Dáil debates

Tuesday, 26 April 2005

 

Legal Aid Service.

8:00 pm

Photo of Seán HaugheySeán Haughey (Dublin North Central, Fianna Fail)

The mission statement of the Northside Community Law Centre is as follows:

The [Northside Community Law Centre] . . . is an independent community-based legal centre. [It works] . . . to protect and develop the legal, social and economic rights of individuals and groups.

The Centre provides free information and advice to individuals and groups in its community who otherwise would not be able to access legal services and works to give power to the community through education, research and campaigns.

[The Northside Community Law Centre] . . . believes in the dignity of each individual. [It is] . . . committed to working with the community for the creation of a just and tolerant society.

On 23 February this year President MaryMcAleese formally opened the new offices of the Northside Community Law Centre in the new Northside Civic Centre in Coolock, Dublin. Two months later this important community facility is about to close its doors because of a lack of funding. The centre has been in existence for 30 years during which period it has played a central role in the civic life of the community and surrounding areas. It has campaigned forcefully on behalf of disadvantaged communities in regard to family law, social welfare law, consumer credit and debt and on poverty in general. In addition, it has provided free legal advice to many people and, in particular, to people experiencing difficult personal and distressing circumstances.

As a public representative for the Coolock area, I know that the closure of this centre will cause real hardship for many people. I am not in a position to give professional legal advice to my constituents but I regularly refer people to the free legal advice clinic organised by the Northside Community Law Centre every Thursday evening. There clients can get advice on marriage, separation, divorce, barring orders and many other issues. No one else in the area provides this service. Very often clients are in a very distressed state, perhaps because of violence in the home or whatever, and they need immediate legal assistance as to what they can do, particularly in emergency situations.

Bureaucratic wrangling between the Department of Social and Family Affairs and the Department of Justice, Equality and Law Reform must not be allowed to cause the closure of this invaluable community service. It is unacceptable that the Department of Social and Family Affairs would allow the closure of the Northside Community Law Centre by ceasing funding without putting alternative financial arrangements in place. The Department of Justice, Equality and Law Reform has been asked to examine the issue as a matter of urgency. Ministerial heads must be knocked together immediately to sort this administrative failure. The Department of Social and Family Affairs should continue to fund the centre out of its information budget, given that the centre's activities are well within the scope of the Department's goals.

The Northside Community Law Centre is modelled on the US law centres, which were set up as part of President Johnson's War on Poverty. According to the Northside Community Law Centre, the idea was that law centres would assist marginalised communities in tackling structural causes of poverty and exclusion, thereby empowering those who had been disempowered. The centre is seen as one of the great success stories of the Department of Social and Family Affairs, as a thoughtful and innovative approach to the problem of poverty and as something which is entirely appropriate to that Department.

Some 30 years ago, community volunteers in a disadvantaged area of the city had a vision. A law centre was established to meet real and practical needs being experienced by ordinary people in their daily lives. A little bit of imagination at this time is needed to ensure this dream is fulfilled. A public meeting is being held on Friday. Many representatives of local organisations and individuals have indicated that they will attend the meeting. Therefore, I ask the Minister for Social and Family Affairs to meet with the board of directors of the Northside Community Law Centre to sort out this administrative problem.

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