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Russian oligarch might approve ‘unjustifiable housing tsar salary'

Russian oligarch might approve ‘unjustifiable housing tsar salary'

Irish Times30-04-2025

The
Government
was accused of double standards in exchanges where they were accused of paying 'tsar' salaries that would please a 'Russian oligarch'.
Opposition politicians criticised Ministers over potential increases in salaries for the heads of 30 semi-State bodies while mounting 'a despicable attack on low-paid workers' in the
Dáil
on Wednesday.
Social Democrats
acting leader
Cian O'Callaghan
made the accusation after the Cabinet agreed on Tuesday to
implement recommendations made by the Senior Posts Remuneration Committee
.
This would lead to pay reviews and possible salary increases worth tens of thousands of euro for chief executives of almost 30 commercial State bodies.
READ MORE
But Taoiseach
Micheál Martin
said there had been an ad hoc approach to salaries for the past 10 or 20 years and it was 'important to create a framework for how chief executives are paid in the semi-state sector'.
The exchange follows an attack earlier by
Labour
leader
Ivana Bacik
, who said the appointment of a 'housing tsar' at an 'extraordinary and unjustifiable price tag' of €430,000 was a price that 'might be approved of by a Russian oligarch'.
She said it was 'clearly putting
Fine Gael
noses out of joint' following reports that Tánaiste
Simon Harris
heard in the media about the proposed appointment of
National Asset Management Agency
boss
Brendan McDonagh
, when he believed it should have been discussed in advance by party leaders.
Ms Bacik, who accused the Taoiseach of failing to deal with homelessness, claimed the Housing Activation Office was a 'new policy shrouded in secrecy' and claimed the Government had a 'flying by the seat of your pants' strategy. She said it was unacceptable for its chief executive to earn €200,000 more than the Taoiseach.
But Mr Martin insisted the new agency 'is not a secret. It was in the programme for government.'
Sinn Féin
leader
Mary Lou McDonald
, referring to the proposed salary of the head of the new agency, said the 'nearly half a million euro to take up the responsibilities of the housing Minister is cracked'. She called on the Taoiseach to 'come to his senses' and asked if he was on a 'solo run' because 'your friends in Fine Gael seem to think you are'.
She said the Taoiseach had failed to justify the salary for people 'who can't afford housing or rent'. But Mr Martin said he had dealt with the issue comprehensively and within the public service there were people earning substantial salaries and this had been the case since 1998 with the establishment of the National Treasury Management Agency.
Mr O'Callaghan said that 'not content' with a €430,00 salary for the head of the new Housing Activation Office, the heads of semi-states from Horse Racing Ireland to RTÉ are potentially in line 'for massive increases'.
He said this was 'despite the fact that these CEOs received a combined €75 million in pay and perks over 10 years', according to a report in Village magazine.
He asked 'why does this Government believe that those at the top deserve bumper salary increases while low-paid workers are thrown under the bus'.
The Dublin Bay North TD said there were no references 'to economic headwinds, tariffs or global volatility when it comes to gold-plate salaries'.
'While across the country people are struggling to make ends meet, keep their homes heated, their rent paid and their bills from piling up, this Government has mounted a despicable attack on low-paid workers.'
But rejecting the accusations Mr Martin said there had been many improvements for low-paid workers. The minimum wage increased over the last number of years, 'and it will continue to increase'. Pension auto-enrolment would be implemented in January and is the 'most significant' development in a generation for low-paid workers.
He added that for semi-State agency chief executives it was 'important to create a framework for how chief executives are paid in the semi-State sector' and to move from an ad-hoc approach.

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Sweeping RPZ changes could be a 'timebomb' with tens of thousands of tenants facing eviction
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'To say I saw appalling stuff is an understatement': Irish soldier on fighting on Ukraine's frontline
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Robert Deegan, from Co Kildare, was killed while fighting in Ukraine. Robert Deegan was 29 and from Newbridge, Co Kildare. He had joined the fight shortly after the 2022 Russian invasion. He lost an eye while serving with Ukraine's Special Forces Unit that year. His injury was caused by an improvised explosive device (IED) but once he recovered, he went back to fight alongside his Ukrainian comrades — going against advice from some family and friends. He was said to be 'laser-focused' on returning to Ukraine and 'deeply committed' to the Ukrainian cause. The highly-skilled soldier had served not only in the much-vaunted Ranger Wing, but was also involved in the Engineers Unit of the Defence Forces Training Centre. After his death, his family released a statement saying he died 'like a warrior', protecting his comrades and he had made "the ultimate sacrifice while staying true to his principles and character'. On the day he died he continued to fight on in the face of a Russian onslaught in order to provide cover for his colleagues' retreat. As a younger man, he was a champion cyclist who represented Ireland, and some of his family are understood to have had a long history of service with the Defence Forces. In December 2023, dual Irish-American citizen Graham Dale, aged 45, originally from Raheny in North Dublin, was killed while fighting for the Ukrainians. He had previously fought with the US Marines in Iraq and moved permanently to Dublin in 2020. Dale had joined the US Marines following the 9/11 terrorist attacks. Finbar Cafferkey, from Achill, Co Mayo, was killed while battling Russian forces near the city of Bakhmut in the Donetsk Oblas in April 2023. Finbar Cafferkey, aged 46, from Achill, Co Mayo, was killed while battling Russian forces near the city of Bakhmut in the Donetsk Oblas in April 2023. Part of the Shell to Sea campiagn in the 2000s, he had previous combat experience in Syria helping Kurdish militia fight Islamic State insurgents. Rory Mason, 23, from Dunboyne, Co Meath, died while fighting for Ukraine's International Legion in the Kharkiv region near the Russian border in October 2022. Irish man Rory Mason was killed in action in Ukraine. His father, Rob, told the BBC: "Though we are deeply saddened at his death, we are enormously proud of his courage and determination and his selflessness in immediately enlisting to support Ukraine." "Rory was never political but he had a deep sense of right and wrong and an inability to turn the other way in the face of injustice. "Those who fought alongside Rory speak of a truly brave and courageous man who could have left at any time but chose not to. In August 2024, Alex Ryzhuk, aged 20, from Rathmines, Dublin — a drone operator — was also killed fighting for the Ukrainians. The youngest of the Irish to die fighting in Ukraine, he was born in Dublin to Ukrainian parents. News about rape and torture by Russian troops in the Ukrainian city Bucha in April 2022, as well as the deaths of relatives and friends fighting in the war are understood to what motivated Alex to leave Dublin and travel to the frontlines early in 2023.

Government to further discuss proposals to reform rent caps
Government to further discuss proposals to reform rent caps

RTÉ News​

time2 hours ago

  • RTÉ News​

Government to further discuss proposals to reform rent caps

Further discussions are expected to take place tonight among Government party leaders and the ministers for Housing, Finance and Public Expenditure ahead of an expected Cabinet decision tomorrow on Rent Pressure Zones (RPZs). Taoiseach Micheál Martin said the proposals are well balanced and they would give greater protections to renters and provide certainty for investors. However, this is a contentious political decision. Already, the Government has been accused of throwing renters to the vulture funds, but it remains resolute that it will take action. Under the plans, which will be pored over again, rents in newly built properties will no longer be capped at 2% annually but will instead be tied to the rate of inflation. The proposal, which Minister for Housing James Browne will bring to Cabinet, will likely state that there will be no changes for existing renters if they stay in their current tenancy. However, if they move a landlord can reset the rent for the new tenant at the market rate. There will also be protections for new renters which will provide security of tenure for at least six years.

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