Written answers

Tuesday, 27 November 2012

Department of Health

Departmental Staff Remuneration

Photo of Caoimhghín Ó CaoláinCaoimhghín Ó Caoláin (Cavan-Monaghan, Sinn Fein)
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To ask the Minister for Health if he will provide, in tabular form, the number of staff in his Department or in bodies which fall under the remit of his Department whose annual remuneration including salary, pension and benefits at 31 December 2011 fell into bands of €400,000 and above, between €300,000 to €399,999, between €200,000 to €299,999 and between €150,000 to €199,000; and if he will provide a breakdown of the positions held by the staff in relevant pay brackets [52520/12]

Photo of James ReillyJames Reilly (Dublin North, Fine Gael)
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The data relating to the Department of Health at 31st December, 2011, is detailed in the table following:

Salary BandNo StaffPosition
€200,000 – 299,0001Secretary General
€150,000 – 199,0001Chief Medical Officer

With regard to the Health Service Executive, they have been asked to collate the data sought as soon as possible and it will be provided directly to the Deputy by them when available.

The information required by the Deputy in relation to the agencies under the remit of the Department is being collated and will be forwarded to the Deputy.

Photo of Caoimhghín Ó CaoláinCaoimhghín Ó Caoláin (Cavan-Monaghan, Sinn Fein)
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To ask the Minister for Health if he has made any contacts requesting staff whose annual salary is more than €200,000 in his Department or in any body under the remit of his Department, to waive 15% of their salary or such amount in excess of €200,000 whichever is the lesser; if he has, the date on which he first made this contact; the number of staff who acquiesced to the request for the waiver; the number of staff who refused the request for the waiver and the number of staff who have not responded to the request for the waiver [52522/12]

Photo of James ReillyJames Reilly (Dublin North, Fine Gael)
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In June 2011, the Government announced the introduction of pay ceilings for higher posts across the public service and for CEO posts in Commercial State Companies. As part of these measures, the Government also decided to seek, in the first instance, voluntary waivers of salary of 15%, or by a lesser amount if the application of the full 15% reduction would bring the salary levels of such individuals to below the proposed pay ceiling of €200,000 for the public service and €250,000 for CEOs of Commercial State Companies.

Within the HSE, the then CEO came within the terms of the Government Decision. The HSE made contact with my Department directly on 27 June 2011, to indicate that the CEO would make a voluntary waiver of 15% of his salary. The necessary formal arrangements were put in place to apply the waiver with effect from July 2011. No cases of non-acquiescence to this waiver arose in the HSE.

Apart from the HSE, no CEO/staff members in the non-commercial agencies under the remit of the Department received salaries in excess of €200,000.

The Decision did not apply to medical consultants, as a separate process in relation to their salaries and working practices was under consideration.

The VHI is the only commercial agency under the aegis of the Department. Accordingly, in July 2011, the Department wrote to the Chair requesting that relevant staff be asked to comply with the request for the voluntary waiver. The VHI response to the Department in October 2011 indicated that no voluntary waivers of salary would be made by any staff member. No member of staff of the Department of Health currently receives a salary in excess of €200,000 per annum. However, the annual salary of the former Secretary General of the Department, who retired on April 8th, 2012, was in excess of €200,000 but a voluntary surrender brought his annual salary below the €200,000 figure.

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