Results 3,441-3,460 of 10,862 for speaker:Matt Carthy
- Public Accounts Committee: 2020 Report of the Comptroller and Auditor General and Appropriation Accounts
Vote 33 - Tourism, Culture, Arts, Gaeltacht, Sport and Media
Chapter 7 - Oversight of Funding for the European Capital of Culture 2020 (25 Nov 2021) Matt Carthy: Given that, as we now know, there is a substantial payment being made to Revenue, do those governance meetings address the safeguards to ensure that there will not be further outlays in that regard?
- Public Accounts Committee: 2020 Report of the Comptroller and Auditor General and Appropriation Accounts
Vote 33 - Tourism, Culture, Arts, Gaeltacht, Sport and Media
Chapter 7 - Oversight of Funding for the European Capital of Culture 2020 (25 Nov 2021) Matt Carthy: Is Ms Licken satisfied that there are no outstanding issues that could result in a future outlay to Revenue with regard to employment contracts?
- Public Accounts Committee: 2020 Report of the Comptroller and Auditor General and Appropriation Accounts
Vote 33 - Tourism, Culture, Arts, Gaeltacht, Sport and Media
Chapter 7 - Oversight of Funding for the European Capital of Culture 2020 (25 Nov 2021) Matt Carthy: This is where I am confused. Ms Licken said that at the governance meetings issues that have been identified are raised, but that she is not sure of the structure that ensures that issues can be caught early. In other words, she is not sure that they can be addressed before they are raised, specifically in terms of contracts. I note Ms Licken's point that an Accounting Officer cannot ever...
- Public Accounts Committee: 2020 Report of the Comptroller and Auditor General and Appropriation Accounts
Vote 33 - Tourism, Culture, Arts, Gaeltacht, Sport and Media
Chapter 7 - Oversight of Funding for the European Capital of Culture 2020 (25 Nov 2021) Matt Carthy: I am sorry. Vice Chair, am I limited for time? How long have I left?
- Public Accounts Committee: 2020 Report of the Comptroller and Auditor General and Appropriation Accounts
Vote 33 - Tourism, Culture, Arts, Gaeltacht, Sport and Media
Chapter 7 - Oversight of Funding for the European Capital of Culture 2020 (25 Nov 2021) Matt Carthy: Perhaps Ms Licken could just outline the role that the BAI and the NewERA approach have in relation to staff contracts within RTÉ. Ms Licken mentioned them a number of times in relation to this matter.
- Public Accounts Committee: 2020 Report of the Comptroller and Auditor General and Appropriation Accounts
Vote 33 - Tourism, Culture, Arts, Gaeltacht, Sport and Media
Chapter 7 - Oversight of Funding for the European Capital of Culture 2020 (25 Nov 2021) Matt Carthy: Would that include staff contracts?
- Public Accounts Committee: 2020 Report of the Comptroller and Auditor General and Appropriation Accounts
Vote 33 - Tourism, Culture, Arts, Gaeltacht, Sport and Media
Chapter 7 - Oversight of Funding for the European Capital of Culture 2020 (25 Nov 2021) Matt Carthy: Am I correct in saying the BAI has no role either-----
- Public Accounts Committee: 2020 Report of the Comptroller and Auditor General and Appropriation Accounts
Vote 33 - Tourism, Culture, Arts, Gaeltacht, Sport and Media
Chapter 7 - Oversight of Funding for the European Capital of Culture 2020 (25 Nov 2021) Matt Carthy: -----in terms of staff contracts?
- Public Accounts Committee: 2020 Report of the Comptroller and Auditor General and Appropriation Accounts
Vote 33 - Tourism, Culture, Arts, Gaeltacht, Sport and Media
Chapter 7 - Oversight of Funding for the European Capital of Culture 2020 (25 Nov 2021) Matt Carthy: The difficulty is in terms of public money, which is taxpayers' money. Some €1.2 million of taxpayers' money has gone back to Revenue through a settlement and there may be others.
- Public Accounts Committee: 2020 Report of the Comptroller and Auditor General and Appropriation Accounts
Vote 33 - Tourism, Culture, Arts, Gaeltacht, Sport and Media
Chapter 7 - Oversight of Funding for the European Capital of Culture 2020 (25 Nov 2021) Matt Carthy: I am not satisfied that we can be sure that the mechanisms are in place to make sure that outstanding issues will be addressed quickly or that issues will not arise in the future.
- Public Accounts Committee: Business of Committee (25 Nov 2021)
Matt Carthy: I thank the Chairman. It is good to see him back. I have a couple of points. It is incredibly interesting. This relates to the 1997 decision by Revenue to allow couriers be designated as self-employed. I am not sure it was the couriers themselves who benefitted from that arrangement and would argue it was not. The letter states: A review of the 1997 letters from Revenue bears out the...
- Public Accounts Committee: Business of Committee (25 Nov 2021)
Matt Carthy: The fundamental problem here, from a public finances point of view, is that the Department is spending, if I remember correctly, close to €14 million a year sending out paper copies of payslips, which seems to be completely archaic in the modern era and given that most of the public services have moved beyond that practice. From the information we were given by the Department when its...
- Public Accounts Committee: Business of Committee (25 Nov 2021)
Matt Carthy: I am very concerned about this section of the correspondence relating to the national broadband plan. It seems the ground is being prepared for a further revision downwards of the targets by the end of 2022. I am anxious that we get full clarification of the portion of the correspondence suggesting that certain legacy issues resulting from Covid-19 will continue to impact the contracted...
- Public Accounts Committee: Business of Committee (25 Nov 2021)
Matt Carthy: It is a useful piece of work. An Taisce is funded through different schemes by a variety of State bodies and Departments. My specific question relates to the correspondence from the Department of Foreign Affairs on the same issue, No. 892. Does the Chairman want to deal with that now or later?
- Public Accounts Committee: Business of Committee (25 Nov 2021)
Matt Carthy: I have a question in respect of the letter from the Department of Foreign Affairs regarding funding for An Taisce for the Green Schools programme. It is mentioned in the correspondence that the Department was aware of the reinstatement of the 2018 figures in An Taisce's 2019 financial statements and reference is made to a follow-up engagement with An Taisce. The letter goes on to state that...
- Public Accounts Committee: Business of Committee (25 Nov 2021)
Matt Carthy: Thank you.
- Public Accounts Committee: Business of Committee (25 Nov 2021)
Matt Carthy: I wanted to ask whether we have written to the Department of Health regarding the value for money review that is referenced in this correspondence. The Department will be before us in the coming weeks and I suggest we write to request a briefing on the Nursing Homes Ireland correspondence and the national children's hospital, advising that we will raise those issues on the day.
- Public Accounts Committee: Business of Committee (25 Nov 2021)
Matt Carthy: Can we let the Department know that we will be raising it at the meeting and that it would be useful to have some written correspondence on it beforehand?
- Joint Oireachtas Committee on Agriculture, Food and the Marine: Common Agricultural Policy and Young Farmers: Engagement with Macra na Feirme (1 Dec 2021)
Matt Carthy: I welcome Mr. Keane and his colleagues. I regret we are not able to meet in the committee room. I thank Macra na Feirme for its ongoing engagement with the committee and its constructive role not only in assisting this committee in its different deliberations but also in helping to shape Irish farm policy more broadly in a very progressive direction. I commend everybody involved in that....
- Joint Oireachtas Committee on Agriculture, Food and the Marine: Common Agricultural Policy and Young Farmers: Engagement with Macra na Feirme (1 Dec 2021)
Matt Carthy: In terms of the other member states operating within a EU framework that have much better and healthier proportions of young farmers operating, is there a key flagship programme that some of those operate under? Is there a number of simple examples that we can take from any of those and simply extrapolate them into the Irish plan?