Seanad debates

Wednesday, 21 October 2009

Student Support Schemes

 

7:00 pm

Photo of Pearse DohertyPearse Doherty (Sinn Fein)

Cuirim fáilte roimh an Aire Stáit, an Teachta Seán Haughey. Tá mé iontach sásta go bhfuil sé anseo ón Roinn Oideachais agus Eolaíochta leis an cheist seo a phlé. I am very pleased the Minister of State at the Department of Education and Science, Deputy Seán Haughey, is here to discuss this very serious issue which affects many students in Donegal. I am also aware that it affects students throughout the State. Since I placed the motion on the agenda last weekend, the USI has stated this problem is experienced throughout the State. I understand the issue in my home county of Donegal because I have been inundated with requests from mothers, fathers and students to try to deal with this issue and find some resolution.

As I walked through the Chamber door I was on the telephone, as the Minister of State may have noticed. I was taking another call from a distressed mother whose daughter applied for a maintenance grant before the deadline and in good time. She is in college now but still has not received notification of whether the grant will be approved. She is not currently registered with the college because she is not obliged to pay the €1,500 registration fee if she is eligible for a maintenance grant. She cannot access vital services within the college because she is not registered and now there is a threat to the mid-term examinations. This is the problem faced by one individual but hundreds of others face similar problems.

This matter was foreseen and I have raised the issue many times. There is a need for the Student Support Bill to be implemented as well as a need for resources to be put in place to deal with the backlog in applications that local authorities and VECs are experiencing. However, given the difficult times in which we find ourselves there has been a significant increase in the number of applicants for maintenance grants. It is estimated that applications have increased by 20% in Donegal and there is no doubt there were hundreds of additional applications to Donegal County Council and Donegal VEC in the final days before the deadline.

Where does the problem arise? The problem is that Donegal County Council and Donegal VEC do not have the personnel or resources to process these applications in time. Part of the problem also arises from the fact that application forms were only made available four weeks before the deadline, although numerous requests have been submitted throughout the years for applications to be made available in good time. The recruitment embargo, which bans local authorities and VECs from employing new and additional people to deal with this problem, the ban on overtime, which does not allow people to work in excess of the scheduled hours to deal with the backlog, and the fact that local authorities were of the view initially that they would not have to deal with this matter this year because the Student Support Bill would transfer the services to the VEC, have all caused problems this year. The major problem, for which the Government is not directly responsible, is that so many new people are eligible for the maintenance grant because of the changed circumstances of their parents in the past year.

What is the impact on students? There are now hundreds of students in colleges throughout the State who have not paid the €1,500 registration fee because they are not required to do so. They will be entitled to the maintenance grant when the decision is made by the local authority or VEC. Since they have not paid the €1,500 fee, they are not registered with the college. Since they are not registered with the college they do not receive a student number. Since they do not have a student number they cannot access the computer suites, take books from the library and, most important, are not allowed to sit the mid-term exams which start next week. This problem in terms of registration for students requires the direct involvement of the Minister. The Minister must instruct the colleges that there is a backlog, that there is a major problem and that we must get over this hurdle immediately.

The bigger problem is that such students are awarded maintenance grants because they need them to survive in college. We are all aware of the cost of going to college. This small amount of money allows people from the working and lower middle classes to be able to send their children to college. In that way, people can go through colleges independently, but without that support such people are in danger of dropping out. That is the problem we are now faced with. Students have told me that in the majority of cases it will be January 2010 until their applications for local authority grants will be assessed. In the meantime, people are being told to apply for a loan. However, they may have lost their jobs in the last year and are trying to pay mortgages and other debts that have accrued in recent years. They are being turned down for loans by the banks we are bailing out, so the students are being left high and dry as a result.

We must ensure these students can sit their exams and get access to all the services in their colleges. Additional resources are also required by local authorities and vocational education committees. It is not right to leave our students, who are the future of this country, in this position. Months after they have applied and filled in their forms on time, State bodies cannot make the decision because they are being strangled by the Government's restrictions. In the coming weeks, Donegal County Council alone will have lost 280 staff members. One in five of the council's workforce has disappeared in the past 18 months, yet they are still being asked to deliver more services with less resources, which is impossible. We need to lift the embargo, at least on local authorities and VECs, so that additional people can be recruited.

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