logo
TD critical of wasteful spending asked for La-Z-Boy for Leinster House office

TD critical of wasteful spending asked for La-Z-Boy for Leinster House office

A TD who has been critical of government over wasteful spending asked for a La-Z-Boy recliner to be supplied for his Leinster House office for 'breaks and informal meetings'.
Independent Ireland TD Kenneth O'Flynn has been at loggerheads with Oireachtas management over delays in getting his office fitted out since he was elected.
In an email in mid-February to facilities management, Mr O'Flynn looked for ten separate items for his parliamentary office to 'enhance the workspace's comfort and functionality'.
That included a La-Z-Boy recliner as 'comfortable seating' for use during break periods and office meetings, with such seats often retailing at well over €1,000.
In response, the Oireachtas said they had no recliners in stock and that they were not 'commonly purchased'.
Mr O'Flynn also sought book shelves, cabinets, and a side-table 'for holding items like lamps or personal effects near the La-Z-Boy or desk'.
The Independent Ireland TD asked as well for a fan and a desk lamp but was told even these were not available as Leinster House was trying to cut its emissions and energy costs.
An email said this was in line with the 'government's targets' around climate change and that if the light or temperature in the room were a problem, other options could be explored.
Mr O'Flynn has had frosty relations with the Oireachtas since his appointment and in January accused them of a 'disregard for the dignity' of his office in a row over lengthy delays in the fit-out of his office after the election.
In February, he was still seeking updates on when he could expect to have chairs delivered to his own office and that of his parliamentary assistant.
He wrote: 'It is essential that these items are addressed promptly to facilitate our team's productivity.'
Mr O'Flynn also said there had been delays in providing IT equipment and printing services, saying these facilities were 'imperative for a functioning office environment'.
Asked about his request for the La-Z-Boy, Mr O'Flynn said: 'Maybe I used the wrong word – there is a chair in quite a few of the offices, which looks to me like a recliner. I was just looking for the same furniture as they have in the other offices.'
He said he was still waiting to have all the IT equipment he needed fully installed.
'We're now six months on [from the election] – I have worked in other big organisations, and my experience there would have been very different,' he said.
The requests were among dozens made by TDs and Senators to Oireachtas officials in recent months.
Another new TD, Sinn Féin's Fionntán Ó Súilleabháin, also sought a recliner as well as an extremely specific paint job for his office.
An email said: 'I would like the wall papered or painted in turquoise, with the little vertical strip on the left, between the two doors, in yellow.'
However, a month later Mr Ó Súilleabháin wrote again to facilities management saying they should 'disregard [his] request for painting/wallpapering.'
A smelly office was a problem for one senator, with OPW staff called in to conduct an inspection to see what was causing the malodour.
However, they were unable to detect its source and believed it might have been related to the cutting open of a radiator cover.
An email to Senator Linda Nelson Murray said: 'I also asked one of the cleaning staff to visit the room to wipe all surfaces with a disinfectant – the cleaner reported a mild smell coming from the radiator area.'
Other requests included full-length mirrors for the offices of Fianna Fáil's Erin McGreehan and Jennifer Whitmore of the Social Democrats.
One politician wrote to ask if he could have the old windows of his office taped over in some way because of a draft through the room and hallway.
'I already got a dreadful flu,' said an email from the office of Senator Garret Ahearn to Leinster House management.
Health Minister Jennifer Carroll MacNeill asked for a 'small tabletop fridge' for her office, while multiple TDs and Senators complained about bins being removed from their offices. However, they were told this was a new policy around waste disposal.
An email said: 'Individual bins are no longer placed at office desks. Instead, we have segregated waste receptacles located in the corridors.
'This system has many benefits including enhanced waste segregation, reduced waste generation and improved efficiency for cleaners.'
Asked about the records, a spokeswoman for the Oireachtas said they had no comment to make.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Central Bank governor to tell committee that Ireland does not sell Israeli bonds
Central Bank governor to tell committee that Ireland does not sell Israeli bonds

The Journal

time2 hours ago

  • The Journal

Central Bank governor to tell committee that Ireland does not sell Israeli bonds

THE GOVERNOR OF the Central Bank will tell an Oireachtas committee today that Ireland does not sell Israeli bonds. Gabriel Makhlouf is set to appear before the Joint Oireachtas Committee on Finance, Public Service Reform and Digitalisation. He will be addressing an issue that has become a political flashpoint in light of Israel's ongoing war on the Gaza Strip in Palestine, which has killed more than 54,000 people. This week, opposition parties requested a free 'vote of conscience' on a motion calling on the Government to stop the Central Bank from facilitating the sale of Israeli State Bonds. Makhlouf is to begin his remarks by saying he is 'absolutely appalled by the horrific loss of life and destruction we are seeing in Gaza and the occupied Palestinian territories' and expressing his desire to see a ceasefire in the conflict. 'For the avoidance of doubt the Central Bank does not issue, sell, trade or list these bonds,' Maklouf will tell the committee. 'And in the case of Israeli sovereign bonds, we do not authorise or supervise them and they are not listed on a stock exchange we regulate.' Makhlouf will say that as an EU member state, Ireland is obliged to approve the sale of bonds if they meet certain requirements. 'As a body established under statute, we are vested with certain powers and functions which we are required to perform. And we are required to perform and exercise these in the manner in which the legislated tasks are assigned to us, following the law and in line with how it frames our responsibilities,' Makhlouf say. Advertisement Makhlouf will also tell the committee that by approving the bonds, 'the Central Bank does not endorse the issuer and does not endorse the securities'. 'Rather, it means the Central Bank is satisfied that the issuer has disclosed the required information, in the required manner, to potential purchasers of the securities, so that investors can make their own informed investment decision. 'In effect, the Central Bank is carrying out a role mandated by EU law.' The European Commission is responsible for trade policy and trade relations with third countries, Makhlouf will remind the committee. 'The Central Bank has no mandate to impose sanctions on any State or person for breaches or alleged breaches of international law,' he will say. 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

Nama increases State contribution forecast to €5.5bn as windup nears
Nama increases State contribution forecast to €5.5bn as windup nears

Irish Times

time2 hours ago

  • Irish Times

Nama increases State contribution forecast to €5.5bn as windup nears

The National Asset Management Agency (Nama) has increased the estimated lifetime cash contribution it will end up giving to the exchequer by €300 million to €5.5 billion, as the State-owned bad bank prepares to be wound down by the end of this year. The increase has been driven by an upgrade to the agency's lifetime surplus target to €5.5 billion from €4.8 billion, previously. It has also marginally increased its corporation tax projection by €50 million to €450 million. 'The Nama board and my colleagues throughout the agency have always seen our role as set out by the legislation passed by the Oireachtas in 2009 as trying to do the very best we can on behalf of the taxpayer and the State,' said chief executive Brendan McDonagh . 'Every decision, every engagement with a debtor, every transaction – they were framed against a commercial backdrop of maximising the amount that we believed could be recovered for the State.' READ MORE Nama, which was set up in 2009 to take over toxic commercial property loans from the country's banks, said on Wednesday its portfolio has fallen from a peak of €32 billion to less than €100 million fair value. This has been through a mix of selling of portfolios of loans over the years and debtors repaying their loans by working with Nama, or refinancing elsewhere. Nama generated €600 million of cash last year. [ Cost of probe into Nama's Northern Ireland sale tops €10m Opens in new window ] Nama is on track to take over the remnants of Irish Bank Resolution Corporation (IBRC), formerly Anglo Irish Bank , and the enlarged organisation dissolved by the end of this year, subject to enabling legislation being passed. The remains of both will end up in a special resolution unit within the National Treasury Management Agency (Nama). Nama generated €600 million of cash last year, brining the total since its inception to €48.3 million. The exchequer has so far received €4.69 billion of Nama's expected lifetime contribution. The agency reported a €197 million net profit last year, marking a 14th consecutive year of profitability.

Carlow gunman disclosure set to lead to scrutiny of An Garda Síochána
Carlow gunman disclosure set to lead to scrutiny of An Garda Síochána

Irish Times

time4 hours ago

  • Irish Times

Carlow gunman disclosure set to lead to scrutiny of An Garda Síochána

It was Drew Harris 's last appearance before the Oireachtas Justice Committee before his retirement. In between well-wishes for his contribution to policing over a long career – including from Sinn Féin's chair Matt Carthy – there was some close questioning and a political edge to it. The most dramatic came from Labour TD Alan Kelly, who disclosed that Evan Fitzgerald, the young man who fired shots in a shopping centre in Carlow before turning his shotgun on himself, had been supplied with guns and ammunition by undercover gardaí . As Pat Leahy and Conor Lally report, it was confirmed by the Commissioner that Fitzgerald (22) was supplied with the guns by gardaí under what is called a 'controlled delivery'. The gardaí then arrested and charged him with possession of firearms and ammunition offences. It was some disclosure. Such are the time limits on the questioning – because there are so many committees in the 34th Dáil there are strict restrictions – Harris didn't actually manage to respond to the question posed by Kelly. READ MORE A little later, however, Michael McDowell came back to the specific question and Harris said that controlled deliveries were frequently used in drugs and firearms cases. The matter has been referred to Fiosrú, the policing ombudsman, but has now a public and political dimension. It's certain that down the line, the Garda will come under political and public scrutiny for the deployment of this tactic. As Kelly later told The Irish Times: 'What he was doing was wrong, but where is the proportionality in the actions of An Garda Síochána? When undercover gardaí met this young man, followed him and knew who they were dealing with, did they not assess the level of threat differently and look at alternative interventions? 'They knew they were not dealing with dissidents or organised crime gangs but a young man with some issues. They have effectively said the same and even agreed to his bail, so obviously they didn't believe he was a huge threat.' Payback time (or more pay time) for former ministers and senior civil servants There was a bit of surprise when it was announced on Tuesday that Minister for Public Expenditure Jack Chambers was holding a media conference in relation to the National Shared Services Office (NSSO), a classic back-office State agency that doesn't exactly draw news headlines. But as Cormac McQuinn reports, errors in handling pension payments have resulted in a situation where Government ministers and as many as 13,000 retired civil servants could either owe money or be owed money because of miscalculations in relation to their pension contributions. 'This cohort of former civil servants were in work-share arrangements and, while not all are necessarily affected, their pensions are to be checked for underpayments,' writes McQuinn. 'There is also an issue in relation to the pensions of 30 retired senior civil servants and one of them could owe as much as €280,000 as a result of NSSO errors.' It is believed most current Government ministers will owe money to the State, though some may be due some money back. The highest overpayment may be in the region of €30,000. Ministerial Pressure Zones There was a time when the political pressure zone only surrounded the Minister for Housing but this week it has extended nationwide, as it were, to the whole of Government. Not only did the Minister James Browne have a testing day trying to explain the changes he has introduced to rent pressure zones (RPZs), the issue dominated Leaders' Questions. There was a snarly back and forth all day between the Government and Opposition parties over the changes, with some very thorny prose being used (see best reads below). Extending the RPZ from the current 111 local election areas to all 166 was simple to explain. It was the future arrangements for tenants – especially existing ones – that came under scrutiny and, by extension, put the Government under the cosh. Browne was explaining all day and living up to the Karl Rove dictum that when you are doing that, you are losing. Under the new classification, a landlord who owns three properties or less is a 'mom and pop' landlord. That became an issue. The distinction between new accommodation coming on stream and existing accommodation also became an issue. The Opposition pounded the Government all day on whether existing tenants in RPZ zones would see changes to the increase limits after six years, like new tenancies that begin from March 2026. 'The rights of existing tenants will not change' became the mantra of all Government people during the day. In other words, RPZ rules would continue for them ad infinitum. However, it did not succeed in convincing. The Smaller the Party the Bigger the Split Wow. We did not see that coming. People Before Profit coming under attack from within for becoming too mainstream. A group of some 30 activists have left the party over concerns it would enter a future Government with Sinn Féin . It's not over the concerns the likes of Simon Harris or Micheál Martin would have. It's because Sinn Féin is essentially an establishment party, they say. The group's best known politician is Dublin City Council member Madeleine Johansson. In a statement, it said a Sinn Féin-led government would 'coalesce with the establishment and leave untouched the real government, the permanent government – the State bureaucracy, army chiefs and head of Guards'. Ronan McGreevy has the full story on this latest split among the micro parties of the far-left . Best reads Miriam Lord has the full welly on the back and forth over the RPZ changes yesterday including some choice name-dropping by the Taoiseach. Ellen Coyne, our newest colleague on the political team, covered the press conference on Gaza on Tuesday, hosted by Senator Frances Black and others. She reports that the Independent Senator said a 'groundbreaking' case against Airbnb will set a precedent for legal action against any Irish companies with links to illegal Israeli settlements. Black said similar cases will continue to be taken until the Government includes services in the upcoming Occupied Territories Bill . Gordon Deegan writes that Michael Healy-Rae's family property company has posted €842,000 in profit over two years. Playbook Dáil Wed, Jun 11th 09.00: Topical Issues 10.00: Private Members' Business (Social Democrats): Motion re Ending the Central Bank's facilitation of the sale of Israel Bonds 12.00: Leaders' Questions. 12.34: Other Members' Questions 17.02: Government Business: Mental Health Bill 2024 – Committee Stage 21.02: Deferred Divisions 21.32: Dáil adjourns Seanad 10.30: Commencement Matters 11.30: Order of Business 13.00: Government Business: Supports for Survivors of Residential Institutional Abuse Bill 2024 – Second Stage 15.30: Private Members' Business: Child Trafficking and Child Sexual Exploitation Material (Amendment) Bill 2022 – Committee Stage 17.30: Seanad adjourns Committees 09.30: Transport Driving Test and NCT Delays The NCT will say it has reduced the waiting time for tests from 27 weeks to 20 weeks and that one of the causes of the delays were a 60 per cent upsurge in driving test applications. 09.45: Health Issues relating to the priorities and concerns in the context of the Mental Health Bill 2024 10.45: Social Protecion Engagement with Minister for Social Protection Dara Calleary 12.30: Arts, Media and Communications Committee Matters relating to the termination of the Arts Council Grant Management IT system. Pat Leahy has details of the opening statement , which deeply regrets the decision by Minister for Arts Patrick O'Donovan not to renew the contract of director Maureen Kennelly over the handling of a controversial ICT project. 12.30: Further and Higher Education Engagement with Minister for Further and Higher Education James Lawless. 15.30: Finance, Public Expenditure Israeli Bond Programme 15.30: Agriculture Examination of the impacts of the Veterinary Medicinal Products, Medicated Feed and Fertilisers Regulation Act 2023

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store