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Dublin: 8 °C Friday 24 May, 2013

Public Sector Allowances: The ones they want to keep

Gardaí are to keep their dog handling, uniform cleaning and boot allowances, while teachers with more than 35 years service will continue to receive a corresponding allowance.

Gardaí will keep the uniform cleaning, dog handling and boot allowances.
Gardaí will keep the uniform cleaning, dog handling and boot allowances.
Image: Photocall Ireland!

THE DEPARTMENT OF Public Expenditure and Reform today announced its review of the various allowances currently claimed by members of the public service.

The review breaks down its recommendations on the necessity of these allowances into three sections: Those they recommend be kept and given to new workers, those they recommend be modified in some way for future employees – and those that they think should no longer be given to new employees.

Almost 1,000 allowances are in place, according to figures from the department. Minister Brendan Howlin said today that his department will not realise the savings of €75m it had hoped to make by reforming the allowance system.

The following are among the public service allowances which the department would like to see kept in future for all new and current beneficiaries:

Across all sectors:

  • The Saturday allowance and the Sunday premia payment
  • Both shift and unsocial hour Allowances
  • The allowance payable to keyholders (ie those on call) across various sectors e.g. Chester Beatty’s six keyholders as there is no 24-hour security
  • The Eating on Site allowance which is paid as compensation for lunch breaks taken away from designated base
  • Dirty Money is still to be paid for undertaking certain dirty duties, including sewerage facilities, landfill, removal of deal animals.

PUBLIC SERVICE

Education:

  • Visiting Teachers Allowance to those teaching the visually impaired and hearing impaired
  • The Secure Unit Allowance/Disturbed Adolescent Allowance payable to teachers working in children’s detention centres
  • The allowance paid to teachers with 35 years service or more
  • The allowance for the July Provision Scheme Management paid to one staff member in Special schools where there is a summer programme
  • The allowance for the SNA July Programme
  • The script marking allowances in Institutes of Technology only

Defence

  • The Foreign Language Proficiency Allowance paid to those with NATO-standard proficiency
  • The ‘In-Charge’ Allowance payable to those in the Naval Service
  • Aid to the Civil Authority paid at a per day-rate of between €49.76 and €99.60 for those helping outside normal hours of duty e.g. during flood or snow relief
  • Change of Station Allowance arising from a mandatory move
  • Fire Protection Pay for those on duty at Government buildings. It is paid at a daily rate of €5.06
  • Explosive Ordance Duty Allowance of over €90 paid daily to personnel engaged in 24-hour bomb disposal work
  • Overseas Allowances for both peace support and missions
  • Allowance for those performing duty at Portlaoise prison

Local Government

  • The allowance for the Water and Sewerage Caretaker
  • The allowance for extra duties carried out by the Water Safety Development Officer
  • The allowance paid to employees who are on call for out of hours emergency road gritting and salting operations

Garda Sector

  • Allowances for those appointed as Scenes of Crime Examiners
  • Allowances for Immigration officers
  • Dog Handler Allowance
  • Public Holiday Allowance
  • Boot Allowance
  • Plain Clothes Allowance
  • Uniform Cleaning Allowance
  • Detective Allowance
  • An allowance for those 34 drivers working in the Ministerial pool

HSE

  • Sleep-in overnight allowance
  • The allowance to employees who participate in the Assisted Admissions Tea
  • The allowance for advanced paramedics for those who meet the qualifying criteria

CIVIL SERVICE

Irish Prisons Service

  • The allowance for the National Head Chaplain
  • Payment for attending Core Hours of duty

Revenue

  • Dog Handler Allowance
  • Various allowances for those on duty at Dublin Airport
  • The allowance for the Joint Investigation Unit

Justice

  • The out-of-hours allowance for the Press Officer of the Irish Prison Service
  • The out-of-hours allowances for duties relating to sentence management
  • Private Secretary allowances for supreme court and high court judges
  • The allowance for the call out of the State Pathologist

Social Protection

  • The allowance for the Special Investigation Unit which probes suspect fraudulent activities
  • The Call Out Availability Allowance paid to the manager of the local office

Agriculture, Fisheries and Marine

  • Assistant Manager and Farm Manager at Longtown Farm
  • Pesticides Allowance
  • The Special Investigation Unit Allowance
  • The Post-Mortem Room Allowance

Office of Public Works

  • The allowance paid to three senior clerk of works to work at a higher level of responsibility at the Mechanical & Electrical Section – Special Duty

Central Statistics Office

  • The mobile phone allowance of €12.70 per month so the pricing liaison officer can contact the office and the 90 price collectors off-site
  • A €1,728 allowance for the pricing liaison officer for training price collectors and carrying out quality control checks
  • The allowance for service attendants’ extra duties

NON-COMMERCIAL STATE AGENCIES

Road Safety Authority

  • Transport Officer Allowance
  • Atypical Working Hours Allowance
  • Training Allowance for driving testers
  • Vehicle Inspector Allowance

National Museum of Ireland

  • IT Allowance for the provision of support at the museum site in Castlebar
  • Senior Sales Allowance

Chester Beatty

  • Uniform allowance for shoes, socks and dry-cleaning
  • Box making/Microfilming Allowance give to those carrying out duties to preserve collections

IMMA

  • Supervisor Higher Duty (Cleaning) allowance for maintaining rosters and ordering stock

Ordnance Survey Ireland

  • Flight Allowance
  • Flight Manager’s Flying Allowance

Health and Safety Authority

  • Call out allowance

Teagasc

  • Responsibility Allowance
  • Regional Managers Allowance
  • Staff Officers Allowance
  • Admin Grade 2 Allowance
  • College Principal Allowance
  • Head of Department Allowance
  • Programme Leader Allowance
  • Grade 3 Higher Allowance
  • Enterprise Leader
  • College Staff Officers Allowance

More: Public service allowances: The ones they want abolished>

Public Sector Allowances: The ones they *might* change>

Read: Public service allowance savings targets for 2012 will not be met>

See the full document showing the case being made for 800 or so public sector allowances>

Read next:

Comments (42 Comments)

  • “The allowance payable to keyholders (ie those on call) across various sectors e.g. Chester Beatty’s six keyholders as there is no 24-hour security”

    Maybe they shouldn’t have advertised the lack of security in case anyone decides they want to go steal books!

    Reply
    • Yhea, but the library is inside Dublin castle which has its own 24hr private security and 24hr Garda presence so I think it’s fairly safe, I hope! although a lot of its best works were stolen but this was an inside job, for which I guess he thought was just a special allowance.

      Reply
  • Just looking at the HSE “Sleep-in overnight allowance” reminds me, about 2 years ago I was an inpatient and taking a walk early one morning when I met a bloke I knew, a hospital employee leaving, with what looked like an expensive sleeping bag on his back. I assumed he was off camping somewhere and wished him luck but he explained that he had been sleeping in the hospital overnight, on call, the bed provided for this was a sofa bed from the 70′s and the room was usually occupied day and night so the linen wasn’t changed very often. He said that some of his colleagues had questionable personal hygiene so most people preferred a sleeping bag on the floor. He described the sofa bed as something his dog wouldn’t sleep on. I didn’t believe him but have since asked others, he was telling the truth.

    Reply
  • Uniform cleaning allowance and plane clothes allowance? so there’s an allowance for wearing clothes to work.
    on the flip side of that the allowance for bomb disposal seems fairly light at ?90 a day.

    Reply
    • For the Gardai that don’t wear uniforms – yeah. Uniforms are provided, seems fair that if you’re in plain clothes that you should get summit towards the expense.

      Reply
    • Wouldn’t bother me for it to be one stance or the other Michael but is it not having your bread buttered on both sides? There is a very limited number of jobs that people don’t have to wear clothes too. everybody has to clean their own clothes… (unless the mammy is still doin the cleaning)

      Reply
    • that’s assuming that you have the plain clothes in your wardrobe for the job at hand.. each plain clothes gig requires different attire in order to fit seamlessly into the corrisponding group, be it a gig, a festival, the streets at night.. they should be compensated for having to purchase outside of their existing wardrobes

      Reply
  • Bruce 18/09/12 #

    some valid allowances but a huge number which address not justifiable.

    Again labour ministers shows they are spineless. But they will make pensioners on ?10k per annum pay for travel card and property tax.

    Meanwhile wealthy pensioners, the real supporters of labour, will laugh all the way to the bank.

    Gilmore is despicable in the way he has abandoned the people he is supposed to look after. Remember the laughable line “Gilmore for Taoiseach”.

    How about taxing people who made massive profits of the state selling land for school buildings in co. Galway??? what do you say Mr. Gilmore ?

    Reply
  • Leaving pros and cons of allowances aside…..one common theme coming through in every sector…..teachers, gardai, consultants, civil servants etc. When savings must be achieved see how those in situ circle the wagons and throw the new recruits to the wolves! Im alright
    Jack! Its shameful.

    Reply
  • they had a review and a report on allowances and wait for it…. they got rid of 1… 1 out of 1100….

    Reply
  • An allowance to ensure the phones are answered? An allowance to change the photocopier toner? Are these serious things? Is there any particular reason why these allowances had to be introduced? Maybe because the staff were not incentivised enough to do their jobs, they then had to be paid more on top of their wage to carry out the duties they were already being paid for…

    Reply
  • Still keeping allowances for stuff that any reasonable person would consider intrinsic to the job – therefore salaried.

    Reply
  • Robbie 18/09/12 #

    Carpe per diem

    Reply
  • seems legit

    Reply
  • Seriously though… The allowances were an area of potentially €75 million of savings which donkey Howlin has managed to execute €3 million due to his usual BS and short comings. However, that’s nothing compared to the 3.5 billion shortfall that we need to fit. Listening to Gerry and Míchael banging away earlier with the lovely Miriam indicates how truly f*cked we are as a nation.

    Reply
  • Receptionists in the civil service get a franking allowance of €34 a week
    • Staff employed and paid a salary to be forklift drivers get an additional allowance called ‘the forklift allowance’
    • Civil Servants get a footwear allowance of €65 a year.
    • Staff at the National Museum who work in the yard get a yard allowance
    • Security staff at the National Museum who use a CCTV get a camera allowance
    • Paramedics get a cardiac allowance for using a defibrillator. Dates back to the 80s
    • General ops get an allowance for taking 30 mins lunch on site but MUST work 1.5 hrs each side of the break
    • Staff at Chester Beatty Library get a box making allowance of €15-20 per box
    • Receptionists at the HSA gets €2400 on top of salary to guarantee to answer phone 9-5 Mon – Fri.
    • Staff at the CSO get an allowance to replace the photocopier toner so that the OPW aren’t called in.

    Reply
    • civil servants get a foot ware allowance of 65 a year? just one example of a reader here generalising way over the top. I’ve worked in and around hr in the public service for many years and never met anyone who was paid this! most allowances are paid where differentiation among positions is required and the standard pay scales are not flexible enough.

      Reply
    • Agreed, complete crap. I’m in the public service 18 years across 3 departments and the only footwear allowance I’ve come across is for a handful of blokes who work in the warehouses to cover the cost of shoes with steel toecaps to meet health and safety requirements.

      Reply
    • please tell me your takin the piss? whats next an allowance for turning up sober? the mind boggles at the waste of money

      Reply
    • You should know that attendant staff at the national museum are paid among the lowest salaries in the public service, to which Those paltry allowances you cited are supplemental and paid to only 1-2 people a week- a bargain as far as I am concerned- for reliable protection of the nations treasures. These same people have carried the brunt of the cuts within the museum since this whole farce of a recession began. think a bit of perspective is needed on these allowances, no point in knocking it when you understand nothing about it!

      Reply
  • Simon 18/09/12 #

    They keep the public service sweet, the unions won’t mobilise and we won’t have scences like Madrid or Athens

    Reply
  • aside from the head chaplin allowance all seems above board.

    Reply
  • I advise everyone to look at Chris donoghue from newstalk on twitter. He does top 10 allowances – they really are robbing us all blind.

    Reply
  • Alot of these are just part of their jobs…. I’d love to get allowances but alas this is the real world!!

    Reply
  • And a forklift driver get an allowance for driving a forklift A” forklift driver”
    Security worker get an allowance to check out CCTV A ” security worker”
    So what is there job ? Love to see there job description when they were employed.

    Reply
    • Actually you hit the nail on the head there, they were attendants, who came to undertake the security aspects which evolved in the job. I can honestly tell you, many of the public servants are doing a hell of a lot more and then some than they were originally hired to do.

      Reply
  • Colie 18/09/12 #

    Why do Revenue get a dog handler allowance ?
    I know they can act like a dog with a bone but that is outrageous. :)

    Reply
  • The cost of administering all these allowances must be huge, or are they just paid whether u entitled to them or not. Better to get rid of them and pay a higher wage

    Reply

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