
Government committed to €200 childcare fee, but increase in places must happen
Last month, Children's Minister Norma Foley announced that fees for parents paying the highest rates in the country are to see those fees capped from September.
This meant that fees would be brought closer to the average weekly fee of €197 for full day care, when the National Childcare Scheme subsidy is included.
However, the figure is a long way off the commitment from government - but Taoiseach Micheál Martin said commitments in the Programme for Government would be followed through.
'The minister will come to us with her priorities, and obviously it's a Programme for Government commitment, so all Programme for Government commitments, will be followed through. So that's the basic point,' the Taoiseach said.
'But we also cannot lose sight of the need, as well as affordability, we have to move also in terms of additionality, in terms of places, and that people can get places,' he added.
Mr Martin added that research showed more childcare places were needed quickly.
'We've made very good progress in childcare, but we need more places, so the access issue and the number of places is also important as well as affordability,' Mr Martin said.
'Some of the research at the moment is pointing towards the need to improve the number of places fairly quickly. In respect of child care, again, that speaks to the growth of population and the pressures on child care and health services and education. So there will be a focus on childcare, and that will continue,' he added.
Asked if measures to begin the process of moving towards the €200 per month promise need to happen to show the Government is committed to reduction, Mr Martin said progress made in recent years needed to continue.
However, he added that 'we can't do everything at once'.
'We have a whole range of issues now that we have to make progress on. There will be negotiations leading into the budget. We can't do everything at once, so we will endeavour to prioritise and continue the progress we've made in recent years,' he added.
Last year, it was reported that a row had broken out in Government over the increase to social welfare payments with former Social Protection Minister Heather Humphreys wanting increases for some on welfare payments, including pensioners, but not for jobseekers.
Speaking in Hiroshima on his final day of his four-day visit to Japan, Mr Martin said the row was a 'false row' and that the proposal was never put to Fianna Fáil.
Asked if he thought job seekers were less deserving of an increase in the budget than others on welfare, he said he does not agree with the characterisation of people on welfare.
He added that priorities would have to be made in the budget and would like to see measures on child poverty come from the Department of Social Protection.
'I don't like drawing distinctions, and I've never been into the characterisation of people on welfare. I've never been into that politics,' Mr Martin said.
'We do have to make priorities. In terms of how we allocate, my view is that we have, over the last two years, committed to doing something significant on child poverty, to turn the dial around on child poverty, and that's where I would like to see a targeted set of measures emanating from the Department of Social Protection,' he added.
Hashtags

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


Irish Independent
40 minutes ago
- Irish Independent
Wicklow-Wexford chair of AI committee wants it to ‘lead public debate' on new tech
Chair of the new Oireachtas committee on artificial intelligence (AI), Deputy Malcolm Byrne, has said the committee aims to 'lead public debate' on the merits of the new technology and that it will explore the necessary 'guardrails' to ensure its safe use in the healthcare, education and energy sectors. Led by Wicklow-Wexford TD Malcolm Byrne, the AI committee – like other Oireachtas committees – will advise the Houses of the Oireachtas, receive submissions and presentations from members of the public, interest groups and government departments, while scrutinising government expenditure and debating proposed legislation. Encouraging individuals and interested organisations to submit views on issues they would like to see investigated, Deputy Byrne said the groundbreaking technology could make the delivery of public services more efficient, improve healthcare outcomes and 'speed up many of the mundane tasks in many jobs', but cautioned there will be challenges, and 'guardrails must be in place to ensure AI is designed and used safely'. 'The first public meeting of the committee took place last week, and the 14-member body will be examining issues in modular form from the autumn, looking at themes such as AI and healthcare, AI and education and AI and Energy,' the Fianna Fáil deputy said. 'I was honoured to be asked to Chair this Committee as how technology affects our lives really interests me, and I had been pushing to get such a committee established during the last Oireachtas 'There are a number of organisations and companies in Wicklow and Wexford already using AI in their processes, and it will soon be essential that everyone has some knowledge of this new tech.'

The Journal
3 hours ago
- The Journal
Taoiseach hints childcare focus in Budget will be on increasing places rather than cutting costs
TAOISEACH MICHEÁL MARTIN has stressed the need to create more childcare places across the country quickly. Asked by reporters in Japan, where the Taoiseach is this week for a trade mission, if there will be reductions to the cost of childcare in this year's Budget, the Taoiseach was coy in his response. Cutting the cost of childcare to €200 per month per child was a core election promise by both Fianna Fáil and Fine Gael. It is now a pledge in the Programme for Government to deliver the reduction over the lifetime of this government. 'I think we want to continue to make progress on childcare, but we have a whole range of issues now that we have to make progress on,' the Taoiseach said, adding that there will be negotiations leading into this year's Budget in October. 'We can't do everything at once, so we will endeavor to prioritise and continue the progress we've made in recent years. We've made very good progress in childcare, but we need more places, so the access issue and the number of places is also important, as well as affordability.' Advertisement Martin made the point that recent research has pointed to the need to improve the number of available childcare places. 'That speaks to the growth of population and the pressures on childcare and health services, and education,' he said. He added that the government will be prioritising the transformation of Ireland's infrastructure in the Budget. Asked if the government will be prioritising increasing childcare places over reducing costs this year, the Taoiseach said this will be a decision for Minister for Children Norma Foley, who will approach government with her priorities ahead of October's Budget. 'All Programme for Government commitments will be followed through. So that's the basic point,' he said. With reporting from Christina Finn in Japan Readers like you are keeping these stories free for everyone... A mix of advertising and supporting contributions helps keep paywalls away from valuable information like this article. Over 5,000 readers like you have already stepped up and support us with a monthly payment or a once-off donation. Learn More Support The Journal


Irish Examiner
3 hours ago
- Irish Examiner
Taoiseach told 'we must break the cycle of hate' as he lays wreath at Hiroshima's Peace Memorial Park
'We must break the cycle of hate.' This is what Taoiseach Micheál Martin was told by the Mayor of Hiroshima, Kazumi Matsui, in the moments after laying a wreath at the Japanese city's Peace Memorial Park. It is almost 80 years since the atomic bomb was detonated in the city, killing tens of thousands in its immediate blast and hundreds of thousands more with side-effects of radiation emitted in its wake. Mr Martin arrived in Hiroshima on board the bullet train, the Shinkansen, for a brief trip to the Hiroshima Peace Memorial Park where a raised gazebo, containing the city's peace bell, was built in 1964 to stand in opposition to the proliferation and continued development of nuclear weapons. Mr Martin gave the bell a ring, resulting in a low drone emanating after the log struck metal. But after ringing the bell, it was pointed out to the Taoiseach there were dragonflies skittering across the pond below. He was quick to pull out his phone, attempting to snap a picture of bright blue bugs gliding above the water. Shortly after, the delegation was back in their cars and speeding off to another part of the park. Stepping out of the car into the stifling heat, Mr Martin met with Mr Matsui and walked the long pathway towards the main cenotaph, commemorating the bombing. Shaped like a saddle, it was designed to provide shelter for the souls of victims killed by the bomb. Mr Matsui explained to the Taoiseach that there are over 300,000 names within a stone chest at the cenotaph's centre – one for each of the victims of the US attack in 1945. He added somberly that an additional 5,000 names are added each year, as survivors of the attack pass away. During his brief time in the city, the Taoiseach also met with hibakusha, survivors of the bomb, who outlined to him in stark terms what the attack was like. Teruko Yakata, who was just eight years old when the bomb was dropped, told the Taoiseach how she travelled to the hills to escape and later returned to the horrors that lay in Hiroshima. 'She spoke about the burning, the shrapnel, and the glass in her mother's back,' Mr Martin said. When they were coming back down from the hills, there was rows of people coming back up with burns and skin peeling off their arms. The Taoiseach said it was a particularly moving description, highlighting the trauma that has remained throughout her life. Mr Martin described how Yakata has remained attached to bowls of rice as an emotional anchor, having told him how she received one while starving in the Hiroshima mountains. 'Someone gave her a bowl of rice. So even today, she cradles a bowl of rice and she would feed people with bowls of rice because that's embedded in her psyche now.' When the visit was wrapping up, just moments before Mr Martin was due to head for the airport to return home to Dublin, he was asked if he believed the world was now more dangerous than in 1945, with the advent of more powerful nuclear weapons and stronger weapons of war. He said: 'I believe it is. It is in a very dangerous place.' The Taoiseach said it showed two differing sides to humanity; the ingenuity of the species in engineering, but also the 'stupidity of humankind'. While it was a particularly sombre visit to the city, there was some levity, as an excited group of Japanese schoolchildren waved to the Taoiseach before being left slightly star struck when the Hiroshima mayor informed them it was the Prime Minister of Ireland. But his week-long visit to Japan has concluded, with the Taoiseach jetting off to Dublin via Toronto, with some speculation he could be on his way to Croker for Saturday's match. Read More