Written answers

Thursday, 29 March 2018

Department of Children and Youth Affairs

Area Based Childhood Programme

Photo of Anne RabbitteAnne Rabbitte (Galway East, Fianna Fail)
Link to this: Individually | In context | Oireachtas source

389. To ask the Minister for Children and Youth Affairs the future of the ABC programme; if this programme will be extended; and the way in which her Department plans to continue to meet the needs of the communities that this programme serves. [14867/18]

Photo of Katherine ZapponeKatherine Zappone (Dublin South West, Independent)
Link to this: Individually | In context | Oireachtas source

The ABC Programme commenced in 2013 and was designed as a time-bound, co-funding agreement led by the Department of Children and Youth Affairs (DCYA) in conjunction with The Atlantic Philanthropies (Atlantic), originally in the amount of €29.7m for the period 2013-2017. In late 2016, my Department secured additional funding to ensure that all 13 existing ABC sites remained in contract to the end of December 2017. As at December 2017, the total funding provided to the ABC Programme was €32.76 million (rounded).  Of this, DCYA provided €17.91m and Atlantic provided €14.85m.

With the closure of The Atlantic Philanthropies operations in Ireland, DCYA is now the sole funder of the ABC Programme.  In last year’s budget, funding was secured to maintain the existing ABC Programme up to the end of 2018.

The ABC Programme is currently being evaluated at a national level, by the Centre for Effective Services (CES). Data has been collected locally, at the area-level, so as to assess the success and effectiveness of the totality of the investment across the five broad outcomes of the Programme (Improved Child Health and Development, Improved Children’s Learning, Improved Parenting, Integrated Service Delivery, and Services embedded in mainstream services). The national evaluation report will be produced later in 2018. However, preliminary findings have been identified and a summary of these made available to the ABC sites.

In November 2017, my Department initiated a process, in consultation with key ABC Programme stakeholders, to consider options for sustaining the work of the ABC Programme within a new vision for a community based prevention and early intervention programme from 2019 and beyond. My Department is working to ensure that we take full account of the learning from all the interventions across the 13 ABC sites, and the national evaluation, in order to inform the delivery of prevention and early intervention initiatives, and to achieve our shared goal of improving the lives of children and families throughout Ireland.

A working group is currently being established to identify how the existing ABC Programme will transition into a new national structure that can build on the achievements to date and strengthen a future community based programme's focus on addressing child poverty and measurably improving specific outcomes for children and young people.

Photo of Anne RabbitteAnne Rabbitte (Galway East, Fianna Fail)
Link to this: Individually | In context | Oireachtas source

390. To ask the Minister for Children and Youth Affairs the full year cost of operating each ABC centre since their establishment in tabular form; and if she will make a statement on the matter. [14868/18]

Photo of Katherine ZapponeKatherine Zappone (Dublin South West, Independent)
Link to this: Individually | In context | Oireachtas source

The Area Based Childhood (ABC) Programme is a joint prevention and early intervention initiative, led by the Department of Children and Youth Affairs (DCYA) in conjunction with The Atlantic Philanthropies (Atlantic). The aim of the ABC Programme is to test and evaluate prevention and early intervention approaches to improve outcomes for children and families living in 13 areas of disadvantage in Ireland.

The ABC Programme commenced in 2013 and was designed as a time-bound, co-funding agreement, originally in the amount of €29.7m for the period 2013-2017. In late 2016, my Department secured additional funding to ensure that all 13 existing ABC sites remained in contract to the end of December 2017. As at December 2017, the total funding provided to the ABC Programme was €32.76 million. Of this, DCYA provided €17.91m and Atlantic provided €14.85m.

With the closure of The Atlantic Philanthropies operations in Ireland, DCYA is now the sole funder of the ABC Programme. In last year’s budget, funding was secured to maintain the existing ABC Programme up to the end of 2018.

Each ABC area was awarded a three year budget based on their original applications for a three year period of activity, ranging from programme design, through development and full implementation. The reported spending varied greatly from year to year, depending on which programmes an area was implementing, the scale of these, and at what stage of implementation the area was at in a given year, among other considerations.

The following table shows the amount of grant funding for the ABC Programme provided to each ABC area from 2013 to 2017.

ABC AreaABC Contract StartABC Grant Funding 2013ABC Grant Funding 2014ABC Grant Funding 2015ABC Grant Funding 2016ABC Grant Funding 2017Total ABC Grant Funding 2013-2017
Ballymun01/01/2013€500,000€1,750,000€1,750,000€1,200,000€431,155€5,631,155
Tallaght West01/01/2013€406,674€1,423,360€1,423,360€406,674€1,071,971€4,732,039
Dublin Northside (Darndale)01/01/2013€304,000€1,198,550€500,850€767,800€973,643€3,744,843
Clondalkin01/09/2014-€273,025€382,235€247,220€372,851€1,275,331
Louth01/09/2014-€151,059€755,295€452,837€452,379€1,811,570
Dublin Docklands08/09/2014-€120,000€180,000€660,000€556,620€1,516,620
Finglas08/09/2014--€545,585€424,344€358,999€1,328,928
Bray01/12/2014--€209,500€293,300€335,200€838,000
Knocknaheeny01/01/2015--€450,000€630,000€720,000€1,800,000
Grangegorman01/01/2015--€235,207€329,289€457,988€1,022,484
Ballyfermot27/01/2015--€187,500€412,500€218,126€818,126
Limerick01/03/2015--€394,891€552,847€557,385€1,505,123

Comments

No comments

Log in or join to post a public comment.