Results 2,901-2,920 of 6,030 for speaker:Brendan Ryan
- Seanad: Genealogy and Heraldry Bill 2006: Second Stage (12 Dec 2006)
Brendan Ryan: This legislation is a classic example of the sort of work Seanad Ãireann can do that will not be done anywhere else. I appeal to the Minister to let the debate persist. If we vote it down now, the people who believe it is necessary will begin again. Their agenda is not political but relates to our heritage. They want to see the resolution of what they believe to be ambiguity. Perhaps...
- Seanad: Order of Business (12 Dec 2006)
Brendan Ryan: It is far worse.
- Seanad: Order of Business (12 Dec 2006)
Brendan Ryan: A first cousin of Proinsias de Rossa.
- Seanad: Order of Business (12 Dec 2006)
Brendan Ryan: In the number of years I have spent in this House I have frequently ended up in the company of people regarded by some members of the Garda as subversives. In such cases I noticed that whether three people were attending a meeting or 20, there was never a shortage of gardaà to keep an eye on these suspected subversives. They would incessantly follow these people around, visit their homes...
- Seanad: Order of Business (7 Dec 2006)
Brendan Ryan: Nobody wants to talk about traffic yet again but it is an issue. I use the wonderfully useful Fermoy bypass so often that I purchased the capacity to pass through by electronic means without any delay. I now know that if I was to take my car around the country to the various toll systems, I would need three other devices stuck on my windscreen. I can imagine a truck driver travelling the...
- Seanad: Order of Business (7 Dec 2006)
Brendan Ryan: Many, including myself, fulminate about law and order. Yesterday in Cork, the family of a murdered girl showed extraordinary generosity in their response to the family of the man who murdered her. We all could reflect on this and choose our words a little more carefully when discussing some of these horrendous crimes. If the family of a victim can be as forgiving as that, perhaps all of us...
- Seanad: Health (Nursing Homes) (Amendment) Bill 2006: Second Stage (7 Dec 2006)
Brendan Ryan: Much of what has been said on this side of the House represents my views, although I would perhaps take a more radical view. I am intrigued about the way we put certain aspects of our society into boxes. While I may use the term "society", I should say "the present regime" because after ten years of the present Government, one must accept, regrettably, that perhaps it has an insight into...
- Seanad: Health (Nursing Homes) (Amendment) Bill 2006: Second Stage (7 Dec 2006)
Brendan Ryan: The same is true of free second level education. When Donogh O'Malley introduced free second level education, he did not go through a rigmarole of means tests and cross-checking. He decided it would be free. While it is not entirely free, that is a separate issue. Ms Niamh Breathnach introduced the abolition of feesââ
- Seanad: Health (Nursing Homes) (Amendment) Bill 2006: Second Stage (7 Dec 2006)
Brendan Ryan: ââa decision which was entirely correct but which has simply been diverted by the universities, which have managed to cream off the snobs of the fee-paying schools. Members should consider the composition of those attending the institutes of technology and they will see the difference. They are not the children of the very poor but of middle income earners. Members should ask those in...
- Seanad: Health (Nursing Homes) (Amendment) Bill 2006: Second Stage (7 Dec 2006)
Brendan Ryan: I know there is the possibility of enhanced subvention but it is entirely at the discretion of the HSE. The Minister of State said in his contribution that the average amount is above the standard but that applies to a person who is deemed to be completely dependent. The subvention, at approximately twice what we spend per week on a primary school child, is a miserable amount to spend on 5%...
- Seanad: Health (Nursing Homes) (Amendment) Bill 2006: Second Stage (7 Dec 2006)
Brendan Ryan: I know that. It was a different world. The fundamental problem is that the Department of Finance which runs the Department of Health and Children has set its face against a universalist system of provision for older people. It is determined to squeeze blood out of dying turnips. The fundamental issue in this regard is the Department's desire to make people pay, regardless of the human...
- Seanad: Health (Nursing Homes) (Amendment) Bill 2006: Second Stage (7 Dec 2006)
Brendan Ryan: I can do sums. I know what percentages are.
- Seanad: Health (Nursing Homes) (Amendment) Bill 2006: Second Stage (7 Dec 2006)
Brendan Ryan: I appreciate that. The Acting Chairman is also very good at sums.
- Seanad: Health (Nursing Homes) (Amendment) Bill 2006: Second Stage (7 Dec 2006)
Brendan Ryan: I have outlined my fundamental view. Other issues of detail will need to be considered. The fundamental value system that underlines this legislation is antiquated, outdated and ungenerous.
- Seanad: Health (Nursing Homes) (Amendment) Bill 2006: Second Stage (7 Dec 2006)
Brendan Ryan: What constitutes due hardship for an older person?
- Seanad: Health (Nursing Homes) (Amendment) Bill 2006: Second Stage (7 Dec 2006)
Brendan Ryan: Big deal.
- Seanad: Budget Statement 2006: Motion (6 Dec 2006)
Brendan Ryan: Diesel is a filthy fuel.
- Seanad: Budget Statement 2006: Motion (6 Dec 2006)
Brendan Ryan: Diesel may be better than petrol on CO2 emissions but it is a filthy fuel.
- Seanad: Budget Statement 2006: Motion (6 Dec 2006)
Brendan Ryan: We should not get involved in a nonsensical debate about whether this is an election budget. Every budget prior to an election, from all parties, has been an election budget, although none has been as generous as this one. If my party was in Government and in the same position as the current Administration, it would, without a shadow of doubt, introduce an election budget. Whether it would...
- Seanad: Budget Statement 2006: Motion (6 Dec 2006)
Brendan Ryan: I could nearly recite them. We are into voodoo. This notion that the reduction of capital gains tax increased revenues is actually voodoo because it went up as often as it went down in the past ten years, since Charlie McCreevy introduced something which was not mentioned in any election manifesto before it was introduced. It was a classic Charlie McCreevy stroke which the Progressive...