Written answers

Tuesday, 4 July 2023

Department of Children, Equality, Disability, Integration and Youth

Departmental Reports

Photo of Gino KennyGino Kenny (Dublin Mid West, People Before Profit Alliance)
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84. To ask the Minister for Children, Equality, Disability, Integration and Youth if he will publish an action plan and allocate resources to support the findings of the Government’s own Cost of Disability report; and if he will make a statement on the matter. [32471/23]

Photo of Anne RabbitteAnne Rabbitte (Galway East, Fianna Fail)
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The Cost of Disability in Ireland report was commissioned by the Minister for Social Protection and was prepared by Indecon International Research Economists. It was published by the Department of Social Protection in December 2021. It provides important evidence of the additional costs that people with a disability face.

The report has implications for many areas of public policy. As such, a whole-of-Government approach is required to develop appropriate responses and to ensure that everyday costs are reduced for people with disabilities and their families. This is in keeping with Ireland's long-standing mainstream-first approach to the development of disability policy. For that reason, the Cost of Disability report was referred to the Steering Group of the National Disability Inclusion Strategy (NDISSG) within 24 hours of publication, and the NDISSG agreed to consider the conclusions and recommendations of the report in the context of monitoring actions under the NDIS until the conclusion of that strategy in December 2022.

During this time, departments and agencies across Government reported to the NDISSG on the various ways in which the Cost of Disability report was informing their approach to delivering actions under the NDIS. The NDIS concluded in December 2022 and work is now underway to develop an ambitious successor strategy.

In that context there are no plans to develop a specific cost of disability action plan. Rather, the report provides an important evidence base for all of government to consider, on a mainstream basis, and in the specific context of the development of the NDIS successor.

Work is ongoing across Government to coordinate the development of a successor strategy to the NDIS. As this strategy is intended to provide a blueprint for more comprehensive realisation of the UNCRPD it is necessary to allow sufficient time for it's development, and work will continue on this throughout the year. In particular, consultations on the strategy will be conducted over the coming months.

It is important to me that this strategy includes meaningful action to address day to day costs for people with disabilities in Ireland. The Cost of Disability in Ireland Report will be an important contribution to the evidence base from which actions and commitments in the new strategy are developed across Government throughout 2023.

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