Written answers

Wednesday, 25 January 2023

Department of Employment Affairs and Social Protection

Community Employment Schemes

Photo of Paul MurphyPaul Murphy (Dublin South West, RISE)
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117. To ask the Minister for Employment Affairs and Social Protection further to Parliamentary Questions No. 681 of 8 November 2022, if his attention has been drawn to the fact that this issue is of great urgency given that the cost-of-living crisis has placed a significant burden on all supervisors and assistant supervisors, and there has been no increase in wages since 2008; his views on whether an urgent increase in wages should be actioned; and if she will make a statement on the matter [3437/23]

Photo of Joe O'BrienJoe O'Brien (Dublin Fingal, Green Party)
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Firstly, I wish to acknowledge the valuable and dedicated service that CE supervisors/assistant supervisors provide in running CE schemes in delivering local based community services while providing a valuable training and development opportunity to the long-term unemployed and to those often furthest removed from the labour market.

CE supervisors and assistant supervisors are employees of individual CE schemes, which are funded by the Department. The Department is not the employer of this group of workers.

As the funder of CE schemes, the Department received correspondence last year from Fórsa and SIPTU seeking a pay increase for CE supervisors and assistant supervisors. Fórsa and SIPTU subsequently referred this pay claim to the conciliation service of the Workplace Relations Commission (WRC). The WRC issued an invite to the Department to take part in a conciliation process in December 2022. Following Government approval, the Department responded to the WRC indicating that it will engage with a WRC conciliation process, in its role as funder of these schemes. While the organisation and timing of the conciliation process is a matter for the WRC, it is expected that the process will commence in the early days of February.

Any increase in pay rates that would potentially increase the overall cost to the state of funding schemes, or state funded activities in the wider community and voluntary sector, must take into consideration the potential cost to the exchequer. Given these budgetary implications, and the possible referral of other similar claims to the WRC, the Department will also continue to engage with the Department of Public Expenditure and Reform during the WRC process. If there are budgetary implications arising from the WRC process - these will need Government approval.

Minister Humphreys and I are fully committed to the future of CE and will continue to support and improve CE for the benefit of the supervisors and participants, given the valuable contribution being made to local communities through the provision of services.

I trust this clarifies the matter for the Deputy.

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