Results 2,761-2,780 of 19,173 for speaker:Shane Ross
- Public Accounts Committee: Department of Justice and Equality - Review of Allowances (25 Oct 2012)
Shane Ross: Is that core pay?
- Public Accounts Committee: Department of Justice and Equality - Review of Allowances (25 Oct 2012)
Shane Ross: Prison officers receive approximately €43,000. The minimum salary is €31,000 and the maximum, €43,000. Is that correct?
- Public Accounts Committee: Department of Justice and Equality - Review of Allowances (25 Oct 2012)
Shane Ross: I am talking about the average prison officer, not the new recruit. That is the lowest level.
- Public Accounts Committee: Department of Justice and Equality - Review of Allowances (25 Oct 2012)
Shane Ross: What is the average take home pay of the average prison officer?
- Public Accounts Committee: Department of Justice and Equality - Review of Allowances (25 Oct 2012)
Shane Ross: Does that figure include the amounts of €18,000, €4,000 and €3,000?
- Public Accounts Committee: Department of Justice and Equality - Review of Allowances (25 Oct 2012)
Shane Ross: Is Mr. Clinton including the average assistant chief officer, prison officer and recruit prison officer?
- Public Accounts Committee: Department of Justice and Equality - Review of Allowances (25 Oct 2012)
Shane Ross: Therefore, average take home pay is approximately €62,000.
- Public Accounts Committee: Department of Justice and Equality - Review of Allowances (25 Oct 2012)
Shane Ross: The maximum is €62,000. How does that compare with payments in the United Kingdom?
- Public Accounts Committee: Department of Justice and Equality - Review of Allowances (25 Oct 2012)
Shane Ross: Is there any comparison?
- Public Accounts Committee: Department of Justice and Equality - Review of Allowances (25 Oct 2012)
Shane Ross: As they do not work the same hours, could one have a per hour comparison?
- Public Accounts Committee: Department of Justice and Equality - Review of Allowances (25 Oct 2012)
Shane Ross: Average take home pay there is approximately £32,000.
- Public Accounts Committee: Department of Justice and Equality - Review of Allowances (25 Oct 2012)
Shane Ross: What proportion of allowances is pensionable?
- Public Accounts Committee: Department of Justice and Equality - Review of Allowances (25 Oct 2012)
Shane Ross: Will Mr. Clinton provide a figure for the proportion of allowances that is pensionable?
- Public Accounts Committee: Department of Justice and Equality - Review of Allowances (25 Oct 2012)
Shane Ross: Does the Department of Justice and Equality have the figure?
- Public Accounts Committee: Department of Justice and Equality - Review of Allowances (25 Oct 2012)
Shane Ross: What was the effect of the 2005 deal on the pay bill of the Irish Prison Service?
- Public Accounts Committee: Department of Justice and Equality - Review of Allowances (25 Oct 2012)
Shane Ross: Does the Department agree with this?
- Public Accounts Committee: Department of Justice and Equality - Review of Allowances (25 Oct 2012)
Shane Ross: Does Mr. Purcell agree with Mr. Clinton's analysis that the overtime bill was necessarily so high because staff were effectively given no choice other than to work well beyond their core hours, or is Mr. Purcell of the view that the overtime system was exploited by staff?
- Public Accounts Committee: Department of Justice and Equality - Review of Allowances (25 Oct 2012)
Shane Ross: What does that mean?
- Public Accounts Committee: Department of Justice and Equality - Review of Allowances (25 Oct 2012)
Shane Ross: I agree that the €30 million saving is a tremendous achievement. What I am trying to establish is whether, in Mr. Purcell's view, the overtime system was being abused prior to the introduction of the new arrangements.
- Public Accounts Committee: Department of Justice and Equality - Review of Allowances (25 Oct 2012)
Shane Ross: There is something wrong when the annual cost is €65 million.