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Public Accounts Committee: ...Accounts of the Public Services of the Comptroller and Auditor General Chapter 1 - Exchequer Financial Outturn for 2021 Chapter 2 - Net Cost of Banking Stabilisation Measures Chapter 22 - Ireland Apple Escrow Fund (17 Nov 2022)

...Accounts of the Public Services of the Comptroller and Auditor General Chapter 1 - Exchequer Financial Outturn for 2021 Chapter 2 - Net Cost of Banking Stabilisation Measures Chapter 22 - Ireland Apple Escrow Fund

Joint Oireachtas Committee on Jobs, Enterprise and Innovation: Issues Facing Small Businesses: Discussion (16 Nov 2022) See 1 other result from this debate

Richard Bruton: ...work for remote working, a commitment to a circular economy and the types of measures that involves. There will be friction in many ways in designing that future. This is not all motherhood and apple pie. There is a hard edge to the change that is coming at us at a rate of knots.

Select Committee on Finance, Public Expenditure and Reform, and Taoiseach: Business of Select Committee (16 Nov 2022)

Pearse Doherty: Let me finish. The Minister asked me a question so let me finish. We are not talking about Apple versus the corner shop. We are talking about households for a start. The rationale for an upper limit relates to large companies being able to have the State pay multiples of their energy bills. The Minister can shake his head but he outlined to Deputy Boyd Barrett that was one of the...

Retained Firefighters: Motion [Private Members] (15 Nov 2022)

Sorca Clarke: ...somewhat perplexed by the Government amendment in which the Minister sees fit to compare firefighters to other staff in local authorities. With the greatest of respect to them, to say it is like apples and oranges comes nowhere near it. Increases in capital investment, refurbishment of stations and all the new equipment are all meaningless if there are not enough firefighters to use it....

Ceisteanna ó Cheannairí - Leaders' Questions (10 Nov 2022)

Mick Barry: ...question. Press reports this summer told us that European Court of Justice hearings were expected by Department officials to take place this autumn, paving the way for a final ruling next year on the Apple tax case. Incredibly, the Government is still objecting to the State being awarded nearly €14 billion in taxes owed to it. Can the Tánaiste update the House on the...

Joint Oireachtas Committee on Housing, Planning and Local Government: General Scheme of the Planning and Development and Foreshore (Amendment Bill) 2022: Discussion (10 Nov 2022)

...is the key concern. There is also the issue of ensuring there is balance on the board. If we fix those two key issues, will we fix the problems we currently have? As I said, if there is a bad apple in the batch, the answer will be "No". What we have to do is address some of Ms Uí Bhroin's ideas about further oversight and review, which are good ideas to ensure we look more often...

Seanad Public Consultation Committee: Other Voices on the Constitutional Future of the Island of Ireland: Referendums and Lessons from Other Jurisdictions (27 Oct 2022)

...have another referendum in the next year I would have told them they were talking nonsense. Brexit changed everything. It might work back to some of the issues that Mr. McCord raised. It is comparing apples with oranges: they are both fruit but they are very different scenarios. Scotland has its own ancient historic legal system, a separate education system and a whole range of...

Joint Oireachtas Committee on Finance, Public Expenditure and Reform, and Taoiseach: Concrete Block Levy: Discussion (26 Oct 2022) See 2 other results from this debate

...the concrete industry and the enormous impact it has had on homeowners all around the country. We have homes in Donegal, Clare, Mayo and now Wexford. It is everywhere. It is not just a few bad apples. This is a systematic failure within the concrete industry across the country. This seems to be no more than a smokescreen from Government to persuade the public it is doing something and...

Joint Oireachtas Committee on Education and Skills: Junior Cycle Examination Results 2022: State Examinations Commission (25 Oct 2022)

Ms Andrea Feeney: Looking at other jurisdictions and how quickly results are available, there is an element of comparing apples and oranges. They do things differently in those jurisdictions. I know the comparison is usually made with France, where results usually issue in July, but a lot of the examinations on which those results are based are held in March. A very small number are held...

Public Accounts Committee: 2021 Report of the Comptroller and Auditor General and Appropriation Accounts
Vote 29 - Environment, Climate and Communications
2021 Report of the Comptroller and Auditor General - Chapter 9: Implementation of the National Broadband Plan
(13 Oct 2022)

Catherine Murphy: We are hearing from gas experts that it is not. We have to be sure whether we are talking about apples and oranges.

Written Answers — Department of Education and Skills: Education Policy (13 Oct 2022)

Norma Foley: ...established a Single Provider Framework for the purchase of laptops and desktop PCs, to enable schools to easily access such infrastructure with transparent costing. Schools can also access procurement mechanisms for Apple devices established by HEAnet Ireland's National Education and Research Network. The Schools Procurement Unit (SPU) established by my Department is the central support...

Employment Permits Bill 2022: Second Stage (Resumed) (12 Oct 2022)

Michael McNamara: ...work permit while being a seasonal worker or thereafter? These are important considerations. It seems to be fundamentally wrong to bring somebody across the world and into the State and then to say they are just here to pick apples. I have been talking about fruit workers, although there is not a huge horticultural sector in Ireland. Nevertheless, it came very much to the fore earlier...

Committee on Budgetary Oversight: Film Sector Tax Credits: Discussion (Resumed) (12 Oct 2022)

...well as the film tax credit and other supports currently in place. It is important that we reflect on the types of productions that section 481 supports in this country, both incoming and indigenous. It supports multi-million budget television dramas such as the Apple TV-funded sci-fi drama series "Foundations", which was shot in Troy Studios in Limerick. The challenging new feature...

Ceisteanna Eile - Other Questions: Home Schooling (11 Oct 2022)

Pádraig O'Sullivan: ...Foley, are here, I would ask that in time for next year's budget at least some analysis would be done on this issue. I understand that special schools get so many resources but it is comparing apples and oranges with mainstream schools and DEIS schools. There is merit in doing some kind of review and looking into the matter.

Written Answers — Department of Transport, Tourism and Sport: Driver Licences (11 Oct 2022)

Hildegarde Naughton: ..., including security, safe storage, transfer to banks and reconciliation, that the Road Safety Authority wished to avoid as part of the new service. Alternatives are readily available, such as Apple Pay, Google Pay or Payzone vouchers. Payzone vouchers can be purchased from retailers in towns and villages nationwide (over 3,500 outlets). The Central Bank has advised that retail...

Joint Oireachtas Committee on Justice, Defence and Equality: European Council Rule of Law Report 2022 and Rule of Law Situation in Ireland: Engagement with Ms Vra Jourová (11 Oct 2022)

...many matters that in other member states belong to the table of judges and higher judiciary officers. Suddenly, there is some kind of deformed picture and, therefore, sometimes we are comparing apples and pears. Of course, the sufficient number of highly professional and well paid judges is the goal in every country.

Joint Oireachtas Committee on Jobs, Enterprise and Innovation: Update on Quarters 1 and 2: Discussion (5 Oct 2022) See 2 other results from this debate

Garret Ahearn: ...has been reduced from 9% to zero. That is important for local employment in every county and rural area. In my area, the excise relief on cider is important. We in County Tipperary are very well-known for cider and apples. The excise relief will protect jobs there. A number of schemes are available for low-cost loans. Because of the uncertain times we are in, some people might...

Defective Concrete Products Levy: Motion [Private Members] (4 Oct 2022)

Gerald Nash: ...No one should be fooled - the CIF has not cared one jot about the hundreds of thousands of people living in unsafe apartments, given its record to date. Instead, the idea has been perpetuated that there are bad apples around the place. This is the bad apples theory, according to which the sector as a whole should not be scapegoated for the actions of a few. However, the bad apples...

Joint Oireachtas Committee on Justice, Defence and Equality: General Data Protection Regulation Enforcement: Discussion (22 Sep 2022)

...provided for in the legislation. The threshold at which the DPC, in another member state, issues a decision is far lower. When the committee is comparing cases with other cases, it is comparing apples and bicycles. Moreover, in the report the committee stated that Ireland had issued decisions in four out of 196 cases since 2018. That is not actually an accurate figure. The European...

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