Baile Nuacht Preaseisiúintí Remarks by Minister Éamon Ó Cuív TD, at the Galway East/Galway West Fianna Fáil Conference

Remarks by Minister Éamon Ó Cuív TD, at the Galway East/Galway West Fianna Fáil Conference

Nuacht - Preaseisiúintí

Níl leagan aistrithe ar fáil.

A chairde
Tá mé ag súil go mór le bhur dtuairimí a chloisteáil agus na gníomhartha a tógadh le míonna anuas a phlé libh. Bhí ár bpáirtí bunaithe i gcónaí ar na baill agus ann ar mhaithe an phobail. Tá sé riachtanach go mbeadh muid uile airdeallach ar riachtanais an phobail i gcónaí.

Tá cúrsaí fostaíochta mar chuid lárnach den mhéid atá idir lámha againn ag an gcomhdháil seo inniu. Tá dúshlán mór ag baint leis an obair mhór atá curtha romham ag an Taoiseach.

I myself have been given a new job since you first started organising this conference and it is one that is very much concerned with jobs. For many years, I have believed that unemployment is one of the greatest challenges that people face. People often think of unemployment purely in terms of income loss. However, it is also about dignity and confidence; the loss of something challenging to do every day; and the loss of social contact with workmates.

Unemployment has a huge debilitating effect on individuals, families, communities and our nation. I am very interested in hearing and discussing positive and creative ways of dealing with the immediate unemployment problems and finding new opportunities to create jobs in our areas where we have always been strong.

We are not unique in the world in having had to stabilise our public finances and our system of money but we have been ahead of many countries in doing so quickly. The popularity of Fianna Fáil has taken a bruising as we have gone about steadying our financial system but creating new jobs and acting to protect badly-hit families are every bit as important. This is why the Taoiseach has restructured the key Government departments that deal with job creation, training, education, work activation and social supports to help people in a better way.

Changing the way we approach our existing resources can unlock the potential of new ways to create locally-based jobs. This is what the Smart Economy is really about. It is about the kind of thinking where a quarry owner or rock supplier spots the potential for their produce to become a high-end finished product such as a kitchen countertop rather than just bulk material for a house foundation. It is also to be seen in the way Fáilte Ireland are working with the B&B sector to refocus its traditional strengths on the new demands of overseas visitors coming here for activities such as hiking, biking and surfing. We saw with the Volvo Ocean Race last year that we can be world leaders when we act to change the game and adapt our strengths to new realities. A global economic upturn will come and we must be ready to catch its first wave.

One of the priorities I have been given in my new department is to place a particular focus on job activation. The new department brings a joined-up approach to looking at job activation in its wider context with income support. We need to try to create a better future for them with work activity in the short term, to upskill them and give them opportunities to get back into the mainstream workforce as speedily as possible.

One of the great challenges faced at present is that where families have gone from having two incomes to one, or worse from one to none. We are looking at activation opportunities for work for people caught in this mire.

The Rural Social Scheme, the Community Services Programme, the Community Employment Scheme and the Job Initiative scheme will all come over to my new department in the context of job activation. There are a lot of real needs in communities in terms of provision of after-school services, childcare and services for older people that we could address through these four schemes. There is also the semi-economic sector where we have rural heritage centres and tourist amenities, enterprise support units and the sports clubs with gyms and all-weather facilities that can generate some of their financial income, but that will always require some small state support from work schemes.

Le linn na mblianta rathúla rinneadh cuid mhaith infheistíochta i saoráidí áitiúla agus in ionaid pobal. Tá sé ar leas na tíre i gcoitinne go mbainfeadh an pobal úsáid astu. Feicim go mbeadh deiseanna ann chun cabhrú leo siúd atá dífhostaithe trí áiteanna a fháil dóibh ar scéimeanna oibre a bheadh ag déanamh obair riachtanach chun an t-úsáid is fearr a fháil as na saoráidí seo.

During the good years, there was much investment made in developing good local facilities. It is in all our interest to ensure that these facilities are used and well maintained. I am told that there are many jobseekers who would be very willing to use their skills and experience doing this work in their community and who would relish a place on a scheme involved in it. I am interested in your views on this as maintaining people’s employability through regular work activity will be important for getting people back into the competitive economy.

The new department will in time provide a one stop shop for people who face the terrible prospect of being unemployed. The Taoiseach has given my department the very sensible aim of ensuring that when a person visits his or her local social welfare office, the officials who deal with work placement will in time be working side by side with those dealing with payments. This will give a better service to people.

In the wider context, the re-organisation announced by the Taoiseach focuses on the main challenges that face us. We speak about an innovation economy but for that we must have the best systems for giving people new skills so they can avail of changed opportunities. In the re-organisation we will be able to tackle the issues of work and support for people and communities, and of upskilling, training and education.

One of the big things that genuinely unemployed people complain about is the forced inactivity. I will try to tackle that problem as quickly as I can. For years, I have argued that enforced idleness is not a great policy. We spend about €4.2 billion annually on unemployment payments and a further €0.5billion on activation. I want to use activation measures to differentiate between those who are genuine jobseekers and those who may not be genuinely unemployed and use savings arising from this approach to create more activation and opportunities for people to be gainfully involved in community work and so on. That is where the big change will come about.

Moving people from welfare to work has been a life’s mission with me, and I did quite a bit of it during my time creating employment in a community-based business. We face a number of challenges in the next few years in creating opportunities for people to work but we will make progress by being positive and by finding new ways to draw on our traditional strengths.

Just as the first Fianna Fáil Government steadied our country during the bleak and turbulent 1930s economic crisis, we will continue to lead from the front and from the heart to show people that we are working our way out of our problems. Other generations with far more meagre resources lifted this country before and we can and we will choose to compete with the best in the world again.

Go raibh míle maith agaibh.