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Appeal for reversal of cuts in addiction counselling

Funding to drugs projects has been cut nationwide this year, despite protests, and today John Cregan, Fianna Fail TD, hit out at newly announced cuts to drugs services in County Limerick.

The Youth Drug Prevent Project in Kilmallock and the Newcastle West Based Drugs Initiative have been told that their funding will end this month, meaning both projects will have to close their doors.

John blamed the Mid-Western Regional Drugs Task Force for the loss of the two counsellors involved and said there would now be nowhere local for people struggling with addiction in these parts of Limerick to seek help.

He appealed on the local radio station Live 95 FM for the cuts to be “reversed”.

Ironically, John’s intervention comes just one day after drugs workers in Limerick city held a successful drugs information day (see yesterday’s blog report) showing there were places for families and addicts to go in the city.

The work goes on – Southill’s day of action on drugs



– COMMUNITY WORK ON THE GROUND

– 100 ATTEND DRUGS INFO DAY IN SOUTHILL

– Limerick, June 23rd, 2010

The Local and Community Development Programme is due to take off by the end of this year – the structures are being argued over up and down of the country – and in the meantime the work on the ground in communities continues.
Southill CDP in Limerick today brought together 12 staff from 10 agencies involved in anti-drugs work for a public information day on drugs.
A lot of parents brought along their children to see what drugs look like, so they would recognise the dangers when confronted by the real thing.
‘Changing Ireland’ met a mother of an eight-year-old concerned about the way schoolchildren are being targeted. She was determined to educate her child before it was too late. Others sought advice on the day from Slainte, Aljeff, North Star, Cuan Mhuire, Victory Outreach from Cork and others on the way through addiction.

Caroline Keane is a community-based Drugs Education Worker and she says alcohol and nicotine are the most widely used drugs in Southill.

She was pleased at the end of the day: “We had 100 local people along today and 30 of them signed up for training.” The training includes joining a Community Addiction Studies course starting in September.

Group photo above: John Hehir, Denise McNamara and Zoe Hehir who
attended the drugs information day and organiser Caroline Keane.

Photos below: Close-up shots of of patches from the North Star quilt. Each patch is in memory of someone who died before their time.

This report is the beginning in a series showing how local work around the country continues, while policy makers, politicians and community activists seek at the same time to influence the shape and structure of the new Local and Community Development Programme.





You can also follow us on Facebook!


Follow ‘Changing Ireland’ on facebook and join over 300 members on our fanpage.

Contribute ideas, suggestions, comments and stir debate on community issues and community work.
In recent work via facebook, we have worked alongside members of the facebook site ‘Hands Off Community Development’ and Pavee Point to counteract racist websites. Two anti-Traveller sites (here’s what one of the offensive sites looked like) were removed by facebook after presssure from activists and concerned citizens.
It was a case of every cloud having a silver lining. Community workers and volunteers came together on facebook to work together to fight cutbacks and thanks to that coming together they were in a position to force facebook to close down the racist websites.

Meanwhile, it’s time this blog was brought to life once more. Feedback welcome.

28 pages of news, debate and updates – OUR LATEST EDITION!


Yes, the latest ‘Changing Ireland’ is out and it features:
– 6 pages of Sector news
– A Community Work report from Palestine
– Volunteering while unemployed
– New Programme: news, debate & updates on the new Local and Community Development Programme
– Social Enterprise Offers A Real Solution for Ireland

– An interview with former Community Minister Eamon O’Cuiv
– Plus letters to our agony uncle Help Me Horace!
HEY, WHAT DO YOU THINK OF IT? ANY STORY IDEAS FOR OUR SUMMER EDITION?
THANKS TO everyone who contributed to the current edition and to those who suggested ideas and/or critical advice.

A good book to ask your library to buy –

If you’re looking for new perspectives on youthwork in Ireland, then a new journal maps out new thinking on this area of work.

‘Youth and Community Work in Ireland: Critical Perspectives’ was published recently by lecturers from Cork.

It is currently the only text that covers the theory and practice of youth and community work in Ireland.

The authors aim with the book to reach a broad audience including workers, volunteers, students, policy makers and academics in youth and community work and related fields.

It is, they say, “a key text for youth and community work degrees and related programmes in universities and colleges and a resource for youth and community work groups, organisations and projects.”

For more information and to buy a copy – or indeed to ask your local library to purchase your copy – log onto the publishers website Blackhall Publishing.

The authors Catherine Forde, Rosie Meade and Elizabeth Kiely are lecturers in the Department of Applied Social Studies in University College Cork and have published widely on youth and community work.

14 CDPs lose funding following review

14 CDPs are to lose funding following a review by the Department of Community, Rural and Gaeltacht Affairs. 13 are in Dublin and one in Clonmel, Co. Tipperary.

The Community Development Project Appeals Board report, released on Friday, January 29th, said issues considered in the review included the “identification of potential for achieving improved efficiencies”.

For more, check our main website’s homepage for relevant links. You can also read the ‘Irish Times’ report on the review body’s decision.

Budget 2010 – COMMUNITIES DOWN AT LEAST 10%

Some of the most severe recommendations in the McCarthy Report will not be implemented this year, but with a similar budget promised for next year and the year after, it’s far from over for communities.

For now, commentators are talking about the cumulative effect of wide-ranging cuts to community supports on top of cuts to social welfare.

At the same time, there’s
some good news, relatively speaking (see below).

Gross funding to the Dept. of Community, Rural & Gaeltacht Affairs is down 13% for 2010 which means:

  • Funding for the combined budgets of the Community Development Programme and Local Development and Social Inclusion Programme (due to be integrated) are cut by 10% (equalling a cut of €7.1 m).
  • Community Services Programme reduced by 9% (or by €4.65m)
  • RAPID cut by 24%
  • Drugs Initiative cut by 11%
  • Community and Voluntary Supports cut by 10%
  • Clar funding is down 53%

Also:

  • Funding to the Family Support Agency is cut by 9% (or €3.1m); the agency has survived for now.
  • There will be cuts of €25m to the overseas aid budget for 2010. This follows 2009’s massive cut by 24% (€224m).

And the good news (relatively speaking):

  • Charities will benefit from the 0.5% reduction in the VAT rate.
  • Funding will continue to 21 volunteer centres and other volunteering initiatives.
  • “Employment levels will be maintained at existing levels in 450 community projects under the Community Services Programme (CSP) by requiring projects to generate additional resources from their operations.”
  • “Increased funding for the EU co-funded Rural Development Programme for Ireland 2007-2013 (LEADER).”
  • “A revised Scheme of Community Support for Older People will be introduced early in 2010, which will provide security equipment for upwards of 9,000 older people.”
  • “Capital funding of €33m is being provided for the Gaeltacht and Islands in 2010.” Does this mean the likes of the airfield in Inisbofin will open in 2010? Time will tell.

At individual level, among the hardest-hit are: newly jobless young people who may now think harder about emigrating. In 2010 they will see their benefits cut by 25% (to €150 per week) if they’re under 25 years of age, and by 50% (to €100 per week) if aged between 20 and 22 years.

Poor Can’t Pay Campaign launches Video

Some of Ireland’s leading NGO’s and trade unions have joined forces to launch a new campaign called “The Poor Can’t Pay” which aims to mobilise active opposition to proposed cuts to basic social welfare payments or the minimum wage.

The Poor Can’t Pay campaign said that people earning the minimum wage or living on social welfare did not cause Ireland’s economic crisis and should not be forced to pay the price of the recession.

The campaign was launched as a joint initiative by the following NGO’s and trade unions: Age Action, Barnardos, CORI Justice, EAPN, Focus Ireland, INOU, Mandate, National Women’s Council of Ireland, SIPTU and SVP.

Letter from 42 academics in support of CDPs.

This letter was published in today’s Irish Times.

The topic will also be discussed tonight (Wednesday) on Vincent Browne’s show on TV3.

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In the midst of all the coverage of cutbacks and the forthcoming budget, one major proposal has received very little attention. This is the intention of the Department of Community, Rural and Gaeltacht Affairs to wind down and close all 182 community development projects (CDPs) across the most disadvantaged communities in the State. The department intends to close CDPs deemed “unviable” immediately, and to ask those deemed “viable” to voluntarily close and be incorporated into a larger centralised structure, run by Local Development Social Inclusion Partnership companies (LDSIP). This move will dispense with CDP voluntary management committees, will accommodate only some existing fulltime staff, but will redeploy the resources and funding generated by local communities into centralised LDSIPs. It is claimed that this “amalgamation” will give rise to cost efficiencies, but what is more cost efficient than volunteers who work for nothing in managing local resource centres, programmes, staff and funding?

CDPs provide an extraordinary range of programmes including childcare, support for those with disabilities, Travellers and older people. They are run by voluntary boards composed of local people who know and understand the needs of their own communities; these boards are demonstrably cost-effective and very well managed. Moreover, every euro allocated to them by the department has been matched by funding obtained from other sources.

We believe that the agenda behind this proposal has little to do with cost savings but much to do with the dislike in certain quarters for an innovative programme which has given a direct and effective voice to local communities to decide on their own needs and priorities.

Under the proposed arrangements, voluntary boards will lose their role and be obliged to hand over the fruits of their work and fundraising to organisations at a remove from communities, where the vital local voice will no longer be heard.

The CDP programme as it stands is a shining example of self-empowerment and active, ethical citizenship and directly benefits those individuals and communities who did not enjoy the benefits of the Celtic Tiger and who are suffering disproportionately now.

We call on Minister Éamon Ó Cuív and on Minister for State John Curran to abandon this proposal and to guarantee the funding and autonomy of the CDP programme. It is needed now more than ever. – Yours, etc,

Prof KATHLEEN LYNCH, UCD;

Prof BRYAN FANNING, UCD;

Prof ANNE RYAN, NUIM;

Prof PAT O’CONNOR, UL;

Prof PEADAR KIRBY, UL;

Prof TOM LODGE, UL;

Prof ALASTAIR CHRISTIE, UCC;

Prof PATRICIA COUGHLAN, UCC;

RONNIE DORNEY, HSE South;

BARRY MURRAY, HSE South;

DENIS BARRETT, City of Cork VEC;

DENISE CHARLTON, Immigrant Council of Ireland;

NIALL CROWLEY, Independent equality expert;

Sr STANISLAUS KENNEDY, Focus Ireland;

SIOBHAN O’DONOGHUE, Migrant Rights Centre Ireland;

AILBHE SMYTH, Equality Rights Alliance;

Dr ANNE MacFARLANE, NUIG;

Dr ANASTASIA CRICKLEY, NUIM;

Dr BRÍD CONNOLLY, NUIM;

HILARY TIERNEY, NUIM;

Dr MARY GILMARTIN, NUIM;

Dr HILARY TOVEY, TCD;

Dr ELIZABETH KIELY, UCC;

Dr DENIS LINEHAN, UCC;

PIARAS Mac ÉINRÍ, UCC;

Dr CIARÁN McCULLAGH, UCC;

ROSIE MEADE, UCC;

Dr ORLA O’DONOVAN, UCC;

TOM O’CONNOR, Cork Institute of Technology;

Dr COLM O’DOHERTY, Institute of Technology Tralee;

Dr KIERAN ALLEN, UCD;

JOHN BAKER, UCD;

Dr ROLAND ERNE, UCD;

Dr ALICE FELDMAN,UCD;

Dr STEVEN LOYAL, UCD;

Dr ANDY STOREY, UCD;

Dr EOIN DEVEREUX, UL;

Dr BREDA GRAY, UL;

BRIAN KEARY, UL;

Dr ORLA McDONNELL, UL;

MARY O’DONOGHUE, UL &

Dr TINA O’TOOLE UL,

C/o School of Languages, Literature, Culture Communication, University of Limerick.

Earn an award – 3 days and the clock is ticking!

An Aontas award could be yours! Nominate your local adult learning project for an AONTAS STAR Award and do it fast!

The deadline for entries is this Friday, November 27th.

The AONTAS awards, now in its fourth year, celebrate teamwork, and recognise the achievements of those involved in adult learning around the country.

It’s easy to enter. Nominations can be submitted online through the website www.adultlearnersfestival.com, or by email to mail@aontas.com.

A sample nomination form is available online to assist people completing their nominations.

More info: www.aontas.com

CDPs on Liveline

On Monday 9th November, Joe Duffy got a call from a Kathleen O’Neill in Kilbarrack CDP about the proposed changes to the CDP programme. Once it got started, more people started ringing in including:
Mary Catherine Heanue from Inishturk Development Office
Ursula McKenna from Dochas for Women, Monaghan
Bray Traveller’s CDP’s Jim O’Brien,
Maurice McConville from Le Chéile CDP,
Martin Hamilton from Kilmore West CDP,
Mary McClorey from Southside CDP in Drogheda,
Harry Murphy from Crumlin CDP and
Liz Riches from Ballybeg CDP in Waterford.
Joe Duffy and the RTE listeners got the low down on what CDPs do for their communities around the country

Listen to the CDP discussion on Liveline. (mp3 file)

Health Corr gives CDPs a ringing endorsement

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JOURNALIST GIVES BRILLIANT EXPLANATION OF WHAT CDPs REALLY DO

The author of the most penetrating book written in recent years on the Irish health service has given CDPs a ringing endorsement in a 7-minute interview on RTE’s Drivetime. (Click ‘community health workers’).
Sara Burke has described the work that CDPs do as exceptional value for money and she paid tribute to volunteers’ involvement and the ability of projects to do a great many things with very limited resources. While focusing chiefly on CDPs, Sara also drew attention to equally good work done by drugs projects, Family Resource Centres and a range of others.
Her interview was broadcast on Thursday last, September 24th, and Sara has just published a written report on CDPs on her blog.

COMMENT BELOW!!!

National Community Development Forum says merger “an attack on the poor”

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The National Community Development Forum, the representative body for the country’s 180 CDPs, has said it rejects proposals by Minister of State John Curran to merge two programmes, arguing that in the course of that process the “scheme will disempower the most marginalised of local communities across Ireland.”

The Forum said there was no consultation, the plan was “an attack on the poor” and made a mockery of community development educational initiatives.

Forum chairperson Larry McCarthy said, “This move… will terminate the involvement of 2000 volunteers in deciding a little of what happens in their own communities and that undermines everything that Community Development stands for.”
The Forum called for talks with the Minister so he could “clarify some of the issues around the lack of consultation with, not alone the CDPs, but the service users.”

For the full text, check the Forum’s blog.


FOR AN UPDATE, SEE OUR BLOG ENTRY DATED NOVEMBER 25th, 2010, ON ‘Where CDPs Now Stand’.

Blanchardstown: Bonus for Volunteers!

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Volunteers who work at the Vincent De Paul shop in Blanchardstown got a pleasant surprise last week when members of the local Traveller Community Employment scheme presented them with a variety of organic vegetables.
The vegetables were grown on the Travellers Allotment.

Our picture – from CE worker Tom Toner – shows Geraldine Collins of Blanchardstown Travellers CE (right) presenting a basket of mushrooms to shop manager Marie Murray (left) surrounded by shop volunteers and one of the gardeners.
The CE scheme is sponsored by the local CDP, the Blanchardstown Traveller Development Group.