Dáil debates

Tuesday, 10 July 2012

3:00 pm

Photo of Frances FitzgeraldFrances Fitzgerald (Dublin Mid West, Fine Gael)

Preschool services, including child minding services, are currently regulated under the Child Care (Pre-School Services) (No. 2) Regulations 2006, as provided for under Part VII of the Child Care Act 1991.

Operational responsibility for the management and delivery of health and personal social services, including the inspection of child care facilities, was assigned to the Health Service Executive under the Health Act 2004. The notification and inspection service is managed by the preschool inspection teams of the HSE appointed by the executive as authorised persons for this purpose. These teams also provide an advisory service to the services which are statutorily required to notify in order to assist them in achieving and maintaining the appropriate standard. They also provide information to interested persons, including parents, on preschool services in the area.

Following inspection of a service the inspectors provide the service provider with a report on the outcome of the inspection. I understand the HSE is committed to working towards the on-line publication of the standard inspection reports of preschool facilities and I welcome that. In the meantime the HSE is encouraging child care providers to share the information in the reports with parents when requested, and that should happen.

I understand from information supplied by the HSE that 2,789 inspections were undertaken, 704 review and follow-up inspections and 755 advisory visits were made to child care facilities in 2011. By international standards, that is a high proportion of visitation, at 61%, to child care facilities in any one year. Some other countries have a procedure with a roll-over of inspections so that one facility might be inspected every two or three years.

The early years sector has grown significantly over the last decade and in parallel with this new quality and curriculum frameworks have been introduced. In light of all of these developments, the regulation of the sector will be reviewed as part of the early years strategy. For the first time we will have a national strategy and I recently appointed the group to work and develop the policy. It is being developed to cover a range of issues affecting children in their first years of life such as health, family support, learning and development and care and education. It will identify the structures and policies needed to improve early years experience in Ireland and examine child care issues.

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