Advanced search
Most relevant results are first | Show most recent results first | Show use by person

Search only Tim O'MalleySearch all speeches

Results 361-380 of 2,629 for speaker:Tim O'Malley

Seanad: Garda Síochána Bill 2004: Committee Stage (Resumed). (14 Dec 2004)

Tim O'Malley: I will not respond to the last comment. I appreciate Senator Burke's point. However, I do not have an answer. The Senator will have the opportunity to ask that question of the Minister for Justice, Equality and Law Reform, Deputy McDowell, on Report Stage.

Seanad: Garda Síochána Bill 2004: Committee Stage (Resumed). (14 Dec 2004)

Tim O'Malley: The Senator will have an opportunity to return to this point. I do not have an answer tonight. I will make the Senator's reservations known to the Minister.

Seanad: Garda Síochána Bill 2004: Committee Stage (Resumed). (14 Dec 2004)

Tim O'Malley: The Senator may take it that the Minister will come back to him but perhaps not with the answer he wants.

Seanad: Garda Síochána Bill 2004: Committee Stage (Resumed). (14 Dec 2004)

Tim O'Malley: The positions are static security posts in State buildings. Every such post requires five persons to meet the commitment. We are speaking of specific locations, namely, the Courts Service, a Department of State, the Office of the Attorney General, the Houses of the Oireachtas Commission, the National Gallery of Ireland and the board of the National Museum of Ireland. The Minister is specific...

Written Answers — Health Services: Health Services (26 Jan 2005)

Tim O'Malley: I propose to take Questions Nos. 149 and 225 together. The Health Act 2004 provided for the Health Service Executive, which was established on 1 January 2005. Under the Act, the executive is required to manage and deliver, or arrange to be delivered on its behalf, health and personal social services. Responsibility for the provision of services to persons with intellectual disability and...

Written Answers — Services for People with Disabilities: Services for People with Disabilities (26 Jan 2005)

Tim O'Malley: A key policy aim of the Health Strategy, Quality and Fairness: A Health System for You, is to deliver high quality services that are based on evidence-supported best practice. Essential elements for the execution of this aim are currently being developed under the health reform programme. A critical constituent in this process is the establishment of the Health Information Quality Authority,...

Written Answers — Services for People with Disabilities: Services for People with Disabilities (26 Jan 2005)

Tim O'Malley: The additional revenue funding of €70 million and €60 million capital funding provided in 2005 for services for people with physical, sensory, intellectual disabilities, autism and mental illness is being used to put in place a broad range of new and enhanced services around the country. These include, among others, new residential, respite, day and home support services, together with...

Written Answers — Services for People with Disabilities: Services for People with Disabilities (26 Jan 2005)

Tim O'Malley: The additional revenue funding of €70 million and €60 million capital funding provided in 2005 for services for people with physical, sensory and intellectual disabilities, autism and mental illness is being used to put in place a broad range of new and enhanced services around the country. These include, among others, new residential, respite, day and home support services, together with...

Written Answers — Health Services: Health Services (26 Jan 2005)

Tim O'Malley: The Health Act 2004 provided for the Health Service Executive, which was established on 1 January 2005. Under the Act, the executive is required to manage and deliver, or arrange to be delivered on its behalf, health and personal social services. Responsibility for the provision of services to people with an intellectual disability and those with autism in the Dublin area lies, in the first...

Written Answers — Health Services: Health Services (26 Jan 2005)

Tim O'Malley: The Health Act 2004 provided for the Health Service Executive, which was established on 1 January 2005. Under the Act, the executive is required to manage and deliver, or arrange to be delivered on its behalf, health and personal social services. Responsibility for the provision of services to people with an intellectual disability and those with autism in the Dublin area lies, in the first...

Written Answers — Health Services: Health Services (26 Jan 2005)

Tim O'Malley: The Health Act 2004 provided for the Health Service Executive, which was established on 1 January 2005. Under the Act, the executive is required to manage and deliver, or arrange to be delivered on its behalf, health and personal social services. Responsibility for occupational therapy rests with the executive. My Department has requested the chief officer for the executive's northern area to...

Written Answers — Services for People with Disabilities: Services for People with Disabilities (26 Jan 2005)

Tim O'Malley: The Health Act 2004 provided for the Health Services Executive, which was established on 1 January 2005. Under the Act, the executive is required to manage and deliver or arrange to be delivered on its behalf, health and personal social services. Responsibility for the provision of services to persons with intellectual disability and those with autism in the Kildare area lies, in the first...

Written Answers — Health Services: Health Services (26 Jan 2005)

Tim O'Malley: The Health Act 2004 provided for the Health Service Executive, which was established on 1 January 2005. Under the Act, the executive is required to manage and deliver, or arrange to be delivered on its behalf, health and personal social services. Responsibility for speech and language therapy rests with the executive. My Department has requested the chief officer for the executive's southern...

Written Answers — Health Service Allowances: Health Service Allowances (26 Jan 2005)

Tim O'Malley: The Health Act 2004 provided for the Health Service Executive, which was established on 1 January 2005. Under the Act, the executive is required to manage and deliver, or arrange to be delivered on its behalf, health and personal social services. Responsibility for the assessment of entitlement to and payment of the blind welfare allowance, including the payment of arrears, rests with the...

Written Answers — Services for People with Disabilities: Services for People with Disabilities (26 Jan 2005)

Tim O'Malley: The national physical and sensory disability database is currently being implemented in all Health Service Executive areas. When complete, the database will provide a comprehensive picture of the health and personal social service needs of people with a physical or sensory disability over a five year period. The database will inform planning, service development, prioritisation of service...

Written Answers — Health Service Allowances: Health Service Allowances (26 Jan 2005)

Tim O'Malley: My Department issued letters to the CEO of each health board on 6 December informing them that the funding to pay arrears of blind welfare allowance is being authorised by this Department. It was a matter for each individual health board, and is now a matter for the Health Service Executive, as to how and when the arrears are issued to the individuals involved.

Written Answers — Health Service Allowances: Health Service Allowances (26 Jan 2005)

Tim O'Malley: The assessment of entitlement to and payment of the blind welfare allowance, including the payment of arrears, is a matter for the Health Service Executive in the relevant area. Blind welfare allowance is a means-tested Department of Health and Children supplementary payment which is paid to eligible persons who are blind or visually impaired in addition to an existing Department of Social...

Written Answers — Child Care Services: Child Care Services (26 Jan 2005)

Tim O'Malley: The Health Act 2004 provided for the Health Service Executive, which was established on 1 January 2005. Under the Act, the executive is required to manage and deliver, or arrange to be delivered on its behalf, health and personal social services. Responsibility for the provision of services to children with intellectual disability and those with autism in the Limerick area lies, in the first...

Written Answers — Services for People with Disabilities: Services for People with Disabilities (26 Jan 2005)

Tim O'Malley: The data from the national intellectual disability database committee's annual report for 2004, which was published on 26 November 2004, identify 474 individuals with intellectual disability, all aged 20 years or over, accommodated in psychiatric hospitals, 315 of whom have services requirements.

Written Answers — Mental Health Services: Mental Health Services (26 Jan 2005)

Tim O'Malley: The Health Act 2004 provided for the Health Service Executive, which was established on 1 January 2005. Under the Act, the executive is required to manage and deliver, or arrange to be delivered on its behalf, health and personal social services. Responsibility for the provision of the service referred to by the Deputy rests with the executive. My Department has requested the acting chief...

   Advanced search
Most relevant results are first | Show most recent results first | Show use by person

Search only Tim O'MalleySearch all speeches