Results 8,841-8,860 of 10,459 for speaker:Bertie Ahern
- Departmental Staff. (27 Apr 2005)
Bertie Ahern: People with disabilities are treated on the same basis for promotion and recruitment. They are treated exactly the same. The only exception might be for telephonists, who have particular expertise in that area and who tend to stay in that job. In other grades, they can definitely move.
- Departmental Staff. (27 Apr 2005)
Bertie Ahern: Is the Deputy asking how many more people should there be?
- Departmental Staff. (27 Apr 2005)
Bertie Ahern: There is nobody in my constituency office who comes within the category of disabled. I would not have any difficulty, however, if suitable people in the Civil Service system were found. Everybody in my constituency section bar one is a civil servant. The people in my Department who have a disability are as good as and are equal to anybody else. There might obviously be some limitations to...
- Departmental Staff. (27 Apr 2005)
Bertie Ahern: All the people working in the constituency office are included in that. They are part of the staff.
- Departmental Staff. (27 Apr 2005)
Bertie Ahern: I do not have a copy of last week'sââ
- Departmental Staff. (27 Apr 2005)
Bertie Ahern: The Deputy would not believe it if I told him that I have not been in the constituency office in my Department.
- Departmental Staff. (27 Apr 2005)
Bertie Ahern: I have not been there. I do not know. I think it is six. Whatever I said last week. That office is in another part of the building and I do not think I have been in it.
- Departmental Staff. (27 Apr 2005)
Bertie Ahern: My Department will reach the reduction target of 4%. With regard to any new vacancy, the Department examines how it might reschedule staff and achieve greater efficiency. We are on course to meet the target and will do so. This will not be achieved by decreasing the workload but by efficiency, and technology helps in this regard by reducing the volume of paper. We must ensure we meet the...
- Departmental Staff. (27 Apr 2005)
Bertie Ahern: In response to an earlier question by Deputy Rabbitte, seven people work in my constituency office. The enforcement of the quota with regard to the employment of people with disabilities is not easy to achieve and is co-ordinated by the Department of Justice, Equality and Law Reform which monitors all Departments in this regard. However, it is a difficult task. I would have liked the figure...
- Departmental Staff. (27 Apr 2005)
Bertie Ahern: The Department of Justice, Equality and Law Reform.
- Departmental Staff. (27 Apr 2005)
Bertie Ahern: It pursues each Department in respect of the issue. The Minister of State contacts each Department and reminds it of its responsibility. The equality section is the special unit in this regard.
- Freedom of Information. (27 Apr 2005)
Bertie Ahern: I propose to take Questions Nos. 6 to 9, inclusive, together. A total of six requests were received in my Department in the first quarter of 2005. Of these, two were granted, two were part granted, one was withdrawn and there are no records in respect of one request. In the first quarter in 2004, 11 requests were received. In the same period in 2003, 80 requests were received. In the same...
- Freedom of Information. (27 Apr 2005)
Bertie Ahern: People make requests for information from my Department and others and the functions of general examination and primary decision have been delegated by order as envisaged in the Act. With regard to my Department, these functions are generally delegated to those in the grade of assistant principal officer, although a number of cases are reviewed by those in the grade of principal officer. Some...
- Freedom of Information. (27 Apr 2005)
Bertie Ahern: There is a list of monthly requests for information. Sometimes I see the list and sometimes I do not. However, I have no involvement in the process whatsoever. The changes do not help in any way other than in the improved working of the system. People who seek information about themselves can still do so for free. The â¬15 charge for making a freedom of information request cannot be...
- Freedom of Information. (27 Apr 2005)
Bertie Ahern: If I had some information in my Department, which I believed should be in the public domain and would be of some relevance, we would release it. It is not a question of waiting for a freedom of information request. We might have background data to report and we might decide to release the whole lot including case studies etc., which happens all the time. It is not triggered by a freedom of...
- Freedom of Information. (27 Apr 2005)
Bertie Ahern: If I used my Department credit card, which I do not do, to go to dinner with somebody, some people might wish to know whom I was with, what I had eaten and whether I drank wine or Ballygowan.
- Freedom of Information. (27 Apr 2005)
Bertie Ahern: An official might mention that such a request was received. However, other than that, they do not. For that reason I do not bother using the credit card because people would know whom I was with.
- Freedom of Information. (27 Apr 2005)
Bertie Ahern: Overall that might be an interesting study for the Department of Finance to carry out. In the early years my Department received an enormous number of requests relating to historical issues. People were going back using procedures, even current ones, to find out what the procedure might have been in the past. It was obvious they would go through the system and after a few years fall out. So...
- Freedom of Information. (27 Apr 2005)
Bertie Ahern: One had no records.
- Freedom of Information. (27 Apr 2005)
Bertie Ahern: The average cost as calculated by the Department of Finance is approximately â¬425 at 2004 levels. As the fee for each request is â¬15, it is a very unprofitable and costly business, and the fee represents a very small fraction of what it costs to process requests. I believe there have been freedom of information requests regarding Media Lab. This information was either released following...