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Government to give powers to local authorities to rescind emergency accommodation in special circumstances

Government to give powers to local authorities to rescind emergency accommodation in special circumstances

The Government is to give local authorities new powers to strip offers of emergency accommodation from people if they repeatedly refuse offers of social housing.
It will also require those on waiting lists to demonstrate their commitment to staying in Ireland long-term.
The proposed changes to the law come amid a significant increase in the number of people entering into emergency accommodation in recent years.
Under current rules, anyone is able to present to a local authority and seek emergency accommodation supports.
However, concerns have been raised about the lack of pathways to exit migrants from emergency accommodation, given many do not qualify for social housing supports. Over 5,000 people who had leave to remain in Ireland did not have their own accommodation and were in International Protection Accommodation Services (IPAS) housing across the country according to the most recent figures.
The department of housing previously established a working group to examine changes to homelessness legislation, after concerns were raised by the County and City Managers Association. The group itself called for the introduction of specific powers to allow local councils to withdraw offers of emergency accommodation, in specific cases.
These cases include where an individual or household has repeatedly rejected offers of housing, or if their presence in emergency accommodation is threatening the safety of staff or other individuals.
The group called for the introduction of specific eligibility criteria to access emergency accommodation. This means if a household or individual is not eligible for social housing supports, a council does not need to provide them with emergency accommodation.
The Government is also expected to progress legislation around social housing eligibility which would require any individual applying for social housing to be resident here and have a long-term intention to remain.
Progress began on these laws last year as the Housing (Miscellaneous Provisions) Bill 2024. It progressed through pre-legislative scrutiny in the Oireachtas housing committee. The two elements are expected to be progressed side-by-side.
In a separate memo, housing minister James Browne told Cabinet last week that an independent appeals mechanism will be needed in legislation designed to update social housing rules. This is seen as a move that would improve "transparency and consistency" in the allocation of social housing system. He is to return to Cabinet in the coming weeks with more detailed proposals.
His housing bill also aims to add provisions which would mean that any non-national must have deep ties to the State, making habitual residency a condition of accessing public housing. It is understood that ministers have been told that the State must make efforts to ensure that applicants are "demonstrably residing in Ireland", a move which is seen as "consistent" with arrangements in social protection.
It is understood that time spent in temporary protection would not count towards the time that a person was considered habitually living in Ireland.
The general scheme of the bill had made it as far as pre-legislative scrutiny last summer before the plans were shelved. The current version has undergone extensive legal advice. In its pre-legislative scrutiny of the bill last year, the Oireachtas Housing Committee recommended "further clarity be provided in the legislation as to whether residency and the Habitual Residency Condition (HRC) are to be an additional eligibility criterion, or form a precursor to an eligibility assessment".
It said if they were to be used as a separate prerequisite assessment, then "due consideration must be given in legislation to ensure that it meets the requirements of fair procedure and natural justice".
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EU to publish expanded list of US tariff countermeasures
EU to publish expanded list of US tariff countermeasures

RTÉ News​

time5 hours ago

  • RTÉ News​

EU to publish expanded list of US tariff countermeasures

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National History Museum still showing no sign of life 3 years later
National History Museum still showing no sign of life 3 years later

Extra.ie​

time7 hours ago

  • Extra.ie​

National History Museum still showing no sign of life 3 years later

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Ten years later, it was temporarily shut again to facilitate the removal of whale skeletons suspended from the roof, and the packing and removal of 20,000-plus specimens. The museum – popularly known as the 'Dead Zoo' – reopened in 2022, but only the ground floor was accessible to members of the public. On September 1 last year, the NHM was shut again for an extensive refurbishment to enable the full decant of specimens. More than €1m has been spent on consultants since the project was given the green light more than three years ago. Pic: BOULENGER Xavier/Shutterstock But no date has been provided for when the NHM will be able to reopen amid growing political concerns over the length and the cost of the works. In January 2023, then Arts and Culture Minister Catherine Martin approved the commencement of the design phase for the refurbishment. 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Last year architects Fitzgerald Kavanagh & Partners were appointed to lead the integrated design team. An extensive and comprehensive decant of the collection was required in advance of any investigative works.

Minister for Justice to tell of 43% drop in people claiming asylum
Minister for Justice to tell of 43% drop in people claiming asylum

RTÉ News​

time9 hours ago

  • RTÉ News​

Minister for Justice to tell of 43% drop in people claiming asylum

The Minister for Justice is expected to tell a Cabinet sub-committee that his Department is beginning to see the number of applications for International Protection noticeably reduce. RTÉ News understands there has been a 43% reduction in applications in the first six months of this year compared to the same period in 2024. Department of Justice figures show the number of IPAS cases had been rising over the last number of years and reached 18,500 last year. But there has also been a speeding up of the processing of applications and this has been attributed to a significant increase in investment into the international protection system which, combined with digitisation and process reengineering, has facilitated a major increase in processing capacity Figures show that the International Protection Office last year delivered over 14,000 first decisions compared to over 8,500 in 2023, while the International Protection Appeals Tribunal (IPAT) closed around 3,100 appeals in 2024 compared to over 1,700 in 2023. Further growth in decisions will be delivered in 2025. The introduction of accelerated processing from November 2022 for those from designated safe countries of origin, applicants who have received protection elsewhere in Europe and those from a country with a particularly high number of applications. It is said to have resulted in significant reductions in the number of applicants from those countries. In 2023 there were 2,082 applications from people with Nigerian nationality and that rose to 4,035 in 2024 before dropping to 926 in the first six months of this year. There was also a substantial reduction in the number of applications from Algerian nationals with 1,462 in 2023, 281 in 2024 and 64 in the first six months of this year. The first half of 2025 has also seen a drop in the number of IPAS applications from Palestinians. There were 118 in 2023, 957 in 2024 and 65 in the first six months of this year.

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