Emergency legislation to extend RPZs nationwide to be published
THE GOVERNMENT PLANS to publish emergency legislation today to extend Rent Pressure Zones (RPZs) across the entire country.
Last week, the Tánaiste confirmed that the legislation would be fast-tracked, indicating that legislation around the bigger reforms, which will be introduced after 1 March, will be advanced at a later stage.
Housing Minister James Browne will seek to introduce and publish the Residential Tenancies (Amendment) Bill 2025 as emergency legislation today, with Cabinet agreeing last week it would be progressed as a priority.
This will extend the RPZs to all areas of the country until Feb 2026, ahead of the new rent controls coming in from 1 March.
Moving on extending RPZs as a matter of urgency is being done to prevent landlords from increasing rents in areas that are currently not protected in the interim period.
Under the current system, over 80% of the country is already in an RPZ and subject to a 2% cap on rent increases or an increase in line with the rate of inflation, whichever is lower.
Ireland's presidency of the European Union next year
Separately, Tánaiste Simon Harris will outline the significant preparations underway for Ireland's presidency of the European Union next year.
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This will be the eighth time Ireland has hosted the Presidency of the European Council and the first occasion to do so since 2013.
During the presidency term there will be 23 informal ministerial meetings hosted in Ireland and a quarter of them will be held outside Dublin.
There will also be a summit of the European Political Community and an informal meeting of the European Council, both of which will take place in Dublin.
The EPC summit will be the largest meeting Ireland has ever hosted involving leaders of 47 States as well as several heads of EU institutions and international organisations.
The Tánaiste will tell colleagues today that resourcing and delivering a successful presidency in the second half 2026 is essential for Ireland's position, influence and reputation in the EU.
Aside from ministerial meetings, there will also be a range of conferences and other large-scale events which may be held in locations outside Dublin to help ensure an appropriate regional distribution of Presidency events.
The Tánaiste will tell ministers it is essential to have strong relationships established with key figures in the European Parliament in advance of the Presidency and to be on first-name terms with their counterparts in other EU countries.
Back-to-School Clothing expansion
Two other memos will be brought by Social Protection Minister Dara Calleary and Finance Minister Paschal Donohoe.
Calleary will seek approval to extend access to the Back-to-School Clothing and Footwear Allowance to children being cared for by foster families in receipt of the Foster Care Allowance.
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The once-off payment helps eligible families with the cost of uniforms, clothes and footwear when children start school each autumn.
This could help around 2,300 children in 2025. It is payable in respect of children between the ages of 4 and 17 and eligible children between the ages of 18 and 22 who are in full-time second level education.
Donohoe will seek approval for committee stage amendments to the Local Property Tax Bill, including one that relates to a property adapted for use by disabled persons.
This will provide for a reduction of €105,000 in the chargeable value of a property which has been adapted for use by a disabled person, subject to certain criteria being met.
This is an increase from €50,000 in the 2012 Act and will allow owners of properties which have been adapted for use by disabled persons to self-assess the value of the properties at 1 November 2025 at one valuation band lower for the purposes of calculating their LPT charge.
The Taoiseach, alongside Jack Chambers and Paschal Donohoe, will look to publish the Analysis of Well-Being in Ireland report for 2025 tomorrow, which will be used to help set out priorities for Budget 2026.
Yesterday, at the National Economic Dialogue event in Dublin Castle
, it was indicated by a number of government ministers that a VAT reduction for the hospitality sector is a key priority for the upcoming Budget.
While the performance in the well-being report is being described ai]s positive overall, the analysis identifies areas where work is needed, such as unemployed people, younger workers, people in bad health, single-parent households, lower income households, and renters paying market rates faring less well than other groups in society.
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Irish Times
11 minutes ago
- Irish Times
No ‘special exemptions' for students under latest Rent Pressure Zone system, James Browne says
There will be no special exemption for students under new Rent Pressure Zone (RPZ) legislation, Minister for Housing James Browne has said. In advance of a meeting with the Minister for Higher and Further Education James Lawless over concerns students could face higher rents, Mr Browne said a special protection for student tenants in the private market would be 'unworkable' and 'unenforceable'. Earlier this week, Mr Lawless had called for special exemptions for students who could be 'inadvertently disadvantaged' by the new regulations due to the fact students change tenancies more frequently than other cohorts. Under the proposed reform of RPZs, a student who started a new tenancy for each college year could see their rent increase to the market rate each time. READ MORE Speaking after the Cabinet agreed on Tuesday to rush through legislation to extend RPZs to the entire country, Mr Browne said there 'won't be any special measures put in place in terms of the private rental sector, it will become impossible to police or to manage in those circumstances'. He added: 'There is no special exemptions in current law for people in that particular situation, and there won't be under the new legislation either.' Mr Browne said he would 'engage' with Mr Lawless on proposals for students who could be coming into and out of a tenancy in one year as 'that's a very different particular set of circumstances'. 'But I think to try and engineer into the legislation that a landlord would then have to identify what [is] that person's role? Are they a student? Are they a full-time student, part-time student, what qualifies as a student? It will be unworkable, and I think it will be unenforceable.' Mr Browne also denied it was a 'mistake' not to rush through legislation to extend RPZs nationwide last week. 'I think we have moved very swiftly on this,' he said. Earlier, Labour's housing spokesman Conor Sheehan claimed he had seen 'anecdotal' evidence of landlords in areas not yet covered by RPZs trying to increase their rents before the law was passed. Some 17 per cent of existing tenancies are not covered by RPZs, according to latest estimates. Mr Browne said there 'may' be some landlords who are currently carrying out a review of rents. 'What I always say to all the tenants, your rights are there in law. I know some tenants maybe may not be aware of that.' He advised them to reach out to renters' organisation Threshold, their local councillor or TD who would 'certainly ensure that your rights are put in place'. The Cabinet on Tuesday agreed to publish Residential Tenancies (Amendment) Bill 2025 for 'priority enactment' with a view to having it pass all stages in the Oireachtas and be ready to be signed into law by the end of the week.


Irish Independent
an hour ago
- Irish Independent
Wicklow councillor caught up in Egypt ordeal on Global March still committed to reaching Gaza
Social Democrats councillor Mark Barry was planning to link up with demonstrators from 80 countries who planned to march to Egypt's border with Gaza last Thursday, but Egyptian authorities detained many of the activists, while security forces in eastern Libya blocked a many more en route to meet them. The 'Global March on Gaza' was pitched as the largest demonstration of its kind in recent years, but organisers said hundreds arriving in Cairo last week had been detained and deported. While attempts to contact Cllr Barry were unsuccessful, his colleagues have been assured of his safety and in a recent social media post, he said: 'Despite our attempts to march being stalled due to legal hurdles and coordination challenges, we remain committed to our cause." There were fears for Cllr Barry when the march from Al Arish to the Egyptian border was met with resistance by authorities and he was amongst those whose passports were confiscated and were forced to turn back. Others on the march had been detained. While there were plans to regroup at a campsite outside of Cairo to prepare for a Sunday march, there was no clearance given, despite hopes the protestors wanted to 'proceed peacefully under the guidance of Egyptian authorities'. On Father's Day, Sunday, the Greystones councillor posted a touching and heartfelt message dedicated to his two sons from a rather sparse hotel room, in which he said he 'can't help thinking about the kind of world they are growing up in. A world where genocide is happening in real time – again'. 'Our parents believed they had left that horror behind in history. But here we are. We speak up because we must,' he said. 'Because dignity, freedom, and justice for the Palestinian people is non-negotiable. Because a world that allows man-made famine and genocide is not a world I want for my children. "Together, we are calling for the immediate opening of the border to allow vital aid into Gaza, so that aid workers can distribute food and water to save lives. We're demanding an immediate ceasefire and the withdrawal of Israeli forces from Gaza.' Cllr Barry described how the previous night 'power was cut off to Gaza. It went black. No internet, before the people were bombed while they slept in their beds." He said he was 'calling on our government and the governments across the EU and I'm asking the people of Wicklow in Ireland, contact your public representatives, contact your government, contact the Department of Foreign Affairs, get on to anybody you can, media outlets. This is not good enough. Now is the time we all have to stand up and take action.' He urged people to 'remember why 3,000 people from all over the world are here', which was, he said, 'to march peacefully in solidarity with the Palestinian people and put pressure on governments across the world to take all action needed to re open the borders with Gaza to allow humanitarian aide into the people of Gaza.' Despite the harrowing scenes that emerged over the weekend, he added that 'we are not here to protest or disrupt the Egyptian authorities', but noted that 'we are being monitored, and some delegates were detained from their hotels last night'. While previous posts seemed hopeful for the group of protesters, who had 'regrouped' and were planning 'the next steps we can take safely and peacefully', an air of resignation, or perhaps realisation, has set in and now the message from cllr Barry was for 'all delegates to return home safely' in the coming days. 'We are actively strategizing our next steps to keep and increase pressure on our governments and the EU to heed the voices of those who elected them – voices demanding justice and humanitarian aid for the Palestinian people. We have energy, we are mobile, we are many – and we're heading to Europe!'


RTÉ News
an hour ago
- RTÉ News
Dutch government suggests social media ban for under-15s
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