
Nursing homes controversy: What we know so far
The film examined standards of care at nursing homes operated by Emeis Ireland, formerly known as Orpea. The French-owned company runs 27 residential homes across the State.
Advertisement
Undercover researchers found multiple examples of care failings and neglect of vulnerable older residents in the facilities.
Here is everything we know so far about the controversy, including the growing political reaction.
The background
The RTÉ investigation found concerning issues at The Residence Portlaoise and Beneavin Manor nursing homes.
The documentary highlighted vulnerable people being left unsupervised, large amounts of residents congregated together being supervised by one member of staff, and requests for the use of toilets being unanswered for lengthy periods of time.
Advertisement
It also showed some staff not using proper hoisting equipment and shortages in necessary items like incontinence pads.
RTÉ had two undercover researchers simultaneously apply for and secure healthcare assistant roles at the Emeis homes. They both had all the required qualifications and were Garda vetted by RTÉ.
Emeis Ireland is a French-owned nursing home group. Photo: Collins
At The Residence Portlaoise, up to 101 residents can be accommodated at a weekly cost of approximately €1,200 per week under the Fair Deal scheme. The Fair Deal scheme is a State support system that helps cover the cost of nursing home care, based on a person's income and assets.
The undercover researchers did witness some staff provide good care but more often saw repeated instances of staff shortages impacting daily resident care.
Advertisement
This included large groups of residents being congregated together in day rooms, vulnerable older people being left unsupervised resulting in resident falls and day-to-day requests going unattended to for lengthy periods of time such as pleas to be put to bed or use the toilet.
The undercover carer also witnessed multiple examples of poor manual handling with older residents frequently lifted under the arms and without the required use of proper handling equipment contrary to best practice.
On some occasions staff were hampered by a lack of available equipment, while in one instance management also instructed healthcare assistants not to use hoisting equipment in public areas for fear their poor technique would be seen by visitors.
Beneavin Manor nursing home in Glasnevin, Dublin. Photo: Collins
At Beneavin Manor in Dublin, which can provide care for up to 115 adults for approximately €1,400 per week with Fair Deal funding, another undercover researcher saw similar patterns of staff under pressure. Staff also faced constant challenges when it came to the supply of essential resources with recurring shortages of basic items such as towels, bedsheets, sanitary wipes and gloves.
Advertisement
The researcher also witnessed the inappropriate handling of vulnerable residents with frail older people sometimes moved by their clothing instead of using the correct handling equipment mandated in their care plans.
RTÉ had both researchers hand in their notice and report all their concerns to management at the nursing homes and to the regulatory body, the Health Information and Quality Authority (Hiqa).
The response
In response to the documentary, Emeis Ireland issued an apology to to all residents and their families for 'the suffering and distress experienced as a result of failures identified in the care provided'.
It said it recognised and deeply regrets the 'breach of trust' and 'any failure to uphold the dignity of some residents at all times'.
Advertisement
Emeis Ireland said it has commenced a comprehensive review across both nursing homes.
Hiqa, which is responsible for inspecting nursing homes, said it is taking 'escalating action' over the 'wholly unacceptable' practices identified in the programme.
It said a decision to halt admissions to the Residence Portlaoise came into effect in April.
Minister for Enterprise Peter Burke expressed his distress at the revelations in the RTÉ investigation.
'It was very distressing to see vulnerable people to be treated the way they were. When you consider elderly people who have given so much for our economy, for our state, to be treated like that in their twilight years was absolutely reprehensible,' he told RTÉ's Today with Claire Byrne show.
Labour TD Alan Kelly said Hiqa had a 'lot of questions to answer' following the broadcast, adding that the agency needed to be properly supported to 'actually do its job'.
Mr Kelly said demographic changes in the country necessitate a completely different strategy for care of older and vulnerable people, including more public nursing homes and plans for increased home help and care in the home.
He also said Hiqa and other organisations need the Government to put an adult safeguarding framework in place.
The chairwoman of Safeguarding Ireland said she was 'disturbed, distressed, and angry' over the findings of the programme.
In reference to a previous RTÉ documentary on the Leas Cross Nursing Home 20 years ago, Patricia Rickard-Clark added: 'We have gone backwards, I think.'
Ms Rickard-Clark told RTÉ's Morning Ireland that the Government needs to establish an inter-department and inter-agency working group to deal with recommendations from the Law Reform Commission on adult safeguarding.
Disability Minister Norma Foley described the programme as 'horrifying' and 'heartbreaking'.
'To see older people struggle to be heard, to be listened to and to be cared for is quite appalling.'
Ms Foley said she believed that a lack of guidelines on staff-to-resident ratio in nursing homes should be 'looked at'.
What next?
A review of all nursing homes operated by Emeis Ireland has now been requested by the Department of Health.
Minister of State at the Department of Health with responsibility for Older People Kieran O'Donnell has asked Hiqa to start the review of all nursing homes operated by the group in the wake of the RTÉ Investigates programme.
Ireland
Nursing home revelations 'extremely distressing' a...
Read More
He said the treatment of residents at the nursing homes was 'extremely distressing' and 'wholly unacceptable'.
The Minister said he wanted to see inspections happening more frequently and faster responses to protected disclosures.
Hiqa's chief inspector 'is taking escalated regulatory action in the nursing homes identified' and 'will take any necessary additional actions with the provider to ensure safe and effective care and support to all residents', a spokesperson said.
Hiqa ordered admissions to The Residence in Portlaoise to be ceased after the release of a report in February detailed areas of significant concern. – Additional reporting: Vivienne Clarke, Press Association
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Daily Mail
an hour ago
- Daily Mail
Rosie O'Donnell goes scorched earth on Trump after he threatens to revoke her citizenship
Rosie O'Donnell went scorched earth on Donald Trump on Saturday with a series of posts claiming Trump was on Jeffrey Epstein 's client list and was a guest at the billionaire's infamous island. Rosie's clapback came after the president threatened to revoke O'Donnell's American citizenship, calling the comedian and longtime critic a 'threat to humanity' in a fiery post on Truth Social. 'Because of the fact that Rosie O'Donnell is not in the best interests of our Great Country, I am giving serious consideration to taking away her Citizenship,' Trump, 79, wrote earlier in the day. 'She is a Threat to Humanity, and should remain in the wonderful Country of Ireland, if they want her. GOD BLESS AMERICA!' Under US law, a president cannot revoke the citizenship of an American born in the United States. O'Donnell was born in New York state. Over the course of almost a dozen posts the comedian and former chat show host laid into Trump and any association he may have had with Epstein, but some focused squarely on the president himself. 'Thirty-plus years of sexual abuse' - The known victims,' O'Donnell posted along with a profile shot of Trump and a list of women who have accused him of sexual abuse dating back to the 1980s. Another posting showcased a photo montage showcasing Trump meeting Epstein and his convicted sex trafficker girlfriend Ghislaine Maxwell. In the center was a Truth Social from Trump pleading for people to 'STOP TALKING ABOUT EPSTEIN!!!!!'. The comedian and former chat show host laid into Trump and any association he may have had with Epstein, but some focused squarely on the president himself Other posts designed to irk the president further saw a photoshopped picture of Trump wearing one of his signature red MAGA caps only with the words changed to read: 'I'm on the list' referring to the supposed client list Epstein kept. Earlier this week the White House has said that there is in fact no 'client list,' a narrative that some question. O'Donnell then posted a message aimed squarely in response to Trump's suggestion to revoke her citizenship. 'Hey Donald - you're rattled again? 18 years later and I still live rent-free in that collapsing brain of yours. you call me a threat to humanity - but I'm everything you fear: a loud woman a queer woman. a mother who tells the truth an American who got out of the country b4 u set it ablaze,' O'Donnell began. 'You crave loyalty - I teach my children to question power you sell fear on golf courses - I make art about surviving trauma you lie, you steal, you degrade - I nurture, I create, I persist,' she went on. 'You are everything that is wrong with America - and I'm everything you hate about what's still right with it. You want to revoke my citizenship? Go ahead and try, king Joffrey with a tangerine spray tan 'i'm not yours to silence i never was - Rosie.' Responding to Trump on Saturday, O´Donnell wrote her own message on social media noting how she had upset the president Responding directly to Trump's threat she wrote how the president opposes her because she 'stands in direct opposition with all he represents.' 'The president of the USA has always hated the fact that i see him for who he is - a criminal con man sexual abusing liar out to harm our nation to serve himself - this is why i moved to Ireland,' O'Donnell wrote in another posting on Saturday. 'He is a dangerous old soulless man with dementia who lacks empathy compassion and basic humanity- i stand in direct opposition all he represents ... ur a bad joke who cant form a coherent sentence.' In other blatant attacks on Trump, O'Donnell posted artwork of the president stating 'He rapes', while in another she posted a tweet stating: 'Damn, I wish Trump would go after the Epstein list pedophiles the way he's going at Rosie O'Donnell rn.' 'Let's not waste Time and Energy on Jeffrey Epstein, somebody that nobody cares about,' Trump concluded, casting the controversy as a ploy to derail his political momentum. O'Donnell, a longtime target of Trump's insults and jabs, moved to Ireland earlier this year with her 12-year-old son after the start of the president's second term. She has said she's in the process of obtaining Irish citizenship based on family lineage. O'Donnell, said in a March TikTok video that she would return to the US 'when it is safe for all citizens to have equal rights there in America.' Trump's outburst followed O'Donnell's July 7 HuffPost interview, in which she discussed her decades-long feud with him and her 2024 move to Ireland, made ahead of Trump's reelection. Trump's disdain for O'Donnell dates back to 2006 when O'Donnell, a comedian and host on The View at the time, mocked Trump over his handling of a controversy concerning a winner of the Miss USA pageant, which Trump had owned. 'I look at America and I feel overwhelmingly depressed,' O'Donnell, 63, said, citing her need to protect her mental health and care for her 12-year-old son, who has autism. 'I knew what [the Trump administration] was planning to do, because I read Project 2025. I know what he's capable of. And I didn't want to put myself through another four years of him being in charge.' Watching Trump's second term from abroad, O'Donnell added: 'I think it's as bad as everyone worried it would be. I believe fascism has taken a foothold in the United States.' She also criticized a new bill she claims grants Trump his own 'secret police,' with a budget 'greater than the money we give to Israel, which is already unbelievably high.' 'I look at America, and it feels tragic,' she said. 'I feel sad. I feel overwhelmingly depressed. I don't understand how we got here.' During his 2016 presidential campaign, Trump repeatedly brought up O'Donnell, including during the first Republican primary debate in August 2015. When moderator Megyn Kelly questioned his use of terms like 'fat pigs,' 'dogs,' and 'slobs' to describe women, he replied, 'Only Rosie O'Donnell.' Her name eventually resurfaced during a debate with Hillary Clinton, when Trump said, 'Rosie O'Donnell has been very vicious to me. I said very tough things to her, and I think everybody would agree she deserves it.' O'Donnell responded in a now-deleted post on X, calling him an 'orange anus.' After Trump's first election, O'Donnell told W Magazine in October 2017 that she struggled to cope with his presidency, saying it took her a year to regain emotional balance. 'I seriously worry whether I personally will be able to live through [his presidency] and whether the nation will be able to survive,' she said. 'It's a terrifying concept, on the brink of nuclear war with a madman in charge.' In a sprawling social media post on Saturday evening, Trump once again lashed out at the renewed attention on Jeffrey Epstein, dismissing the disgraced financier as a distraction Trump's latest jab at O'Donnell seemed to be in response to a TikTok video she posted this month mourning the 119 deaths in the July 4 floods in Texas and blaming Trump's widespread cuts to environmental and science agencies involved in forecasting major natural disasters. 'What a horror story in Texas,' O'Donnell said in the video. 'And you know, when the president guts all the early warning systems and the weathering forecast abilities of the government, these are the results that we're gonna start to see on a daily basis.' The Trump administration, as well as local and state officials, have faced mounting questions over whether more could have been done to protect and warn residents ahead of the Texas flooding, which struck with astonishing speed in the pre-dawn hours of July 4 and killed at least 120, including dozens of children. On Friday, Trump visited Texas and defended the government's response to the disaster, saying his agencies 'did an incredible job under the circumstances.' In a sprawling social media post on Saturday evening, Trump once again lashed out at the renewed attention on Jeffrey Epstein, dismissing the disgraced financier as a distraction orchestrated by his political enemies and insisting the so-called 'Epstein Files' are part of a smear campaign aimed at undermining his administration. 'All over a guy who never dies, Jeffrey Epstein,' Trump wrote, complaining that 'selfish people' were damaging his 'perfect' administration by focusing on the late sex offender. He accused figures like Barack Obama, Hillary Clinton, James Comey, John Brennan, and 'the Losers and Criminals of the Biden Administration' of fabricating the Epstein documents - likening them to the 'FAKE' Steele dossier used in the Russia probe. Trump went further, suggesting that if the Epstein files actually contained anything damaging to the MAGA movement, his critics would have already weaponized them. 'Why didn't these Radical Left Lunatics release the Epstein Files?' he asked. 'If there was ANYTHING in there that could have hurt the MAGA Movement, why didn't they use it?' He also criticized the FBI for spending 'month after month looking at nothing but the same old, Radical Left inspired Documents on Jeffrey Epstein,' and urged the agency to refocus on voter fraud and political corruption.


Daily Mail
an hour ago
- Daily Mail
Trump threatens to revoke Hollywood star's citizenship branding her 'threat to humanity'
Donald Trump has threatened to revoke Rosie O'Donnell 's American citizenship, calling the comedian and longtime critic a 'threat to humanity' in a fiery post on Truth Social. 'Because of the fact that Rosie O'Donnell is not in the best interests of our Great Country, I am giving serious consideration to taking away her Citizenship,' Trump, 79, wrote Saturday. 'She is a Threat to Humanity, and should remain in the wonderful Country of Ireland, if they want her. GOD BLESS AMERICA!' The outburst followed O'Donnell's July 7 HuffPost interview, in which she discussed her decades-long feud with the president and her 2024 move to Ireland, made ahead of Trump's reelection. 'I look at America and I feel overwhelmingly depressed,' O'Donnell, 63, said, citing her need to protect her mental health and care for her 12-year-old son, who has autism. 'I knew what [the Trump administration] was planning to do, because I read Project 2025. I know what he's capable of. And I didn't want to put myself through another four years of him being in charge.' 'I picked up and left before the inauguration – because I wasn't going to take any chances.' O'Donnell and Trump's public feud began in 2006, after she criticized him on The View over his handling of the Miss USA controversy. Mocking his defense of then-titleholder Tara Conner, she called Trump a 'snake-oil salesman on Little House on the Prairie' and dismissed his claim of being self-made, pointing to his wealthy father. Trump hit back in a People interview, insisting his father 'never gave [him] tons of money' and threatening to sue. 'Rosie will rue the words she said,' he said at the time. 'Rosie's a loser. A real loser.' In the recent HuffPost interview, O'Donnell described her move as one of 'self-preservation.' 'I wasn't up for this battle,' she said. 'The cost was too high. I still believe in the virtue of the fight—I just couldn't do it personally.' Watching Trump's second term from abroad, O'Donnell added: 'I think it's as bad as everyone worried it would be. I believe fascism has taken a foothold in the United States.' She also criticized a new bill she claims grants Trump his own 'secret police,' with a budget 'greater than the money we give to Israel, which is already unbelievably high.' 'I look at America, and it feels tragic,' she said. 'I feel sad. I feel overwhelmingly depressed. I don't understand how we got here.' The two have continued to trade jabs publicly, their mutual disdain well-documented. During his 2016 presidential campaign, Trump repeatedly brought up O'Donnell, including during the first Republican primary debate in August 2015. When moderator Megyn Kelly questioned his use of terms like 'fat pigs,' 'dogs,' and 'slobs' to describe women, he replied, 'Only Rosie O'Donnell.' Her name eventually resurfaced during a debate with Hillary Clinton, when Trump said, 'Rosie O'Donnell has been very vicious to me. I said very tough things to her, and I think everybody would agree she deserves it.' O'Donnell responded in a now-deleted post on X, calling him an 'orange anus.' After Trump's first election, O'Donnell told W Magazine in October 2017 that she struggled to cope with his presidency, saying it took her a year to regain emotional balance. 'I seriously worry whether I personally will be able to live through [his presidency] and whether the nation will be able to survive,' she said. 'It's a terrifying concept, on the brink of nuclear war with a madman in charge.' In August 2018, The View alum even joined a protest outside the White House to voice her opposition. After Trump's second inauguration in January 2025, O'Donnell revealed on TikTok that she had moved to Ireland with her child and would consider returning to the U.S. 'when it is safe for all citizens to have equal rights.' Weeks later on The Late Late Show, she expressed disbelief that Trump still invoked their long-standing feud. 'He hasn't let it go,' she said. 'He uses me as a punchline whenever he feels the need.' Trump later commented on O'Donnell's move during Irish Prime Minister Micheál Martin's visit to the White House for St. Patrick's Day. When asked why he allowed O'Donnell to move to Ireland, Trump said he 'liked' the question, asked if Martin knew who she was, then joked he was 'better off' not knowing.


Times
2 hours ago
- Times
Motor industry faces scrutiny over ‘anti-competitive practices'
Joey Donnelly, manager at Crofton Motors, a crash repair specialist in Kimmage in Dublin, believes independent garage owners have a communication problem. Motorists can choose who repairs their cars, what price they pay for their annual service and, to a certain extent, what parts they put in their cars, he said. 'Consumers always have a choice and a warranty has to be honoured as long as certain criteria are met,' said Donnelly, whose independent family-run business has been in operation for more than 60 years. 'Crofton Motors can buy pretty much every part of any car and fix them.' The Competition and Consumer Protection Commission (CCPC) and Donnelly seem be on the same page. In a rare move last week, the authority made public an eight-page letter it had sent to the motoring industry warning companies that they had to comply with competition law. After investigating and contacting three unnamed car companies about alleged abuses of competition law, the commission decided to look across its helpline and complaints mailbox to see if the activity was widespread. It found more than two dozen complaints going back over two years. The complaints included motorists being warned by authorised dealers and repairers that their vehicle warranty would be rendered void if they had their cars repaired at independent garages, or if they used non-original or non-manufacturer supplied spare parts. In other cases, independent garages said they were unable to access diagnostic tools or onboard diagnostic data for certain cars, meaning they could not repair those cars. Tara Kelly, head of competition, anti-trust and foreign investment at Mason Hayes & Curran, a law firm, reckons the commission's letter is 'very significant'. 'It is a very clear signal from the CCPC that it has serious concerns about the effectiveness of competition in the motor vehicle aftermarket,' she said. 'Having said that, as with most things context is key and it cannot be automatically assumed that any restriction on an independent garage or operator gives rise to competition concerns. There may very well be very legitimate reasons why a distributor may refuse access to vehicle data or refuse a motor warranty claim.' Early in her career, Kelly worked on various international cartel cases in the autoparts industry. The potential fines for those found in breach of competition law are headline-grabbing — businesses can face fines of up to €50 million or 20 per cent of their annual worldwide turnover. Yet the reaction from the motor industry was muted. The Society of the Irish Motor Industry (Simi), which represents repairers, authorised dealers and distributors, did not issue a response. It declined to talk to The Sunday Times for this article, due to what it said could be a conflict of interest. Many dealers shrugged their shoulders. One owner of a large Dublin dealership, who asked not to be named, said: 'It's not a dealership issue, it's a manufacturer issue. They set the warranties and we abide by whatever warranties they put in place.' He added that as long as cars were serviced by competent people and the parts were approved by manufacturers, the warranties remained intact. As confirmed by the CCPC, the main focus of the preliminary investigation is on the manufacturers and main distributors of cars in Ireland that have set up authorised networks for dealerships. Under a European law known as the Motor Vehicle Block Exemption Regulation (MVBER), the industry is allowed to operate a franchised dealer network and control who sells its products. The regulation effectively provides a safe harbour for vertical agreements within the motor industry. But the regulation expressly protects consumer rights on service and repairs. In some cases manufacturers own the main distributors. For example, the automaker Kia owns Kia Ireland. The Kuwaiti-based Al Babtain family own the Irish operations of Nissan and Renault, as well as the retail group Windsor Motors. There is no suggestion that any of these companies were the subject of the CCPC's letter, nor that they are under investigation or in any way under suspicion. Nissan Ireland did not return a request for comment. A spokesman for Kia Ireland said: 'Our seven-year warranty does not mandate works to be completed in a Kia dealership. Instead, work needs to be completed by qualified technicians using parts of a similar standard. All terms are available in our vehicle warranty books.' A number of other car distributors did not return requests for comment. Volkswagen Group Ireland, owned by the German manufacturer, said it 'respects its obligations under European and Irish legislation'. There is no suggestion that the VW division was the subject of the CCPC's letter or that it is under investigation or in any way under suspicion. The commission's letter has put a spotlight on the motoring industry, which employs nearly 50,000 people across Ireland and continues to evolve with the growth in electric cars and safety features on cars. The aftermarket in the EU is worth €240 billion annually, on spare parts and labour alone. In Ireland last year new car registrations topped 121,000, with the exchequer pulling in €949 million in new vehicle registration taxes. The average price paid by consumers for petrol or diesel vehicles was €35,000, while an average price of €49,000 was paid for electric vehicles. Separately, while revenues may be high in the trade, margins are tight. Joe Duffy Motors, the country's biggest car retailer, for example, had a turnover of nearly €584 million in 2023, translating to a profit before tax of €38 million. That is a decent return, based on economies of scale, but most operators are much less profitable. Western Motors, which has locations in Galway and Louth, had revenues of just under €83 million in 2023 but a pre-tax profit of €2.4 million. Service income for many dealers can represent a small part of turnover, although it often accounts for a much larger chunk of profits. For example, of Bright Motor Group's €177 million-plus revenues in 2023, about €13 million came from parts and workshop sales. Industry sources say that the sale of new cars is the least profitable part of a car dealer's business and most rely on trade-ins, spare parts and servicing to make money, to help make a return on large investment in building high-spec showrooms. Dealers don't expect the CCPC investigation to be detrimental to their business. Paraic Mooney, managing director of EP Mooney's, a Dublin-based Hyundai dealer and garage, said: 'People in my position know their responsibilities and take them seriously and deal with them appropriately.' Sales at the company, an authorised Hyundai agent that employs 85 people, topped €82 million in 2023, with a profit of just over €728,000. Mooney is of the opinion that consumers themselves increasingly choose dealers to service and repair their cars. With the advent of electric cars and technology advances in safety systems across all engines, there is a rising complexity under the bonnet. 'It is in people's best interest, if they spend €50,000 on a car, to bring it to the manufacturer's agent. They are not dealing with a washing machine,' Mooney said. 'I started as Fred in the Shed in Crumlin. I've loads of respect for these guys but these days they often don't have the capacity or the investment in the equipment that we have to maintain cars. 'There's huge investment on behalf of people like [EP Mooney's] in technology to maintain cars and environmental control systems. A lot of people in [smaller garages] are quite capable of doing an oil change, filter change, but are not capable of updating software.' Perhaps unsurprisingly, independent garage owners disagree with Mooney's comments. One independent garage owner in Cork, who asked not to be named, said: 'My team is fully trained.' He has access to diagnostic tools sourced from Snap-on, an S&P 500 tools supplier, and Autel, a Chinese tech intelligence company. The garage owner paid €7,000 for one tool and must pay €1,500 for software updates annually. He estimates he can diagnose 95 per cent of issues. He argued that independent garages were mostly run by very qualified professionals who got their start in dealerships. He gave the example of a price of €350 that his company recently charged for one service compared with €700 that a nearby dealer had quoted the client. The garage owner said he saw anti-competitive practices in the industry 'all the time', with the increase in the sale of electric cars exacerbating the problem. 'We give out leaflets to our customers explaining how the block exemption works,' he said. 'Many say they have been told by the salespeople of their cars that their warranty will be void if they don't service their cars with the dealer.' Mooney said he had no fear that he would lose business as a result of the CCPC's letter. The company's aftersales division was incredibly busy, he added. The motor industry more generally has been reporting a chronic shortage of experienced technicians for several years now. A large number of garages and dealers appear in the employment permit statistics on the Department of Enterprise, Trade and Employment website, which lists companies that have employed people from outside the European economic area. These include Joe Duffy Motors, Windsor Motors and Kearys of Cork. In its accounts, Fitzpatrick Garages, a dealer based in Kildare, Carlow and Offaly, which had revenues of €95 million in the year to the end of March 2024, said it had increased its workshop capacity by developing its apprenticeship programme and recruiting technicians from outside the EU. In 2023, Western Motors increased the capacity of its service facilities by 40 per cent to cater for growing demand. For now, the CCPC investigation may be no more than an administrative headache for all those who received the letter. They must submit documents, including copies of any agreements and warranties, by August 6. Sylvia Gotzen, chief executive of Figiefa, the international federation of automotive aftermarket distributors, said it appreciated 'the vigilance of the CCPC in reminding vehicle manufacturers and their authorised dealers and network of consumers' right to choose who provides repair and maintenance services for their vehicles'. 'We would like to emphasise that the MVBER underpins the independent operator's right to compete, but it is only effective if properly enforced,' Gotzen added. The MVBER regulations are under review, as current legislation is due to expire in 2028. The solicitor Tara Kelly said that 'if the CCPC concerns are legitimate, the investigation is good news in the sense that it should translate into more choice for consumers and a broader customer base for independent dealers'. At the commission's urging, independent garages have been getting in touch over the past week to report what they see as negative experiences of unfair restrictions. Some have come with receipts. The investigation has no set timeline, according to Craig Whelan, head of antitrust at the CCPC. The next steps will depend on what information it receives from the industry, as well as the public. If the evidence shows a consistent trend of anti-competitive behaviour from a specific company, the commission will prioritise that business for follow-up action. Whelan said he was expecting a good level of co-operation from the industry. 'We are encouraging people to come forward with detailed information. The sooner we get the information, the sooner we can progress to the next stage of our investigations,' he said. Joe Duffy MotorsGavin Hydes, a Scot, runs the biggest car retailer in Ireland. Nivag, the holding company, has a stake in Vertu Motors, a quoted UK car dealer. Turnover in 2023: €583.6 million Profit before tax: €38 million Employees: 602 Nissan Ireland (owner of Windsor Motors)The Kuwaiti-based Al Babtain family own Nissan Ireland, which includes Windsor Motors. In 2023, they took over the Irish operations for Renault and in 2023: €471 million Loss before tax: €4.6 millionEmployees: 445 MSL Motor GroupAlongside Motor Distributors, MSL is owned by the O'Flaherty family. It sells Mercedes, Mazda, Skoda, BYD, Smart and Xpeng cars. Turnover in 2023: €415 million Profit before tax: €24.9 million Employees: 340 Kearys Motor GroupOwned by Brendan, Sinead and Sarah Keary, Kearys has operations in Cork, Dublin and in 2023: €320 millionProfit before tax: €6.3 millionEmployees: 381 OHM Group (Owner of Spirit Motor Group)Based in Dublin and Wicklow, the company is owned by Gabriel Hogan and the families of the late Declan McCourt and Conal O'Brien. Turnover in 2023: €301.4 millionProfit before tax: €7.1 million Employees: 272 Bright Motor GroupSet up in 1982, Bright is owned by Matthew Smyth, Ciaran O'Riordan and Henry Flanagan. It bought the retail arm of Gowan Group in in 2023: €177.5 millionProfit before tax: €3.6 millionEmployees: 184 Johnson & PerrottIn operation since 1810, the Cork-based company is now majority-owned by the Whitaker family. Turnover in 2023: €170 millionProfit before tax: €9.9 millionEmployees: 216 JA Boland & SonsOwned by the Boland family, it operates locations in Dublin, Wexford and in 2023: €166 millionProfit before tax: €4.7 millionEmployees: 198 Auto BolandOwned by another set of Bolands, the Waterford-based Auto Boland is a dealer for Volvo, Honda and Land Rover among other brands. Turnover in 2023: €148 millionProfit before tax: €6 millionEmployees: 178