Written answers

Tuesday, 21 November 2006

Department of Foreign Affairs

Decentralisation Programme

9:00 am

Paudge Connolly (Cavan-Monaghan, Independent)
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Question 427: To ask the Minister for Foreign Affairs the number of staff in his Department who have indicated willingness to decentralise; and if he will make a statement on the matter. [38596/06]

Photo of Dermot AhernDermot Ahern (Louth, Fianna Fail)
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Under the Government's decentralisation programme, the Development Cooperation Directorate of the Department of Foreign Affairs, which is Irish Aid's Headquarters, and currently based in Dublin, will decentralise to Limerick. This is scheduled to take place during the third quarter of 2007 and will involve the relocation to Limerick of 124 posts.

Already, 48 posts in Irish Aid headquarters, including that of Director General, are filled by officers who have signalled their intention to decentralise to Limerick. Some 12 of these officers were already serving within the Department. The remainder is made up of 25 officers who have been recruited from other Departments and Offices via the Central Applications Facility, 8 officers who have been assigned from inter-Departmental promotion panels and 3 newly-recruited officers.

A further 17 officers who are serving elsewhere in the Department, mostly abroad, are also expected to decentralise to Limerick and will be taking up duty in Irish Aid in advance of the move. In addition, 21 officers from other Departments who have applied to decentralise to Limerick, most of whom are currently based in provincial locations, will transfer to the Department closer to the date of the move. Once these officers take up duty in Irish Aid, 86 posts (69% of the Directorate's staff complement) will be in place.

A small number of staff, approximately 15 at entry grades, will be recruited for direct assignment to Limerick in the months preceding the move.

There are 24 development specialist posts attached to Irish Aid's headquarters. Five Development Specialists and two Senior Development Specialists, who had applied to decentralise, have since decided to withdraw their applications. The specialists, with the support of the IMPACT trade union, say that they are not prepared to consider decentralising while issues around the terms and conditions of their employment are unresolved.

Discussions are continuing with representatives of the specialists, with IMPACT, and with the Department of Finance with a view to resolving the issues involved which also have a wider Civil Service dimension. It would be my hope that a greater number of Specialists will, in time, volunteer to decentralise to Limerick.

In addition to those officers volunteering to decentralise to Limerick with Irish Aid, 115 officers within my Department have applied to transfer to provincial locations with other Departments. To date, 26 of these have accepted offers to decentralise.

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