Oireachtas Joint and Select Committees

Thursday, 28 April 2022

Public Accounts Committee

2020 Report of the Comptroller and Auditor General and Appropriation Accounts
Vote 24 - Justice
Vote 21 - Prisons

9:30 am

Photo of James O'ConnorJames O'Connor (Cork East, Fianna Fail)
Link to this: Individually | In context | Oireachtas source

Thank you. I want to make one final point. The pandemic obviously brought about an enormous change in the requirements of policing in Ireland and the work the Department had to do in order to adjust to facilitate that. One observation is that I felt there was a significant rise in the level of substance use by younger members of society in Ireland, which is extraordinarily concerning to me, particularly when it comes to the use of what we would consider class A drugs, such as cocaine, among young members of society. I am hearing about a lot of usage by teenagers and this has been reported to me through my constituency office. This is extremely concerning.

I want to put on record that this is something we need to try to get some degree of control over. I do not wish to put across the position that this can be eliminated and, obviously, it cannot be. However, it is the case, unfortunately, that drug use is rampant in Ireland, particularly among younger members of society. While that is a topic of much debate, when it comes to more serious drugs it is a huge concern. The Department has to try to find more useful ways and, instead of trying to put people in prison, to try to guide young people away from substance abuse and drug use. It needs to find more proactive ways of getting people off the streets and away from dealing drugs. That is very important. We need to re-evaluate this through education programmes, rather than the stick approach, which, unfortunately, is not working.

Gardaí are under immense pressure and finding it very difficult to deal with gang-related crime, which has been an issue in Ireland over a long number of years. I want to make the point to the Department, the Secretary General, the assistant secretary general and all of the officials here that we have a lot of work to do to prevent people from ending up in prison and in situations of addiction. Unfortunately, from what I have seen and what I have heard through my office, this is a huge problem that is going to have huge knock-on consequences for people's mental health and the growth and development of young people in Ireland in general.