Written answers

Tuesday, 21 January 2014

Department of Jobs, Enterprise and Innovation

Grant Payments

Photo of Niall CollinsNiall Collins (Limerick, Fianna Fail)
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324. To ask the Minister for Jobs, Enterprise and Innovation the grant aid available for a purpose (details supplied). [2744/14]

Photo of Richard BrutonRichard Bruton (Dublin North Central, Fine Gael)
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Anyone interested in starting their own business should in the first instance contact their local County and City Enterprise Board (CEB). The CEBs support the indigenous micro-enterprise sector in the start-up and expansion phases and stimulate enterprise potential at local level. They are the first port of call in terms of advice, direction, training and grant support for anyone who wishes to start a business. Contact details for the CEBs are available on .

The CEBs generally only grant assist enterprises in the manufacturing or internationally traded services sector, which over time can develop into strong export entities and graduate to the Enterprise Ireland portfolio. Retail enterprises are ineligible for direct financial support from the CEBs due to concerns over displacement (where grant-assisted projects simply displace business from other players in the local market).

However, any start-up can use the CEBs as a gateway to accessing finance from Micro Finance Ireland, which offers support in the form of loans of up to €25,000 to start-up, newly established or growing microenterprises employing less than 10 people with viable business propositions that do not meet the conventional risk criteria applied by the banks. The Fund has a significant entrepreneurship focus and is open to anyone with a viable business proposal. Applications for the Microfinance Fund should be channelled through the local CEB.

In addition, locally trading businesses, including start-ups can avail of non-financial assistance from their CEB in the form of a wide range of business advice and information services, management capability training and development programmes, e-Commerce training initiatives etc. Training courses include such topics as start-your-own-business, taxation for beginners, internet marketing, ideas generation and negotiation skills.

The 2013 Action Plan for Jobs also included a number of measures designed to help the retail sector. These include a project to streamline the application process for business licences in the retail sector, and an initiative to encourage more businesses to trade on-line. Developments on these initiatives will be reported on a quarterly basis on my Department’s website, , as part of the Action Plan for Jobs Progress Reports.

The Deputy may wish to note that the system for delivery of State supports to micro and small enterprises is being reformed and that the 35 existing County and City Enterprise Boards (CEBs) will be dissolved and new Local Enterprise Offices (LEOs) will be created. This reform will bring about a new level of engagement and interaction at both national and local level in relation to enterprise support and economic recovery and growth. The target date for the legal dissolution of the CEBs and the formal launch of the LEOs is mid-April, 2014.

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