Written answers

Tuesday, 5 November 2024

Department of Children, Equality, Disability, Integration and Youth

Early Childhood Care and Education

Photo of Seán SherlockSeán Sherlock (Cork East, Labour)
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977. To ask the Minister for Children, Equality, Disability, Integration and Youth the number of providers that have been paid AIM funding for 2024; and the number awaiting payment, by county, in tabular form. [45113/24]

Photo of Roderic O'GormanRoderic O'Gorman (Dublin West, Green Party)
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The Access and Inclusion Model (AIM) is a model of supports designed to ensure that children with disabilities can access the Early Childhood Care and Education (ECCE) Programme. Its goal is to empower pre-school providers to deliver an inclusive pre-school experience, ensuring that every eligible child can meaningfully participate in the ECCE Programme and reap the benefits of high quality early learning and care.

The main supports are grouped into universal or targeted supports. Universal supports are designed to create a more inclusive culture in Early Learning and Care settings, through training courses and qualifications for staff. Where universal supports are not enough to meet the needs of an individual child, targeted supports are available to ensure the child can meaningfully participate in pre-school.

The AIM targeted supports are AIM Level 5 and AIM Level 7. AIM Level 5 provides specialised equipment, appliances or capital grants towards minor building alterations to ensure a child’s meaningful participation in pre-school. AIM level 7 provides additional funding to pre-schools who have a child requiring extra support. Providers can use this funding either to reduce the child-to-adult ratio in the pre-school room or to fund an extra staff member as a shared resource with other children in the ECCE setting.

Below are the statistics by county for the number of providers who were approved for AIM targeted supports and have to be paid. The reasons as to why payments have not issued can vary but may include tax clearance issues, companies registration issues or invoice issues.

The data in the table below relates to calendar year 2024 (01 Jan – 31 Oct) covering both 2024/25 and 2023/24 calls.

Payments listed for Level 5 relate to Level 5 alterations only because Level 5 equipment payments are made directly to the equipment supplier.

Level 5

County
Services with Approved Applications

(2024 Calendar Year)
No. Services approved and yet to be paid

(2023/24 & 2024/25 Calls)
Carlow 4 1
Cavan 13 0
Clare 23 1
Cork 52 0
Donegal 11 0
Dublin 62 0
Galway 18 0
Kerry 21 0
Kildare 16 0
Kilkenny 10 0
Laois 8 0
Leitrim 3 1
Limerick 14 0
Longford 4 0
Louth 12 0
Mayo 16 0
Meath 20 0
Monaghan 8 0
Offaly 2 0
Roscommon 8 0
Sligo 10 0
Tipperary 16 0
Waterford 7 2
Westmeath 4 0
Wexford 14 0
Wicklow 12 0
Grand Total 388 5

Level 7

County
Services with Approved Applications (2024 Calendar Year) Services approved and yet to be paid

(2023/24 & 2024/25 Calls)
Carlow 33 0
Cavan 46 1
Clare 82 2
Cork 327 4
Donegal 101 1
Dublin 668 10
Galway 168 2
Kerry 96 1
Kildare 139 6
Kilkenny 71 0
Laois 64 3
Leitrim 23 0
Limerick 125 2
Longford 21 4
Louth 81 5
Mayo 98 5
Meath 155 2
Monaghan 44 2
Offaly 60 1
Roscommon 43 1
Sligo 34 1
Tipperary 132 3
Waterford 65 1
Westmeath 53 0
Wexford 93 4
Wicklow 112 1
Grand Total 2,934 62

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