she knows nothing.
• The standing orders on urgent issues are used regularly to attempt to raise issues that are not
urgent and such requests are almost invariably refused. We will make the Dáil rules for
raising urgent issues more meaningful by requiring a minimum number of signatories for such
a request.
• In future standing order 32 requests will not be read out.
More Effective Financial Scrutiny
We will establish an independent Fiscal Advisory Council (FAC), separated from fiscal decisionmakers
in government, that would undertake official fiscal macroeconomic projections and
monitoring.
The Fiscal Advisory Council functions would include identifying and advising on cyclical and
counter-cyclical fiscal policies and structural deficits; the cyclical or temporary nature of
particular revenues; and the need to maintain an appropriate and effective tax base.
The Fiscal Advisory Council will be independent of Government and will report to the Dáil and
the public.
The modeling assumptions and inputs of the Fiscal Advisory Council will, as far as possible, be
open to public scrutiny and its outputs would be freely available to external bodies, including in
particular, the opposition parties.
We will open up the Budget process to the full glare of public scrutiny in a way that restores
confidence and stability by exposing and cutting failing programmes and pork barrel politics.
We will publish cost-benefit analyses for major infrastructure proposals and “tax expenditures” in
advance of Government approval.

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Public sector bodies will be required to publish balance sheets and to move to accruals from cashflow
accounting.
Every Purchase Order by a Government Department or agency for more than ??20,000 will be
published online. We will give the Comptroller and Auditor General and Oireachtas Committees
the extra powers needed to carry out value-for-money audits of State programmes.
Public bodies will be required to openly compete for budget resources by publishing pre-budget
spending requests, and what they would deliver in return for such allocations to help deliver
Programme for Government.
We will conduct a Comprehensive Spending Review to examine all areas of public spending,
based on the Canadian model, and to develop multi-annual budget plans with a three-year time
horizon. This plan will be presented to the Dáil for debate.
The Comprehensive Spending Review will assess effectiveness in achieving desired outcomes,
and value for money.
The CSR will examine the number, range and activities of bodies funded significantly from public
purse, including at local government level, and reduce numbers where appropriate. In future,
when proposing a new agency, it will be necessary to prove that the proposed new functions
cannot be carried out within the existing framework.
Every public body will set out clear and unambiguous long, medium and short term strategic
priorities, which will be clearly communicated to public service and citizens. Strategic priorities
will be translated into high level goals for all Departments, on a ‘whole of government’ basis, and
in consultation with Ministers.
Performance indicators will be identified to monitor progress on high level priorities. Annual
reports of departments and agencies will include output statements and audited financial accounts
prepared on generally accepted accounting principles. The performance information provided in
output and outcome-focused measurement will feed into the decision making process for future
plans at political and senior management level.
The reform process will provide for increased delegation of budgets, subject to detailed plans,
relevant performance reporting and audited accounts compiled in accordance with generally
accepted accounting principles.
Detailed business cases will be required for major projects, with review and reporting
requirements built in to the plan. Sanctions will be imposed at an early stage for significant
overruns.
We will change the current emphasis on performance reporting to performance management. All
medium to long-term projects that involve significant public spending will be subject to cost
benefit analysis, and to on-going evaluation.
The results of programme evaluations will be published and programmes not meeting their
objectives will be wound down.
Performance and progress will be published in a new, audited annual Public Service Delivery
Reports. Oireachtas Committees will expose any failure to hit milestones and targets. Each
sectoral Committee will take on new powers, similar to those wielded by Public Accounts
Committee, to hold Ministers and public servants to account for value for money. This will feed
into Oireachtas consideration of the next Budget.

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Where appropriate, agency boards will be scrapped and agency managers will be accountable
directly to Ministers.
We will bring forward the annual Estimates cycle, so that it becomes more timely and relevant. It
will in future start at the beginning of the preceding year and conclude by the summer.
The annual Estimates will in future distinguish between monies being allocated to maintaining the
existing level of service for existing programmes and money to support new programmes or
policy decisions.
The Book of Estimates will be accompanied by a detailed performance report on what the
previous year’s spending had achieved. It will also give details of the level of performance
achieved by agencies under service delivery agreements with Government.
Oireachtas members will be given, from within existing resources, dedicated resources for the
proper scrutiny of the Estimates.
We will reform the Department of Finance by bringing in new leadership and skills to restore its
capacity and credibility in financial and macroeconomic management. Specifically, we will make
an external appointment of an economist of international repute to head up the Department’s
Budget and Economic Policy division.
We will give the Comptroller and Auditor General the extra powers needed to carry out value-formoney
audits of State programmes.
The National Parliament and the European Union
We believe the Oireachtas must be given responsibility for full scrutiny of EU draft proposals, for
proper transposition of EU legislation and for holding the Government accountable for the
decisions it takes in Brussels. All Oireachtas committees must share the burden of dealing with
EU policies and legislative proposals. Systems must be put in place to ensure that Ministers do
not bypass the Oireachtas and make decisions in Brussels on EU matters before these matters are
subjected to scrutiny by the Oireachtas.
The Taoiseach will be obliged to brief the Oireachtas prior to attending European Council
meetings and to engage with the Oireachtas in debate on EU issues of national significance and
concern.
The Oireachtas will devote a full week each year to debating major EU issues of concern to
Ireland such as the Draft Annual Work Programme, Green and White Papers and proposals for
EU budget co-ordination.
The Oireachtas will be linked up with the Irish offices of the European Commission and the
European Parliament in communicating Europe to the Irish people. Outreach programmes,
meetings and competitions particularly in schools will be organised and TDs and Senators invited
to participate.
Under the Lisbon Treaty provisions the Oireachtas is entitled to receive all documents produced
by the EU Commission at the same time as the EU institutions and the Irish Government receive
them. We will ensure all EU documents are forwarded to the Oireachtas through the Ceann
Comhairle and the Cathaoirleach. They will transmit them to the Oireachtas library and the

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relevant Committees. Every TD and Senator will be informed of the documents as they arrive, so
that they can engage in EU matters that concern or interest them.
EU’s Annual Work Programme
The EU Commission produces its Draft Annual Work Programme in October/November for the
following year. We propose that the week in which the 9th May, “Europe Day” falls will be the
occasion for a week-long parliamentary debate on Ireland’s priorities within the EU. The debate
will review the national progress in implementing the current year’s work programme and focus
on identifying the major issues of concern to Ireland for inclusion on the following year’s EU
Draft work Programme.
Oireachtas Committees
The most significant new power conferred on the Oireachtas by the Lisbon Treaty is the power to
ensure that the policies of the EU comply with the principle of subsidiarity. In short that the EU
does not overstep its competences under the Treaties and intrude in areas that are the preserve of
the Member States.
We propose that Oireachtas Committees will play the major role in scrutinising the EU in the
coming years. Greater emphasis will be placed on deepening the involvement in EU matters of
the Oireachtas committees that shadow the work of each Government Department. We will oblige
all sectoral committees to deal with EU matters that come within their remit within a defined
period of time.
Committees will be supplemented by a system of subcommittees and a system of rapporteurs who
have a particular interest in an area of policy or scrutiny and who volunteer to carry out an indepth
study for the relevant committee.
Transposing EU Legislative Measures
The situation can no longer be tolerated where Irish Ministers enact EU legislation by statutory
instrument. The checks and balances of parliamentary democracy are by-passed. The
parliamentary treatment accorded home-produced draft legislation must be extended to draft
legislation initiated within the EU institutions.
The Regulatory Impact Assessments prepared for Ministers on all EU Directives and significant
Regulations will be forwarded automatically to the relevant sectoral Oireachtas Committees.
These Committees should advise the Minister and the Joint Committee on European Affairs as to
whether the transposition should take place by Statutory Instrument or by primary legislation.
Where primary legislation is recommended the full Oireachtas plenary process should be
followed.
Oireachtas Accountability
All Ministers will be obliged to appear before their respective Committees or before the
Committee on European Affairs prior to travelling to Brussels for meetings of the Council where
decisions are made.

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Reforming local government
We will move many of the functions currently being performed by agencies – such as
community employment and enterprise supports – back to local government and ensure
that all property-related revenues are part of the income stream of local government.
We will abolish the position of County Manager and replace it with that of Chief Executive, with
a limited range of executive functions. The primary function of the Chief Executive will be to
facilitate the implementation of democratically decided policy.
A democratically-decided Regional or City Plan will replace the present top-down Strategic
Planning Guideline model.
We will give councillors a legal power to seek reports from, and question in public, all providers
of public services in their area. And we will also empower them to question private sector service
providers such as internet and digital TV providers, local banks or private schools, on their public
service remit.
The Local Government Director of Audit will be required to publish an annual report covering all
his functions to the Oireachtas Committee on Environment. The Report will assist in determining
where local government can produce greater efficiencies.
We will examine what services could be converged between two or more local authorities, such as
technology support, human resources and fire services. We will introduce a single national
building inspectorate service.
Local authorities that deliver efficiencies, either alone or through sharing services, over and above
what is required will be allowed re-invest a proportion of those savings in local initiatives.
We are committed to a fundamental reorganisation of local governance structures to allow for
devolution of much greater decision-making to local people. We will give local communities
more control over transport and traffic, economic development, educational infrastructure, and
local responses to crime and local healthcare needs.
In local services, we will establish a website – www.fixmystreet.ie – to assist residents in
reporting problems with street lighting, drainage, graffiti, waste collection and road and path
maintenance in their neighbourhoods, with a guarantee that local officials will respond within two
working days.
We will merge local enterprise and job support functions of local, regional and national agencies
into a single business and enterprise unit within Local Authorities. This will allow streamlining of
local job creation and support functions, increased shared knowledge capability and resources
while saving on administration costs.

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Public Sector Reform
Public service is, and must remain, about serving the public, not making a profit. It is about
serving the common good, not sectional interests. Real reform of the public sector will
require a commitment from the whole of government to become more transparent,
accountable and efficient. It will require:
• Concrete mechanisms to improve performance, using a range of external standards
and benchmarks, and to deal with persistent under-performance.
• A new approach to government which empowers public servants by devolving more
power.
• New personnel from outside the current system, particularly experts in change
management.
• Citizens having a basic right to key information on the performance of key services.
Government has to deliver better value in order to reduce the deficit and protect frontline
services. We will, subject to there being no conpulsory redundancies and to the protection of
front line services:
• Reduce the total number of public sector employees by between 18,000 and 21,000
by 2014, compared to the total number at the end of 2010.
• Reduce this number by a further 4,000 by 2015.
In order to protect frontline services, even as employee numbers are reduced, we will make
fundamental changes to the way government operates.
A Strategic Centre
A key condition of a successful turn-around strategy for the country is a more joined-up
strategic centre at the heart of government, with the power to confront and break up the
concentrations of power that so damaged the country.
• We will reduce the size of the Department of An Taoiseach, transforming it into the
equivalent of a Cabinet Office that oversees the delivery of a new Programme for
Government.
• We will bring new talent and skills into the Department of Finance.
• We will bring in new skills and rigour into policy-making across all Departments.
All appointments at Principal Officer level and above will be open to external
competition and at least one-third of such appointments will be reserved for
candidates from outside traditional civil service structures for a 5-year period.
• We will strengthen corporate governance legislation and enforcement.
Open Government
Where there is secrecy and unaccountability, there is waste and extravagance. We will pin
down accountability for results at every level of the public service – from Ministers down –

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with clear consequences for success and failure. Ministers will be responsible for policy and
procurement and public service managers for delivery.
• Where appropriate, agency boards will be scrapped and agency managers will report
directly to Ministers and their Departments on performance against targets.
• We will put in place a Whistleblowers Act to protect public servants that expose
maladministration by Ministers or others, and restore Freedom of Information.
• There will be no more “golden handshakes” for public servants that have failed to
deliver.
• We will overhaul TLAC (Top level Appointments Commission), with the
chairperson and the majority of members drawn from outside the public sector.
• We will require Departments to carry out and publish Regulatory Impact
Assessments (RIAs) before Government decisions are taken.
• We will introduce a reformed incentive system for all grades within core
Government departments to reward cross-departmental teams that deliver audited
improvements in service delivery and cost effectiveness.
Waste
We will cut back the waste and political cronyism built up over the last decade by paring
back the expensive, fragmented structures of public administration.
• We will go beyond the recommendations of An Bord Snip to rationalise core
processes that are duplicated across the public service, by establishing shared backoffice
operations for information technology, human resource management,
payments and entitlement applications, business inspections and procurement.
• We will review the Local Government Efficiency Review as part of our
Comprehensive Spending Review.
• We will make substantial cuts to the number of State bodies and companies.
• We will instigate a Government-wide review to identify and eliminate non-priority
programmes and outsource, where appropriate, non-critical functions.
“Choice and Voice” for Service Users
Rather than giving fixed budgets to traditional public service providers like the HSE, VECs
and FÁS, we will put resources into the hands of citizens to acquire services that are tailored
to better suit their needs and less expensive for the taxpayer.
• Schools will publish annual reports.
• In local services, we will establish a website – www.fixmystreet.ie – to allow
residents to report problems with street lighting, drainage, graffiti, waste collection
and road and path maintenance in their neighbourhoods, with a guarantee that a local
official will respond within 2 working days.

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• We will establish a new model of financing social interventions – called Social
Impact Bonds – that share audited exchequer savings with charitable and voluntary
organisations.
• Where appropiate we will open up the delivery of public services to a range of
providers.
• We will give schools, hospitals and other public service bodies new freedoms –
within strict budgets and new accountability systems – to set their own staffing
needs, automate routine processes and adapt work practices to local staff and
customer needs.
Empowering the Civil Service
We will legislate for a reformulated code of laws, replacing both the Ministers and
Secretaries Acts and the Public Service Management Act, which will spell out the legal
relationship between Ministers and their civil servants and their legal accountability for
decisions and for management of Departments.
• The system of implied general delegation of a Minister’s statutory powers to civil
servants will be abolished and replaced by a fixed and determined system of
delegation of specified powers to specified officers.
• Where a responsibility is delegated through several civil service grades, each grade
will be held accountable for their element of it and departmental officials giving
evidence to Oireachtas committees will be obliged to speak on their own behalf for
their delegated responsibilities and, where appropriate, defend themselves and their
actions.
• Delegation orders will spell out the functions of the Minister in supervising the
exercise of delegated powers: the Minister will be responsible for ensuring that
adequate standards are maintained; outputs are delivered as determined or agreed;
and procedures are in place to provide the Minister with the necessary and correct
information to enable him or her to respond to problems of administration and to
give an account of those problems, and of any necessary corrective action, to the
Dáil and to the public.
We will bring to an end the unacceptable executive practice where no record is kept of
ministerial involvment with an issue and resulting decisions.
We will review the grading structure of the civil service and public service and reduce
number of management grades. Public service managers will be given greater autonomy in
deciding how they use staffing budgets and resources to achieve agreed outcomes.
We will remove barriers to mobility across the public service. As part of this we will create
a new tier of senior public service management structures, where senior officials are rotated
across the public sector to nurture the collaborative culture needed to tackle the biggest
cross-cutting social and economic challenges.

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High level strategic goals will be reflected in individual goals, in a new performance
management and development system for staff. Staff recognition schemes will be developed
and devolved, with particular emphasis on team awards. Staff will be encouraged to put
forward suggestions for improving service delivery and organisation efficiency and
effectiveness.
Government services websites, public offices, telephone services, and helplines will be
reconfigured to facilitate access to a broad range of government services through a single
point of contact.

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Fairness
Health and Mental Health
This Government is the first in the history of the State that is committed to developing a
universal, single-tier health service, which guarantees access to medical care based on
need, not income. By reforming our model of delivering healthcare, so that more care is
delivered in the community, and by reforming how we pay for healthcare through
Universal Health Insurance, we can reduce the cost of achieving the best health outcomes
for our citizens, and end the unfair, unequal and inefficient two-tier health system.
Health Service Reform
This Government will introduce Universal Health Insurance with equal access to care for
all. Under this system there will be no discrimination between patients on the grounds of
income or insurance status. The two-tier system of unequal access to hospital care will
end.
The Universal Health Insurance system will be designed according to the European
principle of social solidarity: access will be according to need and payment will be
according to ability to pay. The principle of social solidarity will underpin all relevant
legislation.
As a statutory system of health insurance, guaranteed by the State, the Universal Health
Insurance system will not be subject to European or national competition law.
This Government will act speedily to reduce costs in the delivery of both public and
private health care and in the administration of the health care system.
We will introduce a system of risk equalisation for the current insurance market.
A Special Delivery Unit will be established in the Department of Health to assist the
Minister in reducing waiting lists and introducing a major upgrade in the IT capabilities
of the health system.
A Patient Safety Authority, incorporating HIQA, will be established.
The Minister for Health will be responsible for health policy and for implementing this
ambitious programme of reform and cost control.
The Health Service Executive will cease to exist over time. Its functions will return to the
Minister for Health and the Department of Health and Children; or be taken over by the
Universal Health Insurance system. Staff will be deployed accordingly.

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Primary Care
Universal Primary Care will remove fees for GP care and will be introduced within this
Government’s term of office.
The legislative basis for Universal Primary Care will be established under a Universal
Primary Care Act.
Universal Primary Care will be introduced in phases so that additional doctors, nurses
and other primary care professionals can be recruited.
During the term of this Government, GP training places will be increased. GPs will be
encouraged to defer retirement and will be recruited from abroad, and the number of
practice nurses will be increased so that GPs can delegate care when appropriate to
nurses.
Access to primary care without fees will be extended in the first year to claimants of free
drugs under the Long-Term Illness scheme at a cost of ??17 million.
Access to primary care without fees will be extended in the second year to claimants of
free drugs under the High-Tech Drugs scheme at a cost of ??15 million.
Access to subsidised care will be extended to all in the next phase.
Access to care without fees will be extended to all in the final phase.
Under Universal Primary Care, GPs will be paid primarily by capitation for the care of
their patients and will work in primary care teams with other primary care professionals.
A new GP contract will provides incentives to GPs to care more intensively for patients
with chronic illnesses. This will significantly reduce pressures and demands on the
hospital system.
Registration with a primary care team will be compulsory once the Universal Primary
Care system is fully implemented.
Exchequer funding for primary care will go to a Primary Care Fund on a transitional
basis, which will pay providers of primary care. The goal under UHI will be to create an
integrated system of primary and hospital care.
Ring-fenced funding will be provided to recruit additional psychologists and counsellors
to community mental health teams, working closely with primary care teams to ensure
early intervention, reduce the stigma associated with mental illness and detect and treat
people who are at risk of suicide.

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Universal Hospital Care
A system of Universal Health Insurance (UHI) will be introduced by 2016, with the
legislative and organisational groundwork for the system complete within this
Government’s term of office.
UHI will provide guaranteed access to care for all in public and private hospitals on the
same basis as the privately-insured have now.
Insurance with a public or private insurer will be compulsory with insurance payments
related to ability to pay. The State will pay insurance premia for people on low incomes
and subsidise premia for people on middle incomes.
Everyone will have a choice between competing insurers.
The VHI will be kept in public ownership to retain a public option in the UHI system.
Exchequer funding for hospital care will go into a Hospital Insurance Fund which will
subsidise or pay insurance premia for those who qualify for subsidy.
The Hospital Insurance Fund will oversee a strong and reformed system of community
rating and risk equalisation; provide direct payments to hospitals for services that are not
covered by insurance such as Emergency Departments and ambulances; and provide
matching payment to hospitals for treatments delivered.
The Hospital Insurance Fund will also control those health care costs for which central
control is most effective.
Under UHI insurers will be obliged to offer the same package of services to all.
This guaranteed UHI package will be determined by the Minister for Health in
consultation with the Hospital Insurance Fund and medical experts and will be regularly
reviewed in a process to be established in legislation, the Universal Health Insurance Act.
Insurers will not be allowed to sell insurance giving faster access to procedures covered
by the UHI package.
Hospitals and clinics which participate in supplying care under UHI will not be allowed
to sell faster access to procedures covered by the UHI package.
A White Paper on Financing UHI will be published early in the Government’s first term
and will review cost-effective pricing and funding mechanisms for care and care to be
covered under UHI.
The legislative basis for UHI will be established by the Universal Health Insurance Act.

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Hospitals
Under UHI public hospitals will no longer be managed by the HSE. They will be
independent, not-for-profit trusts with managers accountable to their boards.
Boards will include representatives of local communities and staff.
Smaller hospitals may combine in a local hospital network with a shared management
and board.
Hospitals will be paid according to the care they deliver and will be incentivised to
deliver more care in a “money follows the patient” system.
Insurers will negotiate directly with hospitals to help control costs and encourage
innovation in the delivery of care.
Insurers will not take over the running of hospitals which will be independent providers
of care separate from insurers as purchasers of care.
The Minister for Health will be responsible for hospitals policy and determining that
hospitals which play an important role in an area should not be allowed to close under
UHI.
The Hospital Insurance Fund will assist hospitals in more remote locations that may not
have a large throughput of patients to continue to provide important local services.
To ensure that hospitals compete on an equal footing, public hospitals will be
compensated for costs that they bear that private hospitals do not such as Emergency
Departments and training health care professionals.
The Patient Safety Authority will introduce a national licensing system for hospitals, and
will oversee the transition of hospitals from the HSE to independent local control.
The existing policy of co-location of private hospitals on public hospital lands will cease.
Tax incentives for private hospital developments will cease.
Pathway to Universal Hospital Care Insurance
In the first term of this Government, the foundations will be laid for the introduction of
Universal Hospital Care Insurance:
• The legislative basis for UHI will be enacted.
• Public hospitals will be given autonomy from the HSE.
• The HSE’s function of purchasing care for uninsured patients will be given to
a Hospital Care Purchase Agency which will combine with the National
Treatment Purchase Fund to purchase care for the uninsured over this
transition period.

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• This separation of purchaser-provider functions will enable the development
of a money follows the patient system of purchase of care for people without
insurance before the implementation of the UHI system.
Care of Older People and Community Care
Investment in the supply of more and better care for older people in the community and
in residential settings will be a priority of this Government.
Additional funding will be provided each year for the care of older people.
This funding will go to more residential places, more home care packages and the
delivery of more home help and other professional community care services.
The Fair Deal system of financing nursing home care will be reviewed with a view to
developing a secure and equitable system of financing for community and long-term care
which supports older people to stay in their own homes.
Integrated Care
The integration of care in all settings is key to efficient health care delivery, in which the
right care is delivered in the right place.
Integration of care will be the responsibility of an Integrated Care Agency under the
aegis of the Minister for Health.
This agency will oversee the flow of centrally tax-funded resources between the different
arms of the system so that there are incentives for care to occur in the best setting.
Cost Control
Reference pricing and greater use of generics will be introduced to reduce the State’s
large drugs bill and the cost to individuals of their medications.
Under the new GP contract the rate of remuneration of GPs will be reduced.
Under a new consultant’s contract hospital consultants’ remuneration will be reduced.
Action will be taken to reduce the cost of procurement for medical equipments and
construction of facilities.
Health Administration
The Minister for Health and the Department of Health will be responsible for policy and
spending.
The HSE will cease to exist as its functions are given to other bodies during this process
of reform.

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The HSE hospital purchasing arm will merge with the NTPF to become a new purchaser
of public patient care during this period of transition.
HSE hospitals will become autonomous providers of care.
Capital developments in Health
Health capital spending will be a priority.
Within the Health capital budget, the immediate priority areas will be primary care
centres, step-down and long-term care facilities, and community care facilities such as
day centres for older people.
The completion and commissioning of the cystic fibrosis unit will be expedited.
The National Children’s Hospital will be built.
Mental Health
Our policy on mental health incorporates the recommendations of A Vision for Change.
We are committed to reducing the stigma of mental illness, ensuring early and
appropriate intervention and vastly improving access to modern mental health services in
the community.
A comprehensive range of mental health services will be included as part of the standard
insurance package offered under Universal Health Insurance.
Given the central role of primary care in our reforms, we will ensure that patients can
access mental health services such as psychologists and counsellors in the primary care
setting. We will also strengthen GP education and training in mental health so that they
can better diagnose, treat and refer as necessary.
We will ring fence ??35m annually from within the health budget to develop community
mental health teams and services as outlined in A Vision for Change to ensure early
access to more appropriate services for adults and children and improved integration with
primary care services.
Part of the ring-fenced funding will be used to implement Reach Out, the National
Suicide Prevention Strategy, to reduce the high levels of suicide.
We will close unsuitable psychiatric institutions moving patients to more appropriate
community-based facilities and will develop specific strategies for elderly patients and
those with intellectual disabilities who remain under the care of mental health services.
To ensure a joined-up approach to mental health in the community we will establish a
cross-departmental group to ensure that good mental health is a policy goal across a range
of people’s life experiences including education, employment and housing for example.

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We will endeavour to end the practice of placing children and adolescents in adult
psychiatric wards.
We will review the Mental Health Act 2001 in consultation with service users, carers and
other stakeholders, informed by human rights standards, and introduce a Mental Capacity
Bill that is in line with the UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities.
Other health priorities
We will develop a national Alzheimer’s and other dementias strategy by 2013 to increase
awareness, ensure early diagnosis and intervention, and development of enhanced
community based services. This strategy will be implemented over five years.
We will introduce a cervical cancer vaccination catch-up programme for all girls in
secondary school. We will also extend Breastcheck to 65-69 year old women.
We will develop a National Carers Strategy to support carers and to address issues of
concern.
We will reopen discussions with the Irish Thalidomide Association regarding further
compensation for victims of Thalidomide.
We will seek a mechanism to compensate those women who were excluded on age
grounds alone from the Lourdes Hospital Redress Scheme.
Bioethics
We will legislate to clarify the law surrounding assisted human reproduction including
the law relating parental relationships arising from assisted human reproduction.
We will legislate to regulate stem cell research.
We acknowledge the recent ruling of the European Court of Human Rights subsequent to
the established ruling of the Irish Supreme Court on the X-case. We will establish an
expert group to address this issue, drawing on appropriate medical and legal expertise
with a view to making recommendations to Government on how this matter should be
properly addressed.
We will legislate for post-mortem procedures and organ retention practices as
recommended by the Madden report.
We will legislate to change the organ donation to an opt-out system for organ
transplantation, rather than an opt in system so as to improve the availability of organs for
patients in desperate need.

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Education
This Government’s ambition is to build a knowledge society. Education is at the heart of
a more cohesive, more equal and more successful society, and it will be the engine of
sustainable economic growth. Ireland has experienced a decline in educational outcomes
in recent years. We will draw from top performing education models like Finland to
reverse this trend. Even in our country’s crisis, we can make progress in education and
protect frontline services.
Early Childhood Care and Education
We will maintain the free pre-school year in Early Childhood Care and Education to
promote the best outcomes for children and families. We will improve the quality of the
pre-school year by implementing standards and reviewing training options.
As resources allow, this Government will invest in a targeted early childhood education
programme for disadvantaged children, building on existing targeted pre-school supports
for families most in need of assistance such as the young ballymun project.
Empowering Schools to Improve Standards
A priority in education will be to recruit, train and support the highest calibre of teachers.
School leadership will be fundamental to furthering this aim.
We will give greater freedom and autonomy to school principals and boards to raise
educational standards by devolving more responsibility locally, with greater freedom to
allocate and manage staff with required flexibility and to delegate management
responsibilities to teachers as school priorities require.
We will require schools, with the support of the Inspectorate, to draw up five year
development plans for their schools and individual teachers.
Administrative functions, relating to maintenance, school building projects and coordination
of support services currently carried out by principals will be devolved locally.
Protecting the Frontline
Education will be a priority for this Government. It will endeavour to protect and
enhance the educational experience of children, young people and students. To that end,
it will endeavour to protect frontline services in education, and seek efficiencies in work
and school practices, in line with the Croke Park Agreement.

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Improving Outcomes
A longer term aim of this Government will be to position Ireland in the top ten
performing countries in the OECD Programme for International Student Assessment
(PISA).
We will review Junior and Leaving Certificate systems and implement reforms necessary
to encourage greater innovation and independent learning, building on the National
Council for Curriculum and Assessment’s work in this area.
Maths and science teaching at second level will be reformed, including making science a
compulsory Junior Cert subject by 2014. Professional development for maths and science
teachers will be prioritised.
The system for evaluating schools will be reformed so parents have access to more
information when choosing a school for their family. A new system of self-evaluation
will be introduced, requiring all schools to evaluate their own performance year on year
and publish information across a wide range of criteria.
A bonus points system for maths, which is linked to specific maths or science courses,
will be introduced to encourage greater participation in courses where skills shortages
currently exist.
Making Literacy a National Cause
This Government believes that no child should leave an Irish school unable to read and
write.
A national literacy strategy for children and young people will be developed as a matter
of urgency, with school-level targets that are related to national targets. Every school will
be required to have a literacy action plan, with demonstrable outcomes. Responsibility
for achieving these outcomes will be vested in the school principals, who will also
receive continuous professional development to support the implementation of the
strategy.
Pre-service and in-service training in teaching of literacy for all primary and secondary
school teachers will be improved, with dedicated literacy mentors to work intensively
with teachers in most disadvantaged primary schools.
Together with a new focus on how literacy is taught, time spent on quality literacy tuition
is important. DEIS primary schools will be required to teach literacy for 120 minutes per
day; non-DEIS schools to teach literacy for 90 minutes per day. This time includes
incorporating structured literacy tuition into teaching of other subjects.
Local authorities will be supported in developing Right to Read campaigns involving
community supports for literacy, from within existing budgets such as more spacious
social housing, longer opening hours for libraries, homework clubs and summer camps
that improve literacy through sport and games.

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21st Century Schools
This Government will end the treatment of ICT in education as a stand-alone issue, but
will integrate it across education policy. This will begin with merging the National
Centre for Technology in Education with the National Council for Curriculum and
Assessment. A new plan to develop ICT in teaching, learning and assessment will be
developed. This plan will incorporate the integration of ICT policy across other agencies,
such as the Professional Development Services for Teachers, the State Examinations
Commission, and Project Maths.
The primary priority for investment in ICT in the immediate term will be the integration
of ICT in teaching and learning across the curriculum and investing in broadband
development to ensure schools have access to fibre-powered broadband. Investment in
ICT will be maximised through pooling of ICT procurement.
Greater use of online platforms will be made to offer a wide range of subjects and lessons
online, and to enable schools to ‘share’ teachers via live web casts. These online lessons
will be made available through a new Digital School Resource, bringing together existing
resources from National Council for Curriculum Assessment, Department of Education
and other sources as a cost effective means of sharing expertise between schools.
We will engage with the publishing industry to develop more online learning resources
and new mediums for their learning materials.
Building Schools for the Future
This Government will prioritise school building projects in a revised national
development plan.
The objective of this Government will be to progressively phase out the inefficient
renting of school prefabs. In the interim the negotiation of prefab rental contracts will be
part of a reformed public procurement policy to encourage greater value for money,
transparency and reduce dependency on temporary accommodation.
The devolution of an annual capital budget to schools will be piloted to allow schools to
plan for capital projects.
The Department of Education’s central database of school accommodation will be
overhauled to ensure a complete inventory of school buildings and associated structures
is maintained so deficiencies are easily identifiable.
In areas of demographic growth, Shared Educational Campuses will be the preferred
model for future development of educational infrastructure. New schools will be built to
grow with their communities and to provide for more interactive, child-friendly model of
education.
Local authorities will be required to complete Educational Impact Assessment on
residential zoning, to identify potential need for schools.

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We will negotiate the transfer of school infrastructure currently owned by 18 religious
orders cited in Ryan Report, at no extra cost, to the State. In principle, school buildings
and land will be zoned for educational use, so that they cannot easily be sold and lost to
system.
Delivering Equity in Education
We will consider recommendations of the review of the DEIS programme and use it as
platform for new initiatives to deliver better outcomes for students in disadvantaged
areas.
We will examine how to make existing expenditure on educational disadvantage more
effective, and innovative ways in which teenagers at risk of leaving school system can
stay connected, for example through use of ICT-based distance learning and projects such
as iScoil.
We will publish a plan for the implementation of the EPSEN Act 2004 to prioritise access
for children with special needs to an individual education plan. The priority will be to
move to a system where necessary supports follow a child from primary to second level
and to achieve greater integration of special needs-related services.
We will support diversity in education of children with special needs, recognising that
both intensive education and mainstreaming can be seen to work for individual children.
We recognise the critical importance of early diagnosis of autism and early intervention
and address current deficits in this area. We will reverse the cut to the number of
psychologists in National Educational Psychological Service in Budget 2011.
We will encourage schools to develop anti-bullying policies and in particular, strategies
to combat homophobic bullying to support students.
We will improve co-ordination and integration to delivery of services to the Traveller
community across all Government departments, using available resources more
effectively to deliver on principles of social inclusion, particularly in area of Traveller
education through the DEIS programme
We will examine supports in place for gifted students and create improved links with
third level institutions on regional basis, to provide gifted students with access to new
programmes or educational resources.
Patronage
We will initiate a time-limited Forum on Patronage and Pluralism in the Primary Sector
to allow all stakeholders including parents to engage in open debate on change of
patronage in communities where it is appropriate and necessary. The Forum will have
concise terms of reference and will sit for a maximum of 12 months.

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The Forum’s recommendations will be drawn up into White Paper for consideration and
implementation by Government to ensure that education system can provide sufficiently
diverse number of schools, catering for all religions and none.
We will give parents and local communities the opportunity to have a say in the
patronage of existing and future schools, for example by direct ballot.
We will also move towards a more pluralist system of patronage at second level,
recognising a wider number of patrons.
People of non-faith or minority religious backgrounds and publically identified LGBT
people should not be deterred from training or taking up employment as teachers in the
State.
Third Level Reform
We will review the recommendations of Hunt report on higher education. A reform of
third level will be driven by the need to improve learning outcomes of undergraduate
degree students, as well as providing high quality research.
We will initiate a time-limited audit of level 8 qualifications on offer and learning
outcomes for graduates of these courses.
We will introduce radical reform in third level institutions to maximise existing funding,
in particular reform of academic contracts and will encourage greater specialisation by
educational institutions.
We support the relocation of DIT to Grangegorman as resources permit.
We will explore the establishment of a multi campus Technical University in the South
East.
We will extend the remit of Ombudsman to third level institutions.
We will merge the existing accreditation authorities; National Qualifications Authority,
FETAC and HETAC to increase transparency.
Lifelong Learning
Lifelong learning, community education and vocational training for jobseekers will be a
high priority. We will expand training options for jobseekers across the VEC, further and
higher education sectors to facilitate upskilling of the labour force. We will address the
widespread and persistent problem of adult literacy through the integration of literacy in
vocational training and through community education.

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Housing and Distressed Mortgages
A policy of putting the interests of big developers and the banks ahead of people looking
to purchase a home was a direct cause of Ireland’s disastrous property boom and bust.
This Government is committed to helping homeowners in distress to weather the
recession, and to ensuring that Ireland has a sustainable housing policy.
Both parties believe that more protection is needed for homeowners with distressed
mortgages. The recommendations of the Cooney report are inadequate to address the
scale of the current crisis. A more radical approach is needed to protect families in fear
of losing their home. This Government will examine a number of such proposals,
including:
• Increasing mortgage interest relief to 30% for First Time Buyers in 2004-08 (from
the current sliding scale of 20% to 25% depending on the year the mortgage was
taken out), financed in part by bringing forward the abolition of relief for new
buyers from June 2011.
• Directing any mortgage provider in receipt of State support to present
Government with a plan of how intends to cut its costs, over and above existing
plans, in a fair manner by a sufficient amount to forego a 25 basis point increase
on their variable rate mortgage.
• Introducing a two year moratorium on repossessions of modest family homes
where a family makes an honest effort to pay their mortgage.
• Fast-tracking personal bankruptcy reform needed to bring us into line with best
international standards, such as introducing a flexible discharge period for “honest
bankrupts”, defined as one that has materially complied with the Tax, NAMA and
Companies Acts among others.
• Converting the Money Advice and Budgeting Service into a strengthened
Personal Debt Management Agency with strong legal powers. The agency will
support families who make an honest effort to deal with their debts, including
non-mortgage debt, providing protection from their creditors where appropriate,
so that they have time to sort out their affairs. In order to do so, the Personal Debt
Management Agency will have quasi-judicial status.
• Making greater use of Mortgage Interest Supplement to support families who
cannot meet their mortgage payments, which is a better and cheaper option than
paying rent supplement after a family loses their home.

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Ghost Estates
We will mandate the Minster for the Environment, in conjunction with Local Authorities,
to bring forward a coherent plan to resolve the problems associated with ghost estates.
This plan will be developed in cooperation with NAMA.
Social Housing
We will introduce a staged purchase scheme to increase the stock of social housing, while
achieving the best possible value for public investment. Under the terms of this scheme,
leased dwellings will revert to the ownership of local authorities and housing associations
at the end of the leasehold period.
We will enable larger housing associations and local authorities to access private sector
funding for social housing by issuing ‘social housing bonds’, secured on the value of
their existing housing stock when market conditions allow.
We will amend the Housing (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act (1992) to require all local
authorities and housing associations to register with the Department of the Environment
if they wish to access Government subsidies or other supports for social housing
provision
Urban Regeneration
We are committed to urban regeneration to revitalise communities in areas such as
Limerick to give families a better quality of life.
Homelessness
We are committed to ending long term homelessness and the need to sleep rough.
To address the issue of existing homelessness we will review and update the existing
Homeless Strategy, including a specific focus on youth homelessness, and take into
account the current demands on existing housing and health services with a view to
assessing how to best provide additional services.
In line with our Comprehensive Spending Review, we will alleviate the problem of long
term homelessness by introducing a ‘housing first’ approach to accommodating homeless
people. In this way we will be able to offer homeless people suitable, long term housing
in the first instance and radically reduce the use of hostel accommodation and the
associated costs for the Exchequer.
We believe that prevention is better than cure and we will aggressively target the root
causes of homelessness. By having a dedicated body to coordinate policy across
Government we will target initiatives in cross cutting areas which will aim to prevent as
much as possible problems like homelessness.

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Housing
We will ensure that the Central Bank and Financial Regulator supervise credit
institutions’ mortgage lending practices comprehensively and intensively. Where credit
institutions fail to adequately control mortgage lending risks, the Central Bank will
impose loan-to-value ceilings on mortgages, caps on loan-to-income multiples, limits on
the term of new mortgages, and more rigorous procedures for verifying borrowers’
incomes.
We will improve the quality of information available on the Irish housing market by
requiring that the selling price of all dwellings is recorded in a publicly available,
national housing price database.
We will legislate for tougher and clearer rules relating to fire safety in apartment
buildings and will introduce a new fire safety inspection and certification regime.
We will establish a tenancy deposit protection scheme to put an end to disputes regarding
the return of deposits.

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Justice and Law Reform
Victims Rights
We will enact legislation to strengthen the rights of victims of crime and their families, to
ensure that victims and their needs are at the heart of justice process and that rights to
information, advice and other appropriate assistance are met effectively and efficiently.
White Collar Crime
We will ensure that rogue bankers and all those that misappropriate or embezzle funds
are properly pursued for their crimes and that the full rigours of the law will apply to
them.
We will enact a new consolidated and reformed anti-corruption law to punish white collar
crime and end the impunity from consequences for corporate behaviour that threatens the
economy.
We will strengthen measures to ensure that convicted white collar criminals cannot
transfer assets to spouses or other family members and we will empower the Criminal
Assets Bureau to pursue such convicted white collar criminals for any legal aid costs
awarded to them.
Criminal Law Reform
We will enact legislation to strengthen the powers of the Criminal Assets Bureau in
relation to forfeiting the proceeds of crime.
We will establish a DNA Database to assist the Gardaí in the investigation of serious
crime, such as homicides and sexual offences. The database will also be utilised to
enhance cooperation within the EU in the area of asylum and immigration. There will be
appropriate safeguards in relation to inclusion on and access to the DNA database.
We will provide statutory guidelines for the witness protection programme.
We will increase the penalty for tobacco smuggling for commercial purposes and provide
robust detection measures to counteract such smuggling.
We will introduce x-ray scanners to all prisons to screen people and goods entering
prisons to stop the flow of drugs and mobile telephones into prisons. Appropriate action
will be taken to stop mobile phones being used in prisons.
We will introduce roadside drug testing programmes to combat the problem of driving
under the influence of drugs.
We will enact legislation to prohibit the practice of Female Genital Mutilation for the
protection of girls and women.

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Strong and Efficient Policing
We will ensure that administrative duties are carried out by civilian staff in order to free
up highly trained Gardaí for preventing and detecting crime.
We will reform the prosecution and judicial case management systems so as to reduce the
number of Gardaí unnecessarily detained in the courts.
We will seek to combat drug supplies at source by providing x-ray scanners at major
ports; greater patrols along coastline and increasing presence of Customs officers at
smaller airports.
Sentencing and Penal Reform
We are committed to a sentencing system that provides a safer society at a lower cost to
the taxpayer. We will ensure that violent offenders and other serious offenders serve
appropriate prison sentences while at the same time switching away from prison
sentences and towards less costly non-custodial options for non-violent and less serious
offenders. This will result in a reduction in the prison population and alleviate
overcrowding.
We will fully implement the Fines Act 2010 and extend the use of Community Service
Orders. Where a member of the judiciary is considering the imposition of a prison
sentence of one year or less, he/she will be required by legislation to first consider the
appropriateness of Community Service Orders as an alternative to imprisonment.
We will end the practice of imprisoning people who cannot pay fines and debts and
introduce a system which takes a small amount of money from wages or social welfare
by “attachment order” to pay off a fine or debt over time, as an alternative to
imprisonment for people who refuse to pay.
We will introduce legislation to ensure that aggravating factors are considered in
sentencing and to allow for the criminal prosecution service to make a submission on
sentence, which draws to the court’s attention aggravating factors which relate to the
crime.
We will introduce a series of post-imprisonment restraint orders for violent and sexual
offenders to include electronic tagging and other restrictions, which may be imposed at
the time of sentencing.
Violent and sexual offenders may only earn remission based on good behaviour,
participation in education and training, and completion of addiction treatment
programmes and, where appropriate, sex offender programmes. We will review the
workings of the Prison Act 2007 in relation to incentivising engagement with
rehabilitative services in prison.
We will strengthen the Inspector of Prisons, by putting the office on a statutory footing
and removing restrictions on publication by the Inspector of Prisons of his/her reports.

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Prison visiting committees will furnish their reports to the Inspector of Prisons who will
be under an obligation to publish them. The Inspector of Prisons will make an annual
report to the Minister for Justice and the Oireachtas Justice Committee, and will be
empowered to appear before that Committee on such other occasions as may be
appropriate.
We will ensure better coordination between the Irish Prison Service and the Probation
Service to create an integrated offender management programme.
A review will be conducted of the working of mandatory sentencing laws in the context
of an overall review of drugs policy.
We will review the proposal to build a new prison at Thornton Hall and consider
alternatives, if any, to avoid the costs yet to be incurred by the State in building such a
new prison. We are conscious of the need to provide in-cell sanitation to all prisons and,
in so far as resources permit, to upgrade prison facilities.
We will end the practice of sending children to St. Patrick’s Institution.
Anti-Social Behaviour
The Government will tackle anti-social behaviour and the plague of low level crime that
is so destructive of community life. We will build on the existing community policing
partnerships and forums to enhance trust between local communities and their Gardaí. It
is Government policy that a higher priority be attached to community policing and that,
within available resources, there is a higher Garda visibility in the local neighbourhoods
worst affected. In the case of public or social housing, we will implement a 12-month
probationary tenancy for all new tenants. Where tenants engage in anti-social behaviour
during this period the tenancy will be terminated.
We will give special emphasis to alternative programmes for juvenile offenders through
extensions to the Juvenile Liaison Officer Scheme and the Garda Juvenile Diversion
Programme, and the extended use of Restorative Justice where appropriate. We will also
examine outcomes-based contracts with community organisations to help reduce reoffending
by young people, based on the social impact bond model in the U.K..
Drugs
We support the principles and objectives of the National Addiction Strategy. We are
committed to providing renewed impetus to the fight against drugs and to ensuring that
the Strategy once again becomes relevant and effective. We will where possible enhance
demand reduction strategies. The new National Addiction Strategy deals with both drugs
and alcohol addiction. The first step in implementing a successful strategy will be to
outline key priorities for short-term implementation, underpinned by a realistic timeframe
and targets.
We will –

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• expand rehabilitation services at local level in line with need and subject to
available resources;
• integrate drug and alcohol abuse strategies at local level;
• strengthen the supply reduction effort and criminal assets seizures, particularly at
local level;
• develop compulsory as well as voluntary rehabilitation programmes;
• reduce the flow of drugs to prisons;
• carry out a full review of the Drug Treatment Court Programme to evaluate its
success and potential in dealing with young offenders identified as having serious
problem with drugs;
• ensure every Government Department, Agency or task force responsible for
implementing elements of the National Addiction Strategy will be required to
account to the Minister for their budget annually and to demonstrate progress on
achieving targets;
• work with Local and Regional Drug Task Forces to implement effective
programmes aimed at preventing addiction in schools;
• require all local and regional drugs taskforces to build on the success of Education
Prevention Units in other taskforces;
• update the out-dated drugs awareness programmes in schools to reflect current
attitudes and reality of recreational drug use amongst teens;
• target resources to increasing the number of needle exchange programmes and
rehabilitation places across the country where it is needed most;
• assist drug users in rehabilitation through participation in suitable local
community employment schemes.
Law Reform, Courts and Judiciary
We will legislate to establish a Judicial Council, with lay representation, to provide an
effective mechanism for dealing with complaints against judges.
We will introduce a constitutional amendment to allow Government to reduce the pay of
the judiciary as a whole in line with other public sector reductions. We will also provide a
modern and reformed framework for judicial expenses.
As soon as resources as permit, we will introduce a constitutional amendment to allow
for the establishment of a distinct and separate system of family courts to streamline
family law court processes and make them more efficient and less costly.

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We will take the necessary steps to create a permanent Civil Court of Appeal.
We will encourage and facilitate use of mediation to resolve commercial, civil and family
disputes in order to speed up resolution of disputes, reduce legal costs and ameliorate the
stress of contested court proceedings.
We will provide for a Commercial Court to facilitate speedy resolution of disputes at
Circuit Court level, where monies in dispute do not warrant High Court jurisdiction.
We will introduce legislation to facilitate courts making provision for structured
settlements in circumstances where lump sums are currently awarded as a consequence of
individuals suffering catastrophic injury because of the negligence of another.
We will create an enforcement mechanism for District Court maintenance orders in
family cases.
We will reform and modernise aspects of family law.
We will introduce consolidated and reformed domestic violence legislation to address all
aspects of domestic violence, threatened violence and intimidation in a manner that
provides protection to victims.
We will establish independent regulation of the legal professions to improve access and
competition, make legal costs more transparent and ensure adequate procedures for
addressing consumer complaints.
We will prioritise a programme of law reform arising out of the recommendations made
by the Law Reform Commission.
We will review existing tendering processes for legal services by Government and State
and semi-State agencies to ensure value for money and end anti-competitive practices.
Passports, Citizenship, Immigration and Asylum
We will introduce comprehensive reforms of the immigration, residency and asylum
systems, which will include a statutory appeals system and set out rights and obligations
in a transparent way.
We will provide for the efficient processing and determination of citizenship applications
within a reasonable time.
Consideration will be given to transferring the passport service from the Department of
Foreign Affairs to the Department of Justice to operate as an Independent Executive
Agency under the aegis of that Department.

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Equality and Social Protection
This Government is committed to tackling Ireland’s economic crisis in a way that is fair,
balanced, and which recognises the need for social solidarity.
Tackling poverty and protecting the most vulnerable
During a time of recession and deep unemployment the Government acknowledges the
vital role of the community and voluntary sector working in partnership with local
communities, State agencies and local authorities.
We will maintain social welfare rates.
We will reverse the recent cut in the national minimum wage.
The Commission on Taxation and Social Welfare will examine and make
recommendations on the interaction between taxation and the welfare system to ensure
that work is worthwhile. In particular, it will examine family and child income supports,
and a means by which self-employed people can be insured against unemployment and
sickness.
The elimination of poverty will be an objective of this Government. We are committed
to achieving the targets in the National Action Plan for Social Inclusion to reduce the
number of people experiencing poverty.
A new approach is needed to break the cycle of child poverty where it is most deeply
entrenched. We will adopt a new area based approach to child poverty, which draws on
best international practice and existing services to tackle every aspect of child poverty.
Initially, this model will be rolled out to up to ten of Ireland’s most disadvantaged
communities, in cooperation with philanthropic partners to co-fund and manage the
project.
We will complete and publish a strategy to tackle fuel-poverty.
Eliminating poverty traps
We will examine the social protection system with a view to identifying and eliminating
poverty traps including:
• amending the 30 hour rule for Rent Supplement and Mortgage Interest
Supplement for people moving from welfare to work.
• activating people on a reduced week who refuse extra day(s) employment.
• over time, One Parent Family Payment will be replaced with a parental allowance
that does not discourage marriage, cohabitation or work.
We will also tightly regulate moneylenders and debt collectors.
A zero tolerance approach to welfare fraud

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We will take a zero tolerance policy in relation to welfare fraud, underpinned by a major
anti-fraud enforcement drive.
As well as more regular face-to-face interviews with an integrated employment and
entitlements service for those of working age, we will undertake other anti-fraud
measures using latest available technology and better sharing of data across government
departments and agencies.
Getting better value for money
We will progressively reduce reliance on Rent Supplement, with eligible recipients
moving to the Rental Accommodation Scheme.
We will review the operation of the Rent Supplement Scheme and introduce a code of
conduct for rent supplement eligibility similar to that which operates for local authority
tenants.
Rent supplement will only be paid to tax-compliant landlords registered with the PRTB
and offering decent quality accommodation, to root out fraud.
We will divert staff from elsewhere in public service to clear the social welfare appeals
backlog, and introduce a consolidated appeals process.
The household benefits packages will be put out to tender, so that the Exchequer benefits
from reduced prices.
We will raise the issue of payment of Child Benefit in respect of non-resident children at
EU level, and seek to have the entitlement modified to reflect the cost of living where a
child is resident. We will examine all possible flexibility within European legislation to
reduce the cost of this payment.
Equality
Equality is at the heart of what it means to be a citizen in our democracy. This
Government believes that everyone has the right to be free from discrimination and that
we all benefit from living in a more equal society.
We are committed to ensuring that the rights of women and men to equality of treatment
and to participate fully in society are upheld.
We will take steps to ensure that all State boards have at least 40% of each gender.
We will promote greater co-ordination and integration of delivery of services to the
Traveller community across Government, using available resources more effectively to
deliver on principles of social inclusion, particularly in the area of Traveller education.
We will encourage schools to develop anti-bullying policies and in particular, strategies
to combat homophobic bullying.

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We will ensure that trans-gender people will have legal recognition and extend the
protections of the equality legislation to them.
We will require all public bodies to take due note of equality and human rights in
carrying out their functions.
We will reform the current law on employees’ right to engage in collective bargaining
(the Industrial Relations (Amendment) Act 2001), so as to ensure compliance by the State
with recent judgements of the European Court of Human Rights.
We will promote policies which integrate minority ethnic groups in Ireland, and which
promote social inclusion, equality, diversity and the participation of immigrants in the
economic, social, political and cultural life of their communities.
People with Disabilities
We will ensure that the quality of life of people with disabilities is enhanced and that
resources allocated reach the people who need them. To achieve this, we will reform the
delivery of public services to bring about back office savings that will protect front line
services.
We will also facilitate people with disabilities in achieving a greater level of participation
in employment, training and education.
We will publish, following wide consultation, a realistic implementation plan for the
National Disability Strategy, including sectoral plans with achievable timescales and
targets within available resources. We will ensure whole-of-government involvement and
monitoring of the Strategy, in partnership with the disability sector.
We will seek to get best value for money for investment in services and to ensure that
services meet the needs of users. A Comprehensive Spending Review will examine all
provision for people with disabilities with a view to determining how users can get the
best services. We will also ensure that money spent on disability services under the
National Disability Strategy is clearly laid out and audited.
As part of this Review we will move a proportion of public spending to a personal budget
model so that people with disabilities or their families have the flexibility to make
choices that suit their needs best. Personal budgets also introduce greater transparency
and efficiency in funding services.
We will put the National Standards for Residential Services for People with Disabilities
on a statutory footing and ensure that services are inspected by the Health Information
and Quality Authority.
We will examine different mechanisms to promote the recognition of Irish Sign
Language.

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We will reform the law on mental capacity to ensure the greatest degree of autonomy for
people with intellectual disabilities or suffering with mental illnesses in line with the UN
Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities.
In planning legislation, we will promote and support universal design whereby all
environments can be used to the greatest extent possible by all people, regardless of age,
ability or disability.

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PROGRESS
Children, Families and Older People
We will fundamentally reform the delivery of child protection services by removing child welfare
and protection from the HSE and creating a dedicated Child Welfare and Protection Agency,
reforming the model of service delivery and improving accountability to the Dáil.
We are committed to implementing the recommendations of the Ryan Report including putting
the Children First Guidelines on a statutory footing and legislating for the use of “soft
information”.
We will enact legislation to amend tax and social welfare law in respect of civil partnerships. We
will amend the Civil Partnership and Certain Rights and Obligations of Cohabiting Couples Act
2010 to address any anomalies or omissions, including those relating to children.
Our tax, social welfare and other laws should not discourage people from getting married or
cohabiting. For example, single mothers lose the One Parent Family Payment if they marry. Over
time, we will transform it into a family income-based payment that does not discourage marriage
or work.
We will modernise and reform outdated elements of family law. We will enact legislation to
consolidate and reform the law on adoption.
We will complete and implement the National Positive Ageing Strategy so that older people are
recognised, supported and enabled to live independent full lives.
Local Authorities will be required to establish Older People councils, where members of the
community can raise local concerns or issues of importance.
We will support older people in living in their own homes and communities for as long as they
wish and will facilitate this by ensuring that the eligibility criteria for the home help and the Home
Care Package Scheme are applied consistently. We will also develop and implement national
standards for home support services which are subject to inspection by the Health Information and
Quality Authority.
We will reform the pension system to progressively achieve universal coverage, with particular
focus on lower-paid workers, to achieve better risk sharing, and to provide for greater flexibility
for those who wish to retire on a phased basis.
Arts, Culture and Sport
We will make strategic policy formulation the primary function of the Department, with line
agencies and bodies responsible for policy implementation.

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We will encourage the Arts Council to continue to dedicate resources to touring in order to protect
the State’s investment in regional Arts infrastructure around the country and to bring cultural
tourism opportunities to towns and villages across the country.
We will work with stakeholders in the Arts community to develop new proposals aimed at
building private support of the Arts in Ireland exploring philanthropic, sponsorship or endowment
fund opportunities.
We will make the Culture Night Initiative a twice yearly event, and introduce a National Lottery
Funding Anniversary Day, whereby all facilities which have received funding from the National
Lottery will open their doors to the public free of charge. We will also review the opening times
of our national cultural institutions.
We will develop a cultural plan for future commemorative events such as the Centenary of the
Easter Rising in 2016.
We will promote genealogical tourism by updating the National Cultural Institutions Act in
relation to the Genealogical office to put it on a proper statutory footing, modernise its operations
and to enable publication of the 1926 census to stimulate genealogy tourism.
We will also explore philanthropic opportunities for the development of a national archives and
genealogy quarter, providing easy access to archives and tapping into an area of cultural tourism
which is of huge interest to the vast Irish Diaspora.
We will encourage greater co-operation between local authorities to provide assistance where
possible for local authorities currently lacking a local authority Arts officer due to recruitment
restrictions and to co-operate in developing cultural tourism opportunities.
We will seek to capture some public good from NAMA by identifying buildings that have no
commercial potential, and which might be suitable as local facilities for art and culture.
Responsibility for policy-making will revert to the Department, while agencies will be
accountable for implementing policy, assessing outcomes and value for money.
All State funding will be subject to the beneficiaries signing up to a dispute resolution service, a
code of governance and a new mandatory code of conduct regarding child protection in sport.
A number of positions on the Sports Council’s governing Board will be made directly electable.
The National Sports Facilities Strategy will become the blueprint for the future development of all
sports facilities in the country and will inform any future investment on sports infrastructure.
In future sports funding should prioritise projects which further greater participation in sport on a
local and national level.

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Foreign Affairs, ODA and Defence
We are determined to restore Ireland’s standing as a respected and influential member of the
European Union and as part of the wider international community.
We will ensure that our diplomatic network aids the repair of our reputation through a transparent
and responsible approach to winning inward investment and we will recall Ireland’s Ambassadors
within 100 days of this new government for briefings on a new approach to promoting and
marketing Ireland as a country to do business in.
We will review the 2006 White Paper on Overseas Development Aid.
In times of humanitarian crises, we will unite NGOs that provide humanitarian aid to create a
single appeals mechanism for national fundraising and public response. This will maximise
publicity for the cause, the receipt of emergency funds and ensure the effective and co-ordinated
dispersal of emergency aid. The State will financially support these NGOs in their response.
We are committed to the 0.7% of GNP target for Overseas Development Aid. We will seek to
achieve this by 2015.
We will position Ireland, in particular Shannon airport, to become an international hub for the
storage and distribution of emergency humanitarian supplies.
We will seek to establish a Civilian Corps, which could allow some job seekers use and share their
skills in developing countries while retaining some job seeker’s benefit.
We will implement the Defence Forces Medical Services Review as resources allow.
We will initiate a detailed legal review of the basis, structures and governance of the Red Cross in
Ireland to improve its functioning in the light of changing circumstances.
We will enforce the prohibition on the use of Irish airspace, airports and related facilities for
purposes not in line with the dictates of international law.
Northern Ireland
We support the full implementation of the Good Friday Agreement and St. Andrew’s Agreement.
We are committed to publishing and acting on the recommendations of the first Review of the
North-South Implementation Bodies and Areas for Co-operation; and we will progress the second
Review, which will identity new areas for North South co-operation.
We will work for greater economic co-operation to accelerate the process of recovery and creation
of jobs on this island.
The threat from dissident paramilitary groups cannot be underestimated. We will foster the
continuing strong relationships between An Garda Síochána and the Police Service of Northern

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Ireland to deal with this threat and we will also ensure the necessary resources to deal with these
groups.
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Ireland in Europe
We are fully committed to the EU2020 strategy and its creation of employment and smart,
sustainable and inclusive growth.
We will commission an independent audit into the transposition and implementation of EU
legislation, placing priority on laws and regulations that caused concern or deemed burdensome to
Irish business. We will put in place a mechanism across Government to accelerate
implementation of directives, involving relevant Departments and the Attorney’s Office.
We will enhance the Irish role in EU judicial and home affairs cooperation.
An Gaeilge agus an Ghaeltacht
We will support the 20 Year Strategy for the Irish Language 2010-2030 and will deliver on the
achievable goals and targets proposed.
We will undertake a thorough reform of the Irish curriculum and the way in which Irish is taught
at primary and second levels of education. We will reform the curriculum so more emphasis is put
on oral and aural skills. We will allocate 50% of marks to the oral Irish exam at Leaving
Certificate level.
We will aim to double the proportion of Irish students sitting the Higher Level Leaving Certificate
exam by 2018.
Gaeltacht regions will benefit from the jobs action plan outlined in this document. Under our
proposals, we will deliver new job creation prospects to Gaeltacht regions. We will invest in
energy, broadband and water infrastructure, creating the modern infrastructure needed to attract
and support new businesses and jobs. We will also strongly support the potential for jobs in
tourism and marine activities. We will continue to support the Irish language broadcasting and
arts sector.
We will review the Official Languages Act to ensure expenditure on the language is best targeted
towards the development of the language and that obligations are imposed appropriately in
response to demand from citizens.
We will review current investment and funding programmes that benefit Irish language
organisations in order to achieve visible value for money for citizens and tangible outcomes on a
transparent basis.

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We will take steps to improve the quality and effectiveness of the teaching of Irish at second level.
When these steps have been implemented, we will consider the question of whether Irish should
be optional at Leaving Certificate.
Climate Change
We will publish a Climate Change Bill which will provide certainty surrounding government
policy and provide a clear pathway for emissions reductions, in line with negotiated EU 2020
targets.
We will legislate to give the relevant line Ministers temporary powers to take charge of State’s
actions in response to natural disasters, under the aegis of National Emergency Response Action
Committee.
We will further improve energy efficiency for new buildings, with a view to moving towards zero
carbon homes in the longer term. All new commercial buildings will be required to significantly
reduce their carbon footprint.??
Energy??
We will legislate to support the geothermal energy sector.
We will provide efficient foreshore licensing and leasing process for marine energy.
We will ensure that future wind farms are built in locations where wind regime is best and that
they are built in large numbers or in clusters to reduce cost of connection to grid under new ‘planled’
Gate 4 process, as opposed to existing ‘developer led’ system.
We will incentivise and promote off-shore drilling and streamline planning and regulatory process
for bringing ashore these reserves and seek to maximize the return to the Irish people.
We will review and reform the PSO levy to ensure that only most cost-effective projects are
supported by ReFIT tariff and that consumer can benefit from claw-back when market prices
exceed tariff or where appropriate, share of profits or royalty.
We will appoint an independent international expert commission to review and report, within six
months, on a case for, and cost of, undergrounding (all or part of) Meath-Tyrone 400KV power
lines.
We will provide ReFIT for micro-generators wishing to produce electricity for their own homes,
farms and businesses and facilitate them to sell surplus electricity to the grid. The tariff will not be
significantly above single energy market price for electricity.

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Regulation
We will rationalise regulators to strengthen consumer regulation and promote the consumer
interest.
Sustainable waste policy??
We will develop a national waste policy that will adhere to the EU waste hierarchy and favours a
coherent approach to waste management that minimises waste going to landfill, and that
maximises the resources that can be recovered from it.
We will drive a waste reduction programme through extension of producer responsibility
initiatives and a levy on packaging after appropriate consultation with industry.
We will ensure specific producer responsibility requirements for construction and demolition
projects over certain threshold, with recycling and waste management requirements, enforced
through mandatory compliance bonds that can be refunded at end of project.
We will introduce competitive tendering for local waste collection services where the private
sector and local authorities can bid to provide services in an entire local authority area for a set
time frame. Tender bids will be judged and awarded by the new utilities regulator. Contracts
would be required to stipulate a guaranteed service level to be offered. A public service obligation
would include a fee waiver scheme for low-income households. Licences would be flexible
enough to allow for localised waste management needs and opportunities.
??
Enhancing the quality of the environment??
We will clamp down on environmental crime, such as illegal dumping and graffiti and noise
pollution by allowing for on the spot fines, and providing for mediation between neighbours.
We will complete ratification of Aarhus Convention on access to information, public participation
in decision-making and access to justice in environmental matters.
Peat??
We will allow an exemption for domestic turf cutting on 75 National Heritage Area sites subject
to the introduction of agreed national code of environmental practices.
We will establish an independent mediation between all relevant stakeholders with specific
objective of facilitating resolution to 55 Special Area of Conservation designated bogs.
We will establish an independent mediation to resolve outstanding issues associated with turf
cutting on blanket bogs.

G o v e r n m e n t f o r N a t i o n a l R e c o v e r y 2 0 11 - 2 0 1 6
62
Communications
We will mandate the regulator to require all broadband providers to publish average speeds for
each package.
We will restrict misleading advertisements relating to monthly caps.
We will introduce a new government rating system so that home owners and tenants can assess
broadband facilities easily.
We will accelerate Capital Allowances on software purchases against income tax and corporation
profits tax from 8 to 3 years subject to a cost benefit analysis.
We will review and update Intellectual Property legislation currently in place to benefit
innovation, develop a National Intellectual Property protocol to give clarity about terms on which
business can access IP created in Higher Education Institutions, and clarify legislation relating to
online copyright infringement and enforcement of rights relating to digital communications.
We will examine the role, and collection of, the TV license fee in light of existing and projected
convergence of broadcasting technologies, transform the TV licence into a household-based
Public Broadcasting Charge applied to all households and applicable businesses, regardless of the
device they use to access content and review new ways of TV licence collection, including the
possibility of paying in instalments through another utility bill (electricity or telecom), collection
by local authorities, Revenue or new contract with An Post.
We will review the funding of public and independent broadcasters to ensure a healthy
broadcasting environment in Ireland.
We will maintain the current regime with regard to the Heineken Cup.
A universal postal service is an essential public service, in particular for rural communities and
those disadvantaged communities affected by digital divide. A publicly owned, commercially
viable, profitable and efficient An Post is critical to the long-term viability of the postal market.
We will enact into law the Postal Services Bill which opens postal market to competition. Will
protect universal service obligation by assigning it to An Post for at least 20 years, make provision
for state subvention and require that any decision by ComReg to reassign or scrap USO is subject
to ministerial approval.
We will ensure that the network of post offices around the country is maintained and that
communities have access to adequate postal services in their locality.
Transport
We recognise the need to rebalance transport policy to favour public transport. We will therefore
establish a Cabinet sub-committee on Infrastructure to explore the benefits to the public transport
passenger of more diverse bus service provision.

G o v e r n m e n t f o r N a t i o n a l R e c o v e r y 2 0 11 - 2 0 1 6
63
A modern high speed transport system is essential to ensure our economic competitiveness. We
will support the expansion in range and frequency of high capacity commuter services, which will
be subject to cost benefit analysis.
Funding will be provided on a once off basis to repair damage done to non-national roads due to
recent severe weather conditions.
We will review and update the regulation of taxis to ensure that taxi services are recognized as a
key component of the public transport system and we will provide for a forum for discussion
between the regulatory authorities and taxi providers.
We will legislate to regulate the vehicle clamping industry.
We will continue to invest in the National Cycle Policy and we will look to extend the Dublin
Bikes Scheme across the wider Dublin area and to other cities and integrate the scheme much
more effectively with public transport links.
The rural transport network is vital for rural communities as a reliable and sustainable transport
service. We will maintain and extend the Rural Transport Programme with other local transport
services as much as is practicable.
We will work with the Aviation Regulator to cut airport charges in order to deliver increased
routes, airlines and passenger numbers.
Agriculture
We will take advantage of our links at an EU level to engage in bi-lateral exchanges with other
countries to ensure that any changes in EU policy or in WTO negotiations do not place the Irish
agri-food sector at a competitive disadvantage.
We will move responsibility for agri-payments to a new one-stop-shop as well as developing a
new innovation unit in the Department to drive new policy initiatives in the agrifood industry.
We will enact the Fair Trade Act, which will ban a number of unfair trading practices in the retail
sector such as ‘hello money’ which suppliers have to pay to secure a place for their goods on
supermarket shelves.
Further expansion and innovation in our dairy and meat sectors will be a key priority under a
reformed CAP and we will work with industry to achieve more intensive levels of production.
We support the recommendations of Harvest Food 2020 Report.
We will exempt farm diesel from further increases in the carbon tax.
Building on the existing Food Safety Authority, we will create a single food safety monitoring
agency responsible for food safety inspection from farm to fork.
We recognise the contribution that farm gate schemes make to farm incomes. We particularly
value of agri-environment scheme as an income support and in protecting the environment. As

G o v e r n m e n t f o r N a t i o n a l R e c o v e r y 2 0 11 - 2 0 1 6
64
funds permit, we will investigate the possibility of expanding the Agri-Environment Options
Scheme to farmers locked out of the scheme following the conclusion of their REPS 3 contracts.
We will invest in a 14,700ha per annum afforestation programme.
We will amend and strengthen legislation on animal cruelty and animal welfare.
Coastal communities, fisheries & marine environment
We will negotiate the best possible deal for fishermen in the review of the Common Fisheries
Policy.
We will support the development of sustainable aquaculture and fish farms by streamlining the
licensing process and reducing associated bureaucracy.
Marine responsibilities will be merged under one Department, for better co-ordination in policy
delivery. We will develop an integrated marine and coastal planning process in order to maximise
the potential of Ireland’s coastline in fishing, aquaculture, ocean energy and tourism.
A Sea Fisheries Sustainability Impact Assessment, based on consultation with all major
stakeholders, will be brought before the Dáil annually before EU fisheries negotiations
commence.
We will replace criminal sanctions system for minor fisheries offences with administrative
sanction system to bring Ireland into line with other European jurisdictions.
Safety at sea and decent working conditions must underpin the development of the fisheries
sector. We will explore the provision of an emergency towing vessel for the Coastguard.
Planning
We will seek to better coordinate national, regional and local planning laws in order to achieve
better and more coordinated development that supports local communities instead of the current
system that favours developer led planning.
We will improve local transport access by making local transport plans an integral part of local
Development Plans. We will force all local authorities to develop a transport plan in conjunction
with their County/City Development Plans, and Local Areas Plans.
We will pass legislation to allow local authorities take housing estates ‘in charge’ after three years
if there are no significant financial implications for local authorities, and substantially increase
existing penalties for those who break planning laws.
We will require local authorities to carry out an ‘Educational Impact Assessment’ for all new
zonings for residential development to ensure an adequate supply of school places.
We will make the planning process more democratic by amending the 2010 Planning and
Development Act to allow for detailed public submissions on zoning, and to rebalance power
towards elected representatives. Local authorities will be required to carry out a flood risk report
in the preparation of their City and County Development Plans, and will also be legally required
to manage flood risk through sustainable planning and development.




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