Dáil debates
Wednesday, 17 September 2025
Saincheisteanna Tráthúla - Topical Issue Debate
Company Closures
9:55 am
Brian Stanley (Laois, Independent)
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I raise this important issue because 132 workers at Leprino Foods in Portlaoise received the news on 18 and 19 August that the plant will close and will be wound down over this year and next year. This is an important facility. When it opened there were great hopes and I certainly had great hope because at last we had a large, substantial manufacturing plant in the constituency. The record of IDA Ireland has not been good, but more than 100 jobs were being created in the new business park. It was very important and it was happening at last.
It is estimated that over 12,000 people commute out of County Laois to work every day, many of them to this city. We need to change that. We need to create more jobs in the constituency. Some of those 132 people who will lose their jobs are couples and the Minister of State can imagine the impact of that if they have mortgages or such commitments. For IDA Ireland and Enterprise Ireland, the record regarding Laois is awful. There are only 154 jobs in IDA Ireland-backed companies in the county. It is the lowest number in the State. IDA Ireland made two visits to Laois in the past 12 months. Some of its visits are e-visits; they are not physical visits. In 2021, it made three visits; in 2022 two visits and last year, two visits. It is the worst record of IDA Ireland performance I can see in the charts I have. Westmeath had 20 visits and I do not take that from it. That is well and good for Westmeath.
Laois County Council has pulled out all the stops. It has created a business park and lots of jobs and new industry are being created in that business park, including Alpha Drives where the Laois Rose of Tralee works as an apprentice electrician. She started there. It is great to have those jobs. Laois County Council has been supporting start-ups and, as I said, it developed the Togher business park, which is at the crossroads of Ireland. It is on the junction of the N7, N8 and N80. As Minister of State, Deputy Higgins will understand the importance of that.
In contrast, IDA Ireland has not performed. It has hardly been seen around the place. Other Deputies and I have met IDA Ireland over the years. Councillors have also met it and put it to the organisation, but I do not see any improvement. IDA Ireland is getting a substantial amount of taxpayers' money from the Minister's Department. Last year or the year before it got in excess of €80 million. I think it is approximately €90 million at the moment. I am open to contradiction on that. It has well-paid senior staff.
In the past, we heard all the excuses. The location was the problem. Now the motorways are there. The N80 is being upgraded by the county council and Transport Infrastructure Ireland. As I said, the Togher business park is at the crossroads of Ireland. Lack of infrastructure was another excuse. Now, in the centre of Laois we have first-class infrastructure, including roads. This is less than 1 km from the junction of the N7, N8 and N80.
A lack of serviced land used to be cited as a problem. We do not have that now. We have the Togher business park developed by the council and there are 50 acres owned by IDA Ireland less than 1 km away from the council's site.
The Minister of State will tell me she cannot direct the IDA to do this, that or the other, but questions need to be asked of IDA Ireland about Laois.
Emer Higgins (Dublin Mid West, Fine Gael)
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I thank the Deputy for raising this matter, which I am taking on behalf of the Minister, Deputy Peter Burke. We were all very concerned to learn of the difficulties being experienced by Leprino Foods in Portlaoise. The Minister extends his sympathies to all employees and their families who may be affected by this decision taken by the company, and he knows that this news will be very concerning for all the workers involved and their families.
I understand the Minister received a collective redundancy notification from Leprino Foods EU Limited on 19 August 2025. The Deputy will be aware that Ireland has a robust framework of legislative protections and supports for workers who are affected by redundancy. Under the Protection of Employment Act 1977, employers planning collective redundancies must undertake a 30-day consultation and information process with employee representatives and notify the Minister for Enterprise, Tourism and Employment of the proposed redundancies at least 30 days before they take effect. The Department of Enterprise, Tourism and Employment and the Department of Social Protection will support the company and its employees in any way they can. Enterprise Ireland supports both national and international food and drink manufacturers and will continue to engage with them to set up in Ireland, supporting them to scale, expand and access our world-leading food innovation ecosystem.
IDA Ireland has continued its strong commitment to regional development, which is one of four key strategic objectives of its 2025-29 strategy, Adapt Intelligently. This ambitious strategy aims to secure 550 foreign direct investment, FDI, projects outside Dublin, accounting for 55% of all planned investments. The overarching goal is to create 75,000 new jobs nationwide and generate a projected €250 billion in economic impact. IDA Ireland has also set ambitious targets for every region, including the midlands region. The FDI performance in the midlands has been strong over the past five years, with employment among IDA clients increasing by 26 and a significant ecosystem of well-established companies across life sciences, technology, global business and financial services and engineering and industrial technologies.
As the Deputy said, 145 people are currently employed across five IDA Ireland-supported companies in County Laois. He expressed dissatisfaction with the growth in that area and in particular with the number of visits IDA Ireland has undertaken to the county and I will pass that message on to the Minister. However, as he pointed out, we now have new motorways, upgraded infrastructure, and upgraded and new serviced sites, all because of Government investment.
These are going to make County Laois an even more effective location for investment.
IDA Ireland partners with clients and key stakeholders to build on the strength and competencies of the midlands region, with the particular focus on high-value manufacturing, services and research and development opportunities across a number of established clusters, whether they be in life sciences, technology, global business services or engineering technology trends. It has created, and will continue to create, new opportunities across the region in areas including data analytics, smart manufacturing and cybersecurity. It will also look at new approaches to working, such as co-working hubs.
A core objective of IDA Ireland is to deliver a competitive property offering that supports FDI and the growth and expansion of indigenous clients within the Enterprise Ireland portfolio. The IDA's current strategy includes a partnership with Laois County Council to deliver an advanced planning permit in Portlaoise.
10:05 am
Brian Stanley (Laois, Independent)
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I thank the Minister of State for her reply. If 145 people are employed in IDA-backed companies in Laois, that is actually a decline of nine from the last figures. It is very disappointing. As question has to be asked about why Laois is being ignored time and again. I know everybody will back his or her own corner but I think if one looks at the map of the 26 counties and at the number of IDA-backed jobs in various counties, Laois is way down at the bottom despite the fact that it has that excellent infrastructure and a huge workforce that is commuting out of the county. The location is the best I can see outside of Dublin and other people remarked on that as well.
I want the Minister of State to bring this to the senior Minister, Deputy Burke's attention. Why is Laois being ignored time and again? What is the IDA doing about developing the 50-acre site that it owns on the edge of Portlaoise? Nothing has happened there yet. What is the IDA doing, along with Enterprise Ireland, to get a replacement industry into the Leprino factory? It is a new plant and was only in production for four years. We had great hopes for it. There needs to be support from the Department for the workers in terms of transitioning.
Overall, I am giving the Minister of State and the Government a message because it is the Government that funds these bodies. I do not have a problem with that, but we need jobs. I agree with that but the IDA and Enterprise Ireland need to up their game. We need to see that, the same as everybody else, taxpayers' money from people in County Laois gives people bang for their buck. Two visits in a year is an awful record for a State-backed body and it needs to change.
Emer Higgins (Dublin Mid West, Fine Gael)
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Ireland has seen very positive jobs growth in recent years, and we are now at virtually full employment. However, announcements like this show that we can never become complacent and take any jobs for granted. It shows that there are challenges in certain markets that are beyond the State's control at times. Inflationary pressures, energy costs and the recent increase in US tariffs have created additional challenges for businesses across the country. The Minister, Deputy Burke, can assure the House that the State will provide appropriate supports to employees impacted by this particular closure. The Intreo office of the Department of Social Protection will proactively help them to access opportunities available for employment or appropriate training and development options.
As a Government, we will continue to focus on building the resilience of businesses and on keeping innovation at the heart of that. The IDA continues to work effectively with national and local stakeholders to ensure that each region has the necessary conditions in place to foster enterprise and innovation and attract investment and talent. The IDA enjoys a close working relationship with all key stakeholders across the four counties in the region and is heavily involved in a significant number of initiatives across that region to improve the value proposition of FDI, including the just transition, the midlands regional enterprise plan steering committee, the ICT network, the ATIM cluster steering committee and the regional skills forum. There are loads of them. The availability of quality business parks and strategic sites shows that there is a critical component of the regional value proposition there, which is there to be able to win investment into the regions. It is crucial that the midlands region have a competitive and sustainable property offering to enable the attraction and retention of investment in jobs. The IDA has made considerable investments in land, buildings and infrastructure across the midlands region.
As the Deputy mentioned, the IDA acquired 18.46 ha of land adjacent to the business and technology park in Portlaoise in October 2022 and an additional 4.25 ha last year. That land is currently available for promotion on the business and technology park in Portlaoise and is almost 30 ha at this point. IDA Ireland continues to assist Enterprise Ireland companies with their property requirements as they set up and scale.
Verona Murphy (Wexford, Independent)
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That concludes business for today. The Dáil stands adjourned until 8.47 a.m. tomorrow.