Oireachtas Joint and Select Committees
Thursday, 26 September 2024
Committee on Key Issues affecting the Traveller Community
10:30 am
I welcome our guests. I remind people of their privileges and that they cannot participate if they are outside of Leinster House, etc. Those giving evidence have to be physically present within the grounds of Leinster House and should not criticise or make charges against any person, or identify him or her by name or in such a way that makes him or her identifiable. I think we all understand that.
I propose that we publish the opening statements from our witnesses. Is that agreed? Agreed. I suggest that we invite our witnesses to speak for five or ten minutes and that we allow members to ask questions and make comments for approximately five minutes. Members may ask more questions after everybody gets an opportunity to speak.
The committee is looking at Travellers' experience of the justice system. Today we will focus on Travellers in prison. The committee has already visited Castlerea Prison, Mountjoy Female Prison - the Dóchas Centre - and Oberstown Children Detention Campus. Travellers represent less than 1% of the population yet we make up 8% of male prisoners, 16% of female prisoners and 21% of children detained. The committee looks forward to hearing from our witnesses about this very important subject. We would like to hear about the experience of Travellers dealing with the justice system, including prison, and how we can make things better.
We are grateful to our witnesses for coming here today. They include representatives of the Irish Penal Reform Trust, the Traveller Justice Initiative, the Traveller Mediation Service and Barnardos.
Our witnesses are all very welcome here today.
It is very important for us as a committee to examine the justice system and, most importantly, why there are so many Travellers in prison in this country and what supports we need for Travellers. I am sure we all know the answers but it is important we document those answers and that this committee has a responsibility to work with the Traveller community.
We will begin with one quote a young man said to me in 2020. It was his first time to be in court and he was very nervous. I said to him he will be okay and that everything will be fine. He said, "No Eileen, I am already guilty." I said no, he would not be and that was up to the judge. He said, "I am guilty on the basis of being a member of the Traveller community." I want us all to be mindful of that before we start.
I will open it up to our witnesses. I ask Ms Saoirse Brady to begin.
9:30 am
Ms Maria O'Dwyer:
Our national water resources plan and our four regional water resources plans would set out how we want to interconnect water supply zones into the future. That is probably based on a very detailed study we would have undertaken for all our water supplies nationally. The distance the Deputy is talking about there is quite considerable. If you were to bring this back to a smaller road, my understanding is local authority staff would typically reach out to ourselves if they thought that was a good idea or made sense, in which case we would usually take it back into our own asset planning section and see if there is a need or a justification.
Our biggest challenge here is that there is such significant need and requirements we are already aware of with regard to the public money we are receiving. We are aware of a lot of challenges from treatment plants. When it comes to prioritising this, if that particular area is well served at the moment then it would not be a high priority for us because we have greater need for the money in the short term.