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Dáil Éireann - Volume 32 - 13 November, 1929 Orders of the Day. - Poor Relief (Dublin) Bill, 1929—Third Stage. The Dáil went into Committee. Section 1 ordered to stand part of the Bill. SECTION 2. 1117 The board of guardians of a union to which this Act applies may, at their discretion, relieve out of the workhouse of the union, any destitute poor person who could not heretofore under the provisions of the Poor Relief (Ireland) Acts, 1838 to 1914, have [1117] been relieved by them otherwise than in such workhouse, if such person at the time when he is so relieved has been resident for a continuous period of not less than two years either in the County of Dublin or in the County Borough of Dublin or in the said county and county borough. An Ceann Comhairle Michael Hayes An Ceann Comhairle: With regard to the amendments to Section 2, I propose to put the question on amendment 1 in this form: That in line 42 the words “has been resident” stand. If these words stand, a residence qualification of some kind remains in. I will then be able to take Deputy Thrift's amendment, which is an endeavour to make the two years' period into a three years' period by putting the question that the word “two” stand. Deputy Good's amendment 3 hangs on his amendment 5 and the debate on the whole question could be taken on amendment 5. So I will put amendments 1, 2 and 4. Mr. Everett Mr. Everett Mr. Everett: I move amendment 1:— “To delete all words after the word `workhouse,' line 41, to the end of the section.” The purpose of this Bill originally was to give relief to all people who were destitute, and to bring Dublin City into line with the rest of the country. In the rest of the country, where a man is unable to obtain work the board of health is liable to give a small amount towards his subsistence. I am asking that the residence qualification be removed I find that, with the exception of the Dublin Chamber of Commerce, the ratepayers of Dublin, according to a report of a meeting of that body, are not opposed to the proposal. Mr. Good Mr. Good Mr. Good: The statement is not correct. Mr. Everett Mr. Everett 1118 Mr. Everett: A report appeared in the newspapers to-day of a meeting of the Dublin Chamber of Commerce. In that report, it appears that one of [1118] the members mentioned the fact that there was no opposition to the Bill, notwithstanding that they had got a Commissioner to come to the Chamber and to warn the people of the great increase in the rates it would mean if this Bill were passed. Notwithstanding the propaganda of the Chamber of Commerce, they have failed to get the support of the ratepayers of Dublin in opposition to this Bill. The Dublin members are requesting that the Government should give a contribution towards any extra expense that will be incurred. It is only when Dublin is asked to give similar relief to that given in the rest of the country that we find the Dublin members united in appealing to the Government to bear a portion of the cost. We have no objection, but I would ask them to remember the ratepayers in other areas. The amount of relief given in my county in 1923 was less than £5,000. The cost of home assistance now given in small sums to able-bodied men with dependants who are willing to work and unable to obtain work is £15,000. Dublin is complaining that its rates have increased, but their rates, according to Deputy Byrne, have increased from £163,000 to £264,000. So Dublin rates have not increased in proportion to the rest of the country, as regards home assistance for the able-bodied. 1119 I would appeal to those Deputies not to demand what I consider another boundary in this country. They are asking that a man who happens to be out of work should not get relief unless he was living for two years in the city. Some of the people who are making that appeal, have made huge fortunes out of the sweat of people like these, and are living outside the city themselves. Probably, outside of Dublin there are many people in receipt of relief at the present time, who are Dublin people. We have to maintain people who come from Dublin to the country looking for work; they are a charge upon our rates. We have in my own county at present a large number of people who are not natives of the county in receipt [1119] of home help. I would ask the Minister if he has any statistics as to the number of people who may not be native born or two years in Dublin and who will be likely to be looking for home help. I put it to him that the proportion is very small. If there are any persons from the country districts out of work in Dublin and who would be looking for home assistance, the proportion is altogether smaller than the proportion of Dublin people who have to be maintained in country districts. If the city of Dublin says that it is not going to fall into line with the rest of the country in this matter it will be going against the principle of the Poor Law Acts, because under these Acts a destitute man is entitled to get relief no matter from where he comes. The expense of officials in trying to find out whether persons have two years residence in the city will be greater than the amount of immediate relief that an able-bodied man who is willing to work, if he can get it, will ask the ratepayers to pay. It is not usual for a man from a country district who happens to be in the city to find himself out of work. It is not likely that such men, when out of work, will remain in the city. If only people with two years' residence are to get relief, it may hit the people of Dublin far harder, because we in the country districts will send back to Dublin those people who are at present getting home help, to be maintained at the expense of Deputy Good and other people. 1120 Deputy Byrne says that men from the country districts are putting Dublin men out of employment, and another Deputy says that these men should be sent back to the place where they were born. If many of us were sent back to the place we were born in, probably some people would not be in the comfortable position that they are in to-day and would have smaller bank balances. I would remind the House that reprisals will take place from Cork [1120] up to my own county and that these Dublin people will get short shrift and will be sent back for the Dublin people to maintain them. We have never advocated that—I personally would not advocate it, because I hold that if a man is destitute, no matter where he comes from in the thirty-two counties, he is entitled to get relief, and no man, unless he is in very bad circumstances, will look for relief. What we on these benches want, even if the Bill is passed, is not relief, but employment for men who are willing to work, instead of looking for charity or doles. Mr. Good Mr. Good Mr. Good: The Deputy from Wicklow wants to add to the burden of the poor Dublin ratepayers. One would have thought that these ratepayers are being harassed quite sufficiently by the Bill already without Deputies from Wicklow wanting to add to that burden. The Deputy said that there was no opposition to this Bill outside the Dublin Chamber of Commerce. Might I read for him a resolution which reached me this morning passed by a council in part of the area which will have to carry the burden of the Bill—the Pembroke Urban District Council? The resolution was passed unanimously, one member not voting, and is as follows:— The Pembroke Urban District Council desires to record its protest against the unjustifiable burden which will be cast upon the ratepayers should the Poor Relief (Dublin) Bill now before the Dáil be passed. The poor and unemployed from all areas in the Saorstát come to Dublin with the hope of obtaining employment, and after failing to do so become a charge on the ratepayers in the Dublin area. In the opinion of this council every county, including Dublin, should be called upon to carry its share of the burden. 1121 In face of that I am afraid the Deputy must spend all his time in the country and very little in Dublin, if he is not aware of the fact that a large proportion of the ratepayers—I [1121] am satisfied it runs into 90 per cent.—are opposed to the burden imposed under this Bill. Let me say that they are not opposed to the principle of the Bill, as far as I know. As I said on the Second Reading, I have not heard a single protest against the giving of assistance to a destitute man or woman, but we do say that this Bill is unfair to the city, and for that reason we are opposed to it. Mr. O'Kelly Mr. O'Kelly 1122 Mr. O'Kelly: We on these benches agree entirely with the proposition put forward by Deputy Everett when he says that every destitute person should get relief. We maintain that under the Bill, as we have it here, that relief is provided for. It is set out there that every destitute person must get relief. If they do not get relief from the union they will get it outside. Those who come from outside the area are also dealt with in the Bill. Provision is made in the Bill for sending them back to the place that they are residents or inhabitants of. The Bill therefore provides for relief for every destitute person. We think that it is reasonable to ask that there should be some residence qualification, that two years is a reasonable period, and we propose therefore to vote for it. It may be that there are Dublin people who seek relief outside the Dublin area. They may go to Wicklow. Many people probably do, but not many destitute ones, I think, go to Wicklow. Many people who are ratepayers in Dublin live in County Wicklow, and Wicklow gets some return out of them. I do not think that any great proportion of destitute people go out of Dublin to seek work in the country —not anything like the same proportion goes out of Dublin as comes into it. Speaking from personal experience—and I think any Deputy living in Dublin will have had a similar experience—I know that a number of people come to my door day after day from the country looking for work or for money to take them back to the place where they came from. That is, as I say, an almost daily experience of mine, [1122] and I think I am no exception in the matter. As far as the citizens of Dublin are concerned, I think that it is fair to them to have a qualification of this kind, and we propose to stand by what is in the Bill. Mr. Byrne Mr. Byrne Mr. Byrne: I wish to emphasise on behalf of the ratepayers in the city of Dublin that they have no objection to shouldering their own liability and obligation to the destitute poor of the city. Mr. Davin Mr. Davin Mr. Davin: What does it represent? Mr. Byrne Mr. Byrne Mr. Byrne: It represents that they have the strongest objection to shouldering the burdens of the whole country for the destitute poor which the Labour Party wants to have thrown upon them. A Deputy A Deputy A Deputy: Rubbish. Mr. Byrne Mr. Byrne Mr. Byrne: I hear the word “rubbish.” Everything that I am saying here is absolutely true, and nobody knows that better than Deputy Everett. Deputy Everett throws out a terrific threat. He says that they are going to send back to the city of Dublin all the Dublin men who are unemployed in the County Wicklow. We are not at all frightened by that threat. If that happens one bus would contain the whole of the unemployed Dublin men who are sent back from Wicklow. We will look after them when they arrive. Mr. Davin Mr. Davin Mr. Davin: Would you refuse to serve country customers who come to your shop? Mr. Byrne Mr. Byrne Mr. Byrne: As far as my shop is concerned, nobody gets anything there except he has money to pay for it, and I do not have regard to where he comes from. I say the ratepayers of Dublin are opposed to this Bill, and I say that the statement made by Deputy Everett is not correct, that the ratepayers are not opposed to it. Mr. Everett Mr. Everett Mr. Everett: Read the Chamber of Commerce report. Mr. Byrne Mr. Byrne 1123 [1123] Mr. Byrne: I have no connection with the Chamber of Commerce. I represent the smaller people, and the smaller shopkeepers who are the largest ratepayers, and I say that they are opposed to this Bill which would throw upon their shoulders the support of the unemployed people coming into Dublin. Deputy Good has read a resolution which shows what real opposition there is to this Bill. The City Commissioners themselves are opposed to this Bill, the urban councils are opposed to it, the business men of the city are opposed to it, but we are not opposed to shouldering our liabilities to the destitute poor of the city. Deputy Everett contended that people will not remain in the city who do not find work. What happened after the disbandment of the National Army? Forty or fifty thousand people remained in the city of Dublin, and never left it. What will happen after the completion of the Shannon scheme? The people who will be unemployed will drift up to Dublin with the hope of finding employment. Mr. Colohan Mr. Colohan Mr. Colohan: Why not build a wall around the city of Dublin? Mr. Byrne Mr. Byrne Mr. Byrne: Deputy Everett referred to some figures, and there he was about as correct as in some of the other facts that he gave the Dáil. He said that I stated that £133,000 was spent here in relief of the destitute poor. That was the figure for 1914, but he should have gone along and said that in 1927 the sum of £264,000 was spent in Dublin on the destitute poor. Why cannot the Deputy be honest and straightforward and when he gives figures give correct figures? This Bill will mean the placing of half a million of money on the shoulders of the people of Dublin. We object to that, and not to taking our own fair share of the burden. We want to see that the destitute poor are not allowed to go hungry. That is the duty of all of us, and we are prepared to do it, but we strongly object to supporting the unemployed of the whole country, and that is the principle involved in this Bill. An Ceann Comhairle Michael Hayes 1124 [1124] An Ceann Comhairle: In this amendment. Mr. Everett Mr. Everett Mr. Everett: I did explain that the sum mentioned, as spent in 1914, by Deputy Byrne, was £133,000, and that it is now £264,000, but I pointed out that the increase was not in proportion to the increase we have to pay in the country, and that Dublin has not such a grievance. Mr. Morrissey Mr. Morrissey Mr. Morrissey: As far as members of this Party are concerned, we realise that this Bill, if passed into law, will place a fairly big burden upon the ratepayers of Dublin city and county. But we want again to emphasise that Dublin is not being asked to do any more now than other parts of the country. Deputy Byrne said that Dublin was shouldering the burden of the whole country. That is not so. I might put it this way: that Dublin is living on the remainder of the country. That would be nearer the truth than Deputy Byrne's statement. We know, if this burden is put on the people of Dublin, the business people or others, in the end it will be the people down in the rural parts of the country who will have to pay it. People come up from the country on buses and trains and go into Deputy Byrne's shop and make purchases. That shows that the Deputy is transferring the burden put upon him to somebody else. Mr. Byrne Mr. Byrne Mr. Byrne: Competition is too keen for that. Mr. Morrissey Mr. Morrissey 1125 Mr. Morrissey: I think it is most unfair to suggest that only those who are destitute and down and out come to Dublin from the country. We know that most of our pensioners, and also traders, who make a certain amount of money in other parts of the country, come up to Dublin and spend the remainder of their lives and their money there. Deputy Byrne told us that the people whom he represented and spoke for were against this Bill, and against even the principle of it. Deputy Good tells us that the people for whom he speaks are very sympathetic towards the poor, and are [1125] in favour of the principle of this Bill. Deputy Good knows as well as I do that the principle of this Bill is worth very little to the unemployed, and to those who are hungry unless the money is forthcoming. I am rather surprised at the attitude taken up by Deputy O'Kelly. I believe Deputy O'Kelly has had experience in poor law administration, and I am satisfied he is a man who would like to see the unemployed and the destitute getting sufficient to keep them alive. Knowing the Deputy's very strong feelings upon any question of partition, I am surprised he should be in favour of a section of the Bill which aims at building a wall round the city and county of Dublin. We believe that the people who are destitute should be relieved. It is said that under the Bill those who do not come within the residence qualification can be sent back to their districts. How, and by whom? Who is going to pay? And what is to keep them between the time they make the application, and the time they are sent back, and the next meeting of the county board of health in their particular county? I know the Minister will probably say that the home assistance officers are entitled to give emergency relief. The Minister may not be aware that some of those county boards of health have given instructions against giving emergency relief, although the assistance officer is, by law, required to do so. I do not see that any serious case can be made against Deputy Everett's amendment. Deputy Byrne does not try to make any case whatever, and Deputy Good has not tried to make any case against it The gist of Deputy Good's speech was that those for whom he speaks are in favour of the principle of the Bill. As I say, the principle of the Bill is of no use to those who are unemployed and looking for food. Again, it ought to be emphasised that Dublin is not being asked to do any more under this Bill than the other poor law authorities in the country are doing already. General Mulcahy General Mulcahy 1126 General Mulcahy: Really the only [1126] point at issue in connection with these amendments is the one referred to by Deputy O'Kelly. This is no question of erecting a wall around Dublin city and county. At the moment you have this position in Dublin city and county, that you have workhouses and that indoor relief is afforded. Because an amalgamation scheme has not been set up in Dublin city and county, the provisions with regard to relief for the able-bodied have not, up to the present, applied. This Bill proposes to apply them. In deciding in the special circumstances of Dublin city and county how, in this temporary measure, relief to the able-bodied should be applied, it is proposed that relief, outside institutions, will only be given to persons who have a residence qualification here. There is no question at all of denying relief to persons with a non-residence qualification. The Bill provides that they can be relieved in the institutions that exist in Dublin city and county for the provision of indoor relief. On the application of a person without a residence qualification, the payment by the guardians in the city and county of Dublin of his travelling expenses to a place where the board is satisfied “that such removal is likely to enable such person to support himself and his dependants by his own industry or other lawful means” can be made, On the board being satisfied that his removal will help him to support himself by industry or otherwise— by being kept by his friends or in any other way—the travelling expenses to the place suggested by the applicant himself can be paid. Mr. Morrissey Mr. Morrissey Mr. Morrissey: Could the Minister say in how many cases he expects that to arise? General Mulcahy General Mulcahy 1127 General Mulcahy: There is no question of taking a man and saying to him, “You are destitute here and you have no residence qualification here; we will remove you to the board of health area of such-and-such a county.” There is no proposal to do anything like that. The point that Deputy Morrissey raises [1127] about another county board of health coming into the matter does not arise at all. Mr. Morrissey Mr. Morrissey Mr. Morrissey: But it does. General Mulcahy General Mulcahy General Mulcahy: It does not. Mr. Davin Mr. Davin Mr. Davin: Are these people to starve, then? General Mulcahy General Mulcahy General Mulcahy: The point at issue then is simply this: that Deputies want to secure that every person applying for relief in the county and city of Dublin can, subject to the discretion of the guardians, get outdoor relief. The proposition in the Bill is that certain institutions exist in the county and city of Dublin at present for the giving of indoor relief. It is proposed to utilise those institutions for that purpose so that, say, people coming from the rural districts into Dublin without any prospect of getting employment in the city, but coming in the hope that they can get relief in the city, will not be invited by any arrangement here to leave the country and come into the city. There is the danger with regard to the city and county of Dublin that, if there was no residence qualification, people at the present moment in the rural districts would be attracted to the city. They would come up here really looking for relief, whilst pretending to look for employment. The difference between other counties and the city and county of Dublin is not so marked, for the giving of outdoor relief to able-bodied people is a matter of discretion with those dealing with the distribution of relief. In these circumstances, if there is anything unreasonable in the situation of a person who applies to a local body down the country for relief, it is entirely in the hands of the local body as to whether they will give it or not. As far as I know, there has not been any scrap of complaint from any area that persons from other counties or other areas have been applying for this particular class of relief in their area. Mr. Everett Mr. Everett 1128 [1128] Mr. Everett: I would like to know from the Minister if the Commissioners administering home help in Dublin have the same discretion as members of boards of health in their counties? General Mulcahy General Mulcahy General Mulcahy: Certainly. Mr. Cassidy Mr. Cassidy Mr. Cassidy: The Minister has unconsciously, I think, made a speech in favour of the amendment moved by Deputy Everett. He has stated that the destitute poor resident in Dublin city or county for less than two years will be entitled to indoor relief under the provisions of this Bill, but that they will not be entitled to outdoor relief. I would like to know from the Minister if he has taken into consideration the fact that, in most cases, indoor relief costs more than outdoor relief, while of course it must not be forgotten that the giving of the latter helps to keep the homes of many people together. The Minister has not contradicted the statement of Deputy Morrissey that this amendment only asks that the same treatment be given to the destitute poor in the city and county of Dublin, as is already being given in other counties through the boards of health. As far as Dublin men are concerned, they have always been looked upon in other parts of the country as people with a very broad outlook. I must say that the remarks of Deputy Good and of Deputy J. J. Byrne would give one the impression that they have a very narrow outlook. They want, as it were, to get preferential treatment for the city and county of Dublin as against the other counties. It has been asserted by the Chamber of Commerce and by Deputy Good, I think, at one time, that Dublin was carrying the rest of the country on its back. I believe it is the other way about. I believe that if a wall were built around Dublin city and county, and that the trade of those residing within that area was cut away from the rest of the country, there would be no necessity for the existence of such a body as the Chamber of Commerce. 1129 Deputy Good made what I can only describe as a laughable plea on [1129] behalf of the poor Dublin ratepayers. I suggest to him that he does not represent the poor ratepayers in Dublin city and county who—and I admit there are some— are altogether in favour of this Bill. They believe that the destitute people in the city and county of Dublin, even if they are not resident here for two years, should be relieved in the same way as the destitute poor are relieved in the other counties of the Saorstát. Deputy Good referred to the fact that the Dublin Chamber of Commerce was not the only body that passed a resolution condemning this section in the Bill. The Deputy quoted a resolution that was passed by the Pembroke Urban District Council. The Deputy, however, did not tell us who the mover of the resolution was at the meeting of that council. I wonder would I be correct in saying —— An Ceann Comhairle Michael Hayes An Ceann Comhairle: Would it not be better for the House not to worry about that? Simply take it that it was the resolution of a local body, and not go into the personnel of that local body? Mr. Cassidy Mr. Cassidy Mr. Cassidy: I was going to say it was moved by a member of the Dublin Chamber of Commerce. As far as Deputy J. J. Byrne is concerned, listening to his speech one would come to the conclusion that the Deputy cares very little for the destitute poor in Dublin. Mr. J.J. Byrne Mr. J.J. Byrne Mr. J.J. Byrne: I object to that statement being made. Mr. Cassidy Mr. Cassidy 1130 Mr. Cassidy: I am only just commenting on the speech that the Deputy has made. The Deputy appears to be more interested in the wealthier classes of ratepayers in Dublin City and County than he is, say, in those who reside around Talbot Street, Gloucester Street, Gardiner Street and other areas around there. The Deputy is really asking for preferential treatment for Dublin City and County. Might I point out that Dublin City and County has already got preferential treatment because, in regard to [1130] tariffs that were put on certain articles, Dublin got the benefit of the industries that were established and the employment given as a result of them. Mr. Byrne Mr. Byrne Mr. Byrne: What portion of the city is going to bear the £500,000 which will be imposed under this Bill? Mr. Davin Mr. Davin Mr. Davin: Where did the Deputy get his figure? Mr. Byrne Mr. Byrne Mr. Byrne: From the City Commissioners. An Ceann Comhairle Michael Hayes An Ceann Comhairle: Keep to the residence qualification. Mr. Cassidy Mr. Cassidy Mr. Cassidy: I do not know that Deputy Byrne's figure is correct. I put it that any money taken from the ratepayers under the provisions of this Bill, if Deputy Everett's amendment is accepted, will go towards the cost of relieving the destitute in the city and county, for whom I am sorry Deputy Byrne has not more regard. If a person who has not the two years' residential qualification is given indoor relief that will be more costly than if he were given outdoor relief. I think the House should support the amendment moved by Deputy Everett, which will not alone help the destitute poor in the city and county of Dublin, but will also help the ratepayers, because otherwise the cost would be greater in the long run. I think the House would be well advised to accept the amendment. Mr. Lemass Mr. Lemass 1131 Mr. Lemass: Deputy Morrissey stated that he had some difficulty in understanding Deputy O'Kelly's attitude in relation to this amendment. I have listened very carefully to the speeches which have been made in support of the amendment, and I have not yet satisfied myself that I have discovered a real reason why the amendment was tabled. Deputy Morrissey gave in the course of his remarks only one such reason, and one which indicated that he had either not read or failed to grasp the proposals contained in the Bill. Deputy Everett did give one reason which, I think, requires examination, [1131] and that is the difficulty which will arise in determining the two years' residence qualification, and the expense which may be involved in making inquiries in that connection. I asked the Minister for Local Government on the occasion of the Second Reading to inform us as to the actual machinery which it was proposed to set up for the purpose of deciding disputed cases in relation to the residence qualification, and he could not inform me what the machinery would be. He said it would be a matter for the City Commissioners to decide. I would like if he could give any more information on that matter now, because it seems to me that no matter what appears in the Bill the residence qualification will, in fact, prove to be inoperative because of the difficulty of proving or disproving statements made by the applicants for relief. The case for the maintenance of the residence qualification is that there is undoubtedly a drift towards Dublin of the unemployed from the rest of the country. That statement can be and has been questioned. I ask those who doubt it to do no more than examine the census returns for the year 1926. Mr. Davin Mr. Davin Mr. Davin: That applies to all cities and towns. Mr. Lemass Mr. Lemass 1132 Mr. Lemass: Yes, to all cities to an extent, and to some towns, but to Dublin more than any other. The mere fact that the population of Dublin is increasing and continues to increase while the population of the entire country is decreasing is proof that the abolition of the residence qualification would mean that the destitute poor at present coming to Dublin from any other part of the country would be immediately in the position to qualify for outdoor relief. That would tend to increase the drift of the unemployed towards Dublin, and, in my opinion, such a result would be nationally bad. Let us be quite clear about this. There is adequate provision in the Bill for dealing with the destitute poor that have been resident in Dublin for [1132] more than two years. They can get outdoor relief. If they have been resident in Dublin for less than two years either they can be sent at the expense of the Dublin ratepayers to any other place where they can secure employment or maintain themselves through their own efforts, or else they can, at the expense of the Dublin ratepayers, be maintained in the workhouses. There is, I admit, a strong case in favour of outdoor relief as against institutional relief. Deputy Cassidy is on fairly sure ground in his argument in that connection, but he has not, I think, examined the position far enough. In the first place, the question of preserving family life will not arise, for the only persons debarred from getting outdoor relief will be the destitute poor from the country with less than two years' residence, and they will not be people with families. Mr. Morrissey Mr. Morrissey Mr. Morrissey: They may. Mr. Lemass Mr. Lemass Mr. Lemass: I grant that in a small number of cases they may, but in the majority of cases they will be young people who come to Dublin for the purpose of getting employment and who will find themselves temporarily destitute here. Deputy Cassidy argued that the cost of indoor relief is greater than the cost of outdoor relief. It is per head, but it is not the cost per head that is worrying the ratepayers of Dublin, but the total cost of the whole scheme, and the total cost of providing indoor relief to the destitute poor who are without the two years' residence qualification will, I am convinced, be less than the cost of providing outdoor relief. Mr. Davin Mr. Davin Mr. Davin: What are the approximate figures? Mr. Lemass Mr. Lemass 1133 Mr. Lemass: I cannot give the approximate figures. The scheme has not been in operation, and we can only make up our minds upon our own calculations as to what the results of the various provisions will be. My conclusion is that the abolition of the residence qualification [1133] will increase the drift of the unemployed towards Dublin. People who might come to Dublin for the purpose of seeking employment here are prevented by the prospect of being here a considerable time without getting work, but if the residence qualification is abolished they will come knowing that if they cannot get work immediately they can get outdoor relief—— Mr. Morrissey Mr. Morrissey Mr. Morrissey: They can get that at home. Mr. Lemass Mr. Lemass Mr. Lemass: Yes, but they cannot get employment at home. There is no doubt that though there is considerable unemployment in Dublin there is more employment in Dublin than in the country, and the person who cannot get work in the country may get employment in Dublin. There is more employment here, and the destitute person will feel that there is some prospect of improving his position in Dublin and that there is no prospect in the rural area in which he is resident, and as he can get outdoor relief in Dublin as he can at home he will come to Dublin and take the chance of getting any work that may be available. Deputy Morrissey was wrong in his interpretation of the Bill when he said it proposed to send a person with less than two years' residence qualification back to the area he came from. There is no such proposal in the Bill. Mr. Morrissey Mr. Morrissey Mr. Morrissey: What is the proposal? Mr. Lemass Mr. Lemass Mr. Lemass: It is to send that person at the ratepayers' expense to any place where he can get work. As far as I can make out, he can be sent to any union area in the country. Mr. Davin Mr. Davin Mr. Davin: Or give him indoor relief. Mr. Lemass Mr. Lemass Mr. Lemass: He can get indoor relief, otherwise. Mr. Davin Mr. Davin Mr. Davin: Which would prevent him from getting a job. Mr. Lemass Mr. Lemass 1134 [1134] Mr. Lemass: There is a case to be made for outdoor relief in preference to indoor relief from a theoretical point of view, but this Bill imposes a substantial burden upon the ratepayers of Dublin. so much so that one of its effects will be to increase the number of unemployed, as there are struggling industries that may go under as a result of this burden, and new industries which might otherwise be started will not be started because of the high rates that will prevail. Let us consider that aspect of the question. The burden will be very heavy. I do not agree with Deputy Byrne that the ratepayers are opposed to the Bill. I think the general attitude in Dublin amongst the ratepayers is that there is the duty to provide for the destitute poor, and that though the burden will be very heavy they would like to meet that burden, and they do not want to shirk their obvious duty to the destitute poor. It is obviously in the national interest that the burden should not be unduly increased, and it would, I think, be unduly increased if the residence qualification was abolished, not merely because there will be that drift of the unemployed towards Dublin for the purpose of getting relief out of the rates, but also because the whole work of the scheme will be impeded by its deletion. As I said in the beginning, I am not at all sure that the residential qualification will prove workable, but there should be some means of checking any such tendency on the part of the unemployed, destitute poor throughout the country gravitating to Dublin for the purpose of seeking work, knowing that while they are looking for it they will be maintained out of the rates in Dublin. I think that the residential qualification of two years is fair, because they can get institutional relief or get back to some place where they can get employment. The ratepayers are not shirking their duty to the poor. They are devising a method to meet that duty which will make the burden to themselves lighter in consequence. Mr. Davin Mr. Davin 1135 [1135] Mr. Davin: Deputy Byrne claims to be the eloquent spokesman of the poor down-and-out shopkeeper, the poor fellow who can buy potatoes at threepence per stone from a countryman and sell them at tenpence per stone. The poor down-and-out shopkeeper passes on this and every other charge to the persons who buy in his shop. Deputy Byrne admitted that he is always willing to welcome any person coming into his shop, even those who come from the country, to buy anything which he is in a position to sell so long as he gets a reasonable return. I suggest that if he is prepared to take money from a countryman who buys what he has to sell, he should take the risk involved in having people coming to the city to get employment and subsequently losing it. He should shoulder the responsibility which will save that individual from starvation. Deputy Lemass made a far better case in support of the Bill than the Minister attempted to make, but neither the Minister nor Deputy Lemass, unlike the Chambers of Commerce, the “Irish Independent” and other newspapers, which are bawling and groaning about this Bill, gave us anything like reliable estimates as to the cost of the Bill. I want to know from the Minister what would be the charge which, in the ordinary course, would fall on the Dublin city and county ratepayers by leaving out the two years' residence qualification and what would be saved to those ratepayers by the inclusion of that qualification. I think that we should have figures from the Minister, as I am not, and apparently Deputy Lemass is not, disposed to accept the figures which have been floating around from the Chamber of Commerce and other bodies which represent nobody. General Mulcahy General Mulcahy General Mulcahy: Would the Deputy undertake to give an estimate as to the extent of the influx there might be from the country if you gave relief to the able-bodied poor without a residential qualification? Mr. Davin Mr. Davin 1136 [1136] Mr. Davin: The Minister has all the information to answer that. General Mulcahy General Mulcahy General Mulcahy: I am not a prophet. Mr. Davin Mr. Davin Mr. Davin: I am asking a question, which I am entitled to ask, from the only person who can, if anybody can, produce reliable figures. General Mulcahy General Mulcahy General Mulcahy: Surely it is a question to which the Deputy does not expect an answer. Is it not purely a rhetorical question? Mr. Davin Mr. Davin Mr. Davin: Like many Irishmen, the Minister answers a question by asking another and thereby evading it. General Mulcahy General Mulcahy General Mulcahy: Does the Deputy suggest that I am paid for prophesying what the influx of the unemployed into Dublin would be if we introduced a Bill to give relief to everybody who is destitute and unemployed without a residential qualification? Mr. Davin Mr. Davin Mr. Davin: I will leave the Minister where he has left me—in the dark. Mr. Byrne Mr. Byrne Mr. Byrne: You are in the dark already. Mr. Davin Mr. Davin 1137 Mr. Davin: We are looking for light, and I am willing to accept information from the eloquent spokesman of the poor down-and-out shopkeeper. Deputy Lemass contradicted himself in his enthusiasm, I suppose, for the measure. I agree that it is right and proper for Deputies O'Kelly and Lemass to shout and bawl as much as they can against the Bill, but what about Deputy Boland or Deputy Sheehy from Tipperary? What have they to say on this matter? Are they in agreement with the Front Bench shadow Ministers in backing the Government in support of this measure? That is a coalition which we sometimes see in this House—the Minister for Local Government and the shadow Minister for Local Government backing each other in building a wall to [1137] divide the rich from the poor, but not in building a wall to keep out of the city those who have money to buy anything from the shopkeepers. Deputy Lemass stated that the drift towards the city is a drift of the unemployed, and he went on to say that it is a drift of people who come to the city to take up employment and who subsequently become destitute and unemployed. Which is it? Mr. Lemass Mr. Lemass Mr. Lemass: Neither. Mr. Davin Mr. Davin Mr. Davin: I suggest that there is such a thing in this country as movable occupations and nobody knows that better than Deputy Good. Deputy Good and people in his line of business, in the building trade, often induce men, such as plasterers, carpenters, and bricklayers, to come from the country in the hope of getting permanent employment in the city building trades. Deputy Good and others who are similarly circumstanced get people to leave their homes, such as they are, in the country on the assumption that they will get permanent employment here, but these people subsequently find themselves out of work without any home to which they can return. That often happens in the building trade. There are many operatives walking around the city who came to Dublin some years ago in the hope that the work which they got would be permanent. Deputy Good suggests that they should be shifted back or given indoor relief which might possibly prevent them from getting any employment that might be going. Deputy Byrne was suffering from an elastic imagination when he suggested that between 40,000 and 50,000 of National Army men were thrown on the city when they were demobilised. Does Deputy Byrne know that the strength of the National Army never exceeded the figure of 52,000? I suggest that he is suffering from an elastic imagination when he says that 40,000 of them were thrown on the ratepayers of the city. Mr. Byrne Mr. Byrne Mr. Byrne: I am safe in saying that 40,000 of them remained in Dublin. Mr. Davin Mr. Davin 1138 [1138] Mr. Davin: The present Minister for Local Government was Minister for Defence when the National Army was at its height, and I am sure that he is in a position to tell his colleague in the representation of North City that there were never 40,000 Army men stationed in Dublin. Deputy Colohan knows that very well, because a big percentage of them were stationed at Cork, or rather at the Curragh. What I meant to say was that a good number of them came from Cork, but were stationed at the Curragh. It is quite true that the Dublin ratepayers are actually living on the fat of the land. Any wealth or extravagance that one can see in the country to-day is to be seen in the principal streets of the city. Those who make money out of the people who work on the land are spending it in the city upon themselves, but apparently they are not able to do anything for the down-and-out people who may come from the country to seek employment here and become destitute. Mr. J.J. Byrne Mr. J.J. Byrne Mr. J.J. Byrne: Do the people who come from the country not get value for their money? Mr. Lemass Mr. Lemass Mr. Lemass: I would like to ask Deputy Davin how he would put the burden on those who are living wastefully, as he suggests, and not on the poorer classes who have to pay rates. Mr. Davin Mr. Davin Mr. Davin: I sympathise with Deputy Lemass as to the results of the measure, but if Deputy Lemass will, as the Minister will not, give us some reliable figures which will go to show what is the present cost, supposing it were administered properly, of giving relief to the destitute poor in the city without the inclusion of this residential qualification clause, and with it, then we will be in a position to know where we are. Mr. Briscoe Mr. Briscoe 1139 Mr. Briscoe: I must say that I am not at all in sympathy with a residential clause in the administration of relief, but one must view this matter from all angles, and I have sympathy with the Dublin ratepayers [1139] who are being asked to shoulder the burden of the whole country. If Deputy Everett was correct in his contention, in introducing the amendment, it would indicate that at the present time in Dublin City there must be a tremendous number of destitute poor who are under two years in the city. I wish to disagree with Deputy Everett on that, and I am satisfied that the number who would be affected at the present time by the residential clause is not so very big. None of us has any figures and none of us can say how many will be affected by the residential clause. I am prepared to say, as a result of an investigation that I have been trying to make over the week-end, that the number of destitute poor from the country will not be so great, as distinct from the poor in Dublin itself. I think that Deputy Lemass is quite right in saying that, if this residential clause was not inserted in the Bill, we might find ourselves in Dublin called upon to shoulder the burden of the nation, and we are not prepared to do that. The Government will not solve the unemployment question as a national problem, and certainly it cannot be expected that Dublin City itself should take the whole burden on its shoulders. 1140 The figures which Deputy Davin asked for would certainly be interesting, but we cannot get these figures, and I think it is a waste of time for Deputy Davin and Deputy Byrne to be haranguing each other as to what happened the demobilised members of the National Army, when we know that if the whole 52,000 had been disbanded in Dublin and remained here, their maintenance would be on the shoulders of the ratepayers here, according to this Bill, because it is over two years since disbandment took place. We are trying to give relief to those who require it. The position is that Dublin will have to shoulder a big burden, but it cannot be expected that even the shopkeepers whom Deputy Byrne and Deputy Davin spoke about should be compelled to close up altogether to pay for the [1140] maintenance of the destitute poor from country districts. There is no question that if this residential clause were not inserted we in Dublin City and County would find ourselves called upon to provide for the poor of the whole Twenty-six Counties. I am rather reluctant to find myself in the position of differentiating at all as to whether the destitute poor come from Dublin or from the country, but I feel I have a responsibility to the constituents of Dublin City, and I must in the circumstances support the residential clause. Mr. Colohan Mr. Colohan Mr. Colohan: I rise to support the amendment moved by Deputy Everett. The residential clause of two years, as set out in the Bill, is a two-edged weapon. We could use it with effect in the different counties outside Dublin, especially in county Kildare. A lot of the men demobilised from the National Army are Dublin men. There are men from other counties also, and when they are demobilised from the Curragh, they remain hanging round the county, and we have to give them assistance. I want to make it quite clear that I am not opposed to giving assistance to the destitute poor from any county, but I certainly believe that this clause which provides that in order to qualify for relief in Dublin a person must be resident here for two years is a retrograde step and a reactionary measure. Further, the word “workhouse” appears in the Bill. When we were setting up the county boards of health seven or eight years ago we were led to believe that we would not use the word “workhouse” in any enactment of this House, and we have it now in a Bill in 1929. At that time it was said that assistance was to be given outside the workhouse wherever possible. No one was to go into the county home, and if one mentioned the word “workhouse” at a meeting of the board of health, one would be asked to go outside. Here we are bringing back the old taint of pauperism again and demoralising our people. That comes from both sides of the House. 1141 1142 [1141] Unemployment has been caused in the rural areas in many cases because the people come to Dublin in buses to make their purchases. The Dublin shopkeepers get the benefit of the country money in that way, and the traders in our country towns are complaining. I can see if this amendment is defeated that our county board of health will get to work to see what they can do in the other direction, in sending people after demobilisation from the Army back to Dublin. The Minister for Local Government and Public Health was the Minister for Defence seven years ago, and I remember that as a member of the board of health and of Naas No. 1 District Council I had to try to get separation allowances for some of the men serving in the National Army. I found I had great difficulty in getting these allowances from the Minister. When I brought the matter up [1142] at a meeting of the board of health and urged that the Minister should provide for these people the Minister's officers would not allow the proceedings of that meeting to be published in the local papers. He threw the charge that should rightly attach to his Department on to the county board of health of Kildare. We have the exact opposite now in this case, and I say that it is grossly unfair to insert a two years' residence qualification to debar any man who may become destitute in the city from getting relief. It is not right to offer him the workhouse. I hope the Deputies on my left will reconsider the position and vote for the amendment. Question—“That the words `has been resident' stand part of the section”—put. The Committee divided: Tá, 108; Níl, 9. Tá
Níl
Tellers: Tá, Deputies Duggan and P.S. Doyle; Níl, Deputies Cassidy and Everett. Question declared carried. An Leas-Cheann Comhairle Patrick (Clare) Hogan An Leas-Cheann Comhairle took the Chair. Professor Thrift Professor Thrift Professor Thrift: I move:— In line 43 to delete the word “two” and substitute the word “three.” With nearly everyone who has spoken I too recognise the necessity for some exceptional measure for dealing with the destitution which is rife in the city. No one, I think, challenges that. But I and other Independent Deputies are very anxious that the exceptional measure that is taken shall not be of a character which is likely to intensify the very evil it seeks to alleviate. We do not want that anything should be done which is at all calculated to increase unemployment, which is really the cause of the destitution that is abroad, and we think that there is great danger—though the Minister has given us no figures— from the figures which have been supplied, that this Bill will actually tend to increase unemployment and not diminish it, because there will be such extra charges put upon those who are very little able to afford it that there will be a tendency amongst them to employ fewer people, and the more you increase the rates that that kind of person has to pay, the more likely it is that the effect will be that somebody is to be thrown out of employment. I admit that the amendment which I am advocating is likely to have a very small effect, but we believe that it will have some effect in diminishing the charge which is likely to fall upon the city of Dublin through this Bill. We cannot give the figures to show to what extent this may operate, but we think the tendency will be that to a certain extent it will diminish the total charges that fall upon the rates of the city, and that is the reason that I am suggesting that the residential qualification should be increased from the two years' period to the three years' period. 1145 With the exception of the Labour Deputies, I think almost everybody admits that Dublin is in an exceptional position, for to an exceptional degree the unemployed are drifting towards Dublin in the hope of getting employment, and therefore I think there is no point in the argument which says that the effect of this Bill is simply to put Dublin in the same position as the rest of the country. It cannot be so done. It can be done in the letter of the [1145] law. In fact, if you make the letter of the law the same for the city of Dublin as for the rest of the country it puts Dublin in an unfavourable position. That is our argument. Dublin is to bear a greater share, as a matter of fact, from the inevitable tendency of the unemployed to drift towards the city in the hope of getting employment. As Deputy Lemass showed definitely, that is the case; the unemployed are so drifting. In that connection I would quote a paragraph from the Report of the Commission on the Relief of the Sick and Destitute Poor. That is the paragraph in which Mr. MacLysaght, the Chairman of the Dublin Union Commissioners, recommended that persons with less than three years' residence in the Union area before admission to the institution should not be chargeable to the Union. He gave some figures which tended to show the fact to which I have referred. He submitted the following statistics as to the number of persons admitted to the Dublin workhouse through a period of nine months and who had not been three years resident in the city. The figures are:—Persons aged 60 and upwards, 59; persons aged 59 and over 40, 138; persons aged 40 and over 30, 156; and persons aged 30 and under, 513. You have, out of 866 persons, 513 who are under the age of 30, young people not resident three years in the city of Dublin and who had drifted into the workhouse, no doubt having come to the city in the hope of getting employment. 1146 Mr. MacLysaght suggested that, unless a person had been resident for at least three years in the city, the charge of maintaining him or her in the Union workhouse should not be made chargeable against the Dublin Union. Our contention is that Dublin is in an exceptional position and that therefore there is no point in making the letter of the law exactly the same for Dublin as for the rest of the country. If you do so you make the burden upon the city and county of Dublin unfavourably heavy. I am not able to give you figures which will tend to [1146] show the nature of the relief that would come by the substitution of the three for the two years' period. It would be difficult to get those figures. I do not anticipate that the difference would be serious, but it would be something and we think it is imperatively necessary that we should do everything we can to make the charge that is going to fall on the city ratepayers as small as possible. For that reason we are supporting certain amendments which will have the effect of somewhat diminishing the extent of that charge. I hope this amendment will commend itself to the House because we believe it will have some small effect on the total magnitude of the rate which will inevitably have to be borne by the city. We believe that that rate will be so big that it will make it increasingly difficult for many people to make both ends meet. General Mulcahy General Mulcahy General Mulcahy: Apropos of what Deputy Thrift says in regard to Mr. MacLysaght's evidence, that question was fully considered by the Commission at the time and their opinion was that even if it were thought advisable to put a residence restriction on persons coming to Dublin to seek institutional relief, that restriction should not be more than one year of residence. They pointed out the very great difficulties that had arisen elsewhere and that would arise here if there were a restriction like that. We propose a restriction here and we say in connection with it that we are not, by reason of putting on a restriction, denying relief; we are not preventing persons who have not any residence qualification from getting institutional relief. 1147 It has been pointed out that institutional relief is more costly than outdoor relief, and possibly there would be no reason for not giving outdoor relief as against institutional relief if there was not the point that the giving of outdoor relief direct would inevitably lure to the city persons who were unemployed. The type of relief that we propose here for persons who have not the necessary residential qualification [1147] is indoor relief or payment at the expense of the Guardians to return persons either to their own homes or to some other place where the Guardians would be persuaded that they can earn their own livings or get sustenance as apart from relief. To extend the residential period of two years to three years would make the period too big, in my opinion. I think if a person has been resident in the city for two years and has been in employment, perhaps casual employment, he is then faced with the problem of suggesting where he could go and get work. A man who has spent more than two years in the city is in a very different position from the point of view of possible connection with work elsewhere in the country, from a person who has been less than two years here, and I think the additional year between two and three is very material from that point of view. The two years gives us all we want in the matter of a safeguard, that is, protection against persons being lured into the city by the hope of employment, and more particularly in expectation that if they did not get employment they would get outdoor relief. I think two years is ample for that particular purpose, and that to extend it to three years would create a difficulty between two alternatives, between the alternative of accepting indoor relief or accepting a transfer to some other place where they expected to get work. I would like to say, a propos of the point raised, that this period applies to the able-bodied who have not a residential qualification, and does not apply to the infirm or sick who may lack a residential qualification, or to persons who may be entitled to what is called provisional relief. I submit to the House that two years' residential qualification is ample to provide for the cases we ought to provide for. Mr. Lemass Mr. Lemass 1148 Mr. Lemass: We intend to oppose this amendment for the same reason as Deputy Thrift stated he had in proposing it. We think it would increase the burden that will be [1148] placed on the Dublin ratepayers under the Bill. The case for the existence of a residential qualification, whether or not that residential qualification could be made effective, is that it will act as a deterrent against poor persons coming to Dublin in the hope of getting employment. But if any of those persons come to Dublin and get employment, or continue to reside here for a period of two years, I think we are safe in assuming that they will remain for three years; in other words, that they will look upon Dublin as their permanent residence, in which case, if they are destitute, we will have to provide for them either in the institutions or by outdoor relief. If we have to provide for them in institutions, the cost is going to be heavier than if we have to provide for them by outdoor relief. Therefore, we think it is much better that the local authority should be free to meet their cases by the method of outdoor relief in preference to the method of institutional relief. It will be cheaper and more efficient, and will not be subject to all the various objections to which institutional relief is subject. 1149 The point made by Deputy Thrift concerning the recommendation that only persons with three years' residence should receive institutional relief does not arise in connection with the amendment at all, because whether this amendment is passed or not, any person will be entitled to claim institutional relief, and I think it is right that they should be able to do so, because otherwise you would have the possibility of having persons in the city, for whom no provision of any kind could be made, who could in fact die of starvation before relief could be brought to them. There must be certain provision made to ensure that no one will die of starvation. I think that will be agreed. That provision can be more cheaply and more efficiently provided by outdoor relief than in institutions. If we have provided for the difficulty which the absence of a residential qualification would involve, by having two years' residential [1149] qualification in the Bill, then we can afford, and in fact we would prefer to give outdoor relief to those in need of relief in preference to institutional relief. I think the Deputy would be well advised to withdraw the amendment. Professor Thrift Professor Thrift Professor Thrift: I do not admit at all that Deputy Lemass is right in his view as to the way this would work out. I am quite sure he is wrong. I do not think he surveyed the situation rightly. If it were the case that everybody having somewhere between two and three years' residence in the city were to go into the workhouse instead of obtaining outdoor relief, no doubt it would be more expensive. But we know quite well that that is not what happens. There are various other ways by which these people get assistance, and by this Bill we shall very largely remove the tremendous strain that has been put on philanthropic institutions. That will be to a very large extent taken out of their hands. I had definitely in mind that by extending the limit a certain distance you would relieve those institutions of quite a perceptible amount of the work which they have done in the past, and for which they are supported by benevolent people's subscriptions, and I do not think that would be a wise thing to do. I recognise that there is not the slightest use in pressing the amendment against the united will of the Ministerial side and the Fianna Fáil side. However, I am still convinced that if this amendment were accepted it would relieve the burden to some small extent. I cannot give figures, and, under the circumstances, I ask the leave of the House to withdraw the amendment. Amendment, by leave, withdrawn. Mr. Lemass Mr. Lemass Mr. Lemass: I would be much more opposed to the amendment following Deputy Thrift's second speech than I was after his first one. Mr. Good Mr. Good 1150 Mr. Good: I will not move my amendment No. 3 at this stage. I will consider it after a decision is taken on Section 3, and if necessary [1150] I can bring it forward on the next stage. Mr. J.X. Murphy Mr. J.X. Murphy Mr. J.X. Murphy: I move:— To add at the end of the section the following proviso:— “and provided always that the expenses incurred by such relief shall not exceed the amount that would be raised by a rate not exceeding three shillings in the pound on the corresponding area of charge.” A good deal of what I might have said in support of this amendment has already really been said by Deputy Lemass, Deputy Briscoe and Deputy Thrift. We all agree that Dublin is in a very exceptional position as regards other large centres, and Deputy Lemass and Deputy Briscoe especially stressed the point that whatever increase there is in the rates in order to meet this relief for the poor, which we all admit is right, will tell very heavily against certain businesses and industries in Dublin, and perhaps outside it, and produce unemployment. My idea is that we should not give a blank cheque to those who are going to administer the relief. It has been stated in various newpapers, and at meetings, that the relief may mean anything from 2/- to 5/- in the £ in any one year. We have had nothing definite from the Minister—perhaps he is not able to give us anything definite—but what I suggest is that the rates should not be increased by more than a maximum of three shillings in any one year, and if the amount produced by these three shillings is not sufficient to afford the relief contemplated in the Bill, those who administer the relief should cut their clothes according to their cloth. or else that the Minister should supplement the amount raised by some contribution from Government funds. There is really nothing more that I can say. I think Deputy Lemass put it very clearly as to the effect that this may have on industries, and I would ask the Minister to consider seriously fixing the maximum of three shillings. Mr. T. Murphy Mr. T. Murphy 1151 [1151] Mr. T. Murphy: I am rather surprised that this amendment should appear on the Paper at all, because it seems to me to be in direct conflict with the whole principle of the Bill. I have had some experience of home assistance as administered by other boards, and I cannot see how the people who will be entrusted with the administration of this Bill can be asked to differentiate between applicants for home assistance. I take it that the principle of the Bill is to relieve the destitute, and I cannot see any case whatever for putting a limit to the amount and to the number of cases that are to be dealt with. If it is a question of getting the Minister to contribute a certain amount to the fund which will be available for this purpose, that is another matter, but from what appears on the face of the amendment it seems to me to be undesirable, and I ask the House to reject it. Mr. Lemass Mr. Lemass 1152 Mr. Lemass: In case any confusion may have been created by Deputy J. X. Murphy's remarks, let me say that I intend to oppose this amendment. Despite the burden the Bill places upon the citizens of Dublin, they should be asked to meet the cost of providing relief for the destitute poor, and if Deputy Murphy's amendment were in operation it would result in a certain number of the destitute poor being unable to secure relief. I take it that the amount which a three-shillings rate would bring in would be expended, as long as it would last, upon the relief of the able-bodied poor, and as soon as it was exhausted no further relief could be given until the next year, when a further amount would be realised by another three shillings rate. That would mean that towards the end of each financial year there would be a certain number of destitute poor who would be unable to get relief. If we are going to put this burden upon the ratepayers, let us put it in such a way that we will not appear to be hoodwinking the destitute poor. It seems to me that if we pass this Bill, while at the same time strictly limiting the [1152] amount which can be spent under it, we are, in fact, hoodwinking those who are to receive relief under it. Deputy Murphy indicated that it more money were needed it might be provided by the Minister for Finance out of State funds. But if moneys are provided by the Minister for Finance out of State funds, this amendment is not necessary. Certainly, I would like to hear the Minister for Finance promising to supply the money before the amendment was even moved. I want to put this point to the Deputy, that if the money comes from the Exchequer to the Corporation as a grant-in-aid of relief, the amount which the Corporation will be required to levy off the rates in order to supplement that sum will be fixed by them, and this amendment will certainly not be necessary at all, because obviously they will not strike a rate higher than three shillings if it is not necessary. If the money does not come from the Central Fund, or from any other source, then the burden must be placed upon the ratepayers. Personally, I hope that some means will be devised for making the burden sit as lightly as possible on the shoulders of the ratepayers, but if that means cannot be devised the burden will have to be placed there. If this amendment were passed the problem would be dealt with only in a partial manner by giving relief to one section of the able-bodied poor, and making it impossible to give relief to another section. Mr. Byrne Mr. Byrne 1153 Mr. Byrne: The amendment has one advantage at least: it will show the House the magnitude of the problem that will confront the Commissioners in administering this Bill. I understand that a penny in the £ on the rates of Dublin produces something like £6,000, and three shillings in the £ would produce a sum amounting to £216,000. Deputy Murphy wants to fix a limit to what this Bill will commit the city of Dublin to, and we now have the official Opposition committed to the principle that we should fix no limit to the amount which must be paid by [1153] the ratepayers under this Bill. I think that at least it is a good thing to have that principle appearing on the records of this House, and I hope that when the representatives of Dublin City in that Party face their constituents again their action in connection with this Bill will be carefully considered by those who have the best interests of Dublin City at heart. It has been stated here to-day that the commercial community of this city are reaping fortunes under existing conditions. That statement was made without a scintilla of evidence produced to support it. It was, in fact, an utterly untrue statement. Anybody who looks at the balance sheets of business firms in this city will be aware that the maximum dividends paid are about ten per cent., that the greater number of them are unable to pay two and a half per cent., and that a very large number are unable to pay any dividend at all. Mr. Allen Mr. Allen Mr. Allen: For income tax purposes two sets of books. Mr. Byrne Mr. Byrne Mr. Byrne: My friend from the country wants to be witty at my expense, but these are things about which he knows nothing whatever, and they are things with which I am dealing every day of my life. I also want to make it perfectly clear that another statement made by members of the Labour Party has no foundation in fact. They stated that this burden can be passed on by the commercial community to the consumers in extra prices for the goods which they sell. I wonder if they have any idea of what competition there is at the present moment in the city of Dublin for the limited volume of trade that is available. I wonder if they know that firms established in this city for over a century are unable to pay any dividends at all. Do they realise that many firms, in order to keep afloat, are drawing substantially on their reserves? Mr. Corish Mr. Corish Mr. Corish: The destitute poor have no reserves. Mr. Byrne Mr. Byrne 1154 [1154] Mr. Byrne: As I have stated on more than one occasion, the ratepayers of Dublin are ready and willing to foot the bill for the destitute poor of the city, but we are not, as we are asked in this Bill, ready to accept responsibilities for which there is no right or title. It has been said by some of the most serious speakers in this House that there is no doubt whatever that this Bill will lead to unemployment. I believe that there are certain large firms here which, when this Bill becomes law, may have to face an increase in their rates ranging from £300 to £500 a year. I know that some of these firms are competing against English firms, that they are in a very bad way of business, being able to pay no dividends whatever, and being anxious, if possible, to transfer their businesses to other hands. That is what is involved in the principle of the Bill. It requires a business man to understand these things, and those are the real facts, if the House wants to have them and wants to consider the net effect which this Bill will have upon the city. There is scarcely a shopkeeper in the city who will not be faced with an increase in his rates of from £20 to £30 a year. I can speak for a large number of the shopkeepers of Dublin, and I know that the greater portion of them are very hard pushed to meet the rates at all, even at 14/8 in the £. If the rates go up to something like 19/6 or 20/- in the £, what will become of the families of the smaller shopkeepers? Have they not got a claim upon the consideration of this House? Are they not entitled to consideration? I think that Deputies ought to take a wide and a broad view of this matter and endeavour to do what is best, not alone for the destitute poor of the city, but what is best in the interest of all the citizens. 1155 It has been pointed out by many Deputies that this will have repercussions upon industries set up in this country. In that respect the Labour Party is the most irresponsible Party that one could meet They never take into consideration [1155] how the bill is to be met. It means nothing to them where the money is to be found. That is one fault I have always to find with the Labour Party in this House—their tendency to commit the nation to anything and to let the men in authority and responsibility find the money and foot the bill. General Mulcahy General Mulcahy 1156 General Mulcahy: I am opposing this amendment. The question has been raised from time to time as to what burden this measure is going to place on the city and the county. All kinds of figures have been talked of. When figures are mentioned they can be multiplied and increased and translated into rates and then the rates multiplied and increased. There has been generally a volume of criticism based on what are alleged to be the possibilities of this Bill that would suggest that Dublin was not a place where people ought to invest their capital. The whole of that is very unfounded. I am asked whether I will accept the estimate that has been publicly given by the Dublin City Commissioners that in certain circumstances the probable cost of this will be an additional £200,000 a year. My answer is, I do not accept that. The amount spent during 1927 on outdoor relief in the Dublin Union, that is, that part of the city and county taking in the city proper— Rathmines, Pembroke, the North Dublin Rural District, the South Dublin Rural District, and Celbridge—was £99,607, and that £99,000 included £11,000 spent on special relief under what is known as Section 13. In the year ended March, 1928, the total amount spent was £86,050, including £4,500 special relief. The amount of money spent in the year ended March, 1929, was £88,538, including £1,280 on special relief; and the estimate this year, including a certain amount on special relief is £93,000. I admit the Commissioners will expect to exceed that estimate, but these are the figures for the whole area covered by the present Dublin Union for [1156] ordinary outdoor relief for the last three years, and the figures that were estimated at the beginning of this year. I am asked to believe that because relief is extended to the able-bodied that an amount of £200,000 additional is going to be spent upon the additional class of relief. My answer is, I do not believe it. And in the face of the five shillings and the six shillings and all that we are quoted as falling upon the unfortunate ratepayers of the city of Dublin, I say that even if the £200,000 fell upon the area of Dublin, Rathmines and Pembroke, it would be less than 2/9 in the £ in the rates for a full year. Mr. Good Mr. Good Mr. Good: If the Minister would allow me to interrupt, it is agreed, I think, that the coming rates will have to cover a much larger period than one year. They will have to cover a period of eighteen months. General Mulcahy General Mulcahy General Mulcahy: I said for a full year something less than 2/9 for £200,000, which I do not believe. So that assume that this Bill comes into operation on 1st December and that you run four months, and assume, as the calculation of £200,000 has been made on an expenditure running normally month for month without any fluctuation over 12 months, that one-third of it is going in addition to fall, it gives you, to your 2/9, an additional 1/3. It gives you 4/- in special circumstances, assuming that the burden is going to fall on the city, which, personally, I do not believe. Deputies want exact figures. I cannot give you exact figures, but I can say that, with a very considerable sense of responsibility in the matter, I do not believe that the expenditure on this particular class of relief in the city, if it is administered in the way it ought to be administered, is going to be more than twice what the expenditure on ordinary relief has been for the last few years over Rathmines, Pembroke, Dublin, the North Rural District of Dublin, the South Rural District and Celbridge. Mr. Lemass Mr. Lemass 1157 [1157] Mr. Lemass: Would the Minister have any estimate as to the number of additional persons who would become eligible for outdoor relief under this Bill? General Mulcahy General Mulcahy General Mulcahy: The number estimated is that the same number will become eligible as are being treated for outdoor relief at present. Mr. Lemass Mr. Lemass Mr. Lemass: Then the number will be doubled. General Mulcahy General Mulcahy General Mulcahy: Deputies will understand how difficult it is even for a City Commissioner who may be close up to the situation to arrive at a figure of the unemployed and to say with regard to a figure like this particular 3/-, that fifty per cent. of this expenditure should fall over the whole State. If you put up a figure of three shillings here, you put up a figure to be aimed at for this particular class of expenditure, not only here in the city of Dublin but in Limerick, Cork, Mayo, Donegal and other counties where this particular class of relief can be given. As I say, it is absolutely unnecessary. There is only one way, in the present circumstances, to find out what is the true problem of this nature in the city and to prevent extravagant expenditure for whatever problem there may be. That is proper and effective administration. If we here and ratepayers in the city of Dublin are frightened by expressions of one kind or another and are driven to run away from the problem instead of facing it up and saying “this is a problem which if it is serious will require our serious attention,” it is a serious matter. 1158 The city may not be able to bear a rate of 3/- in normal circumstances but there is only one way of facing the problem and to prevent it growing unnecessarily and that is setting out with a determination that this matter is going to be looked at thoroughly by an efficiently laid out scheme of administration and that such relief as requires to be given will be given but will be given by an effective machine of administration. [1158] I submit that the arrangements which will be made under this Bill will be the most perfect that can be made for the administration of this particular class of relief. They will be more perfect than any other class of machinery that exists in any other part of the country at the present time, and we ought to have confidence in that machinery. At any rate, I certainly would object very much that we should put up before the bodies responsible in Rathdown, Balrothery and the city of Dublin a suggestion that in any way we think this particular class of relief to the destitute able-bodied should or could in any circumstances reach 3/- in the £ in a normal year. I think it would be very inadvisable and it might be disastrous to put in this limit. There is a limit to which any body of people socially organised can bear a burden of this kind, but do not run the risk, when you are only finding out what exactly the problem is, of doing anything that is going to increase the rate. If you put in 3/- I submit you are going to increase the burden for yourselves and probably for other persons. Mr. G. Boland Mr. G. Boland Mr. G. Boland: Could the Minister tell us what proportion of this rate would fall on business people as against ordinary householders? I have been informed that the bigger end of it will have to be borne by the ordinary householders. If that is so, I am not in favour of this amendment. I heard Deputy Good, Deputy Byrne and other persons talking as if the shopkeepers and manufacturers would have to bear the lot. I would like if the Minister would give us figures to show what percentage will be borne by the ordinary householders. General Mulcahy General Mulcahy General Mulcahy: I have not the figures. I doubt if there has been a census of the city showing what portion of the rates is paid by business establishments and what portion by the ordinary persons. Mr. G. Boland Mr. G. Boland Mr. G. Boland: It would be very interesting. I believe that the poor people will have to pay most of it. Mr. S.T. O'Kelly Mr. S.T. O'Kelly 1159 1160 [1159] Mr. S.T. O'Kelly: Before Deputy Murphy speaks, I would like to say a few words. I think Deputy Murphy was not wise in putting down an amendment in these terms. First of all, I am sure that he would not like to be charged with the death of any person, if such person died of starvation as a result of there being no funds at the disposal of the Commissioner or whoever else may be in charge of the relief of the destitute poor, as a result of there being a limit to the amount that they could raise. I do not suggest that it would be possible that there would not be enough money if 3/- in the £1 were raised, but still something of that kind may happen if we adopt the principle of putting a limit to the amount that the Commissioners or other poor law authorities might raise for the relief of destitution. From that point of view, I do not think it was wise, although I do agree that he left himself a fairly wide margin in putting down 3/-. On the other hand, the complaint that I hear most against those who now deal with poor relief in Dublin is that they are parsimonious in their dealings with the poor and that they have cut down the services to the poor inside the Union institutions to an extent that was not known for long before their period of service. I think in that way the Commissioners or those in charge, are not likely to ask for more than they require for the relief of the poor this year or any other year. Our experience of them has been that they will certainly not err on the side of being over-generous. To put up then any limit at all, to my mind, would be bad, and to put up a limit like 3/- is bad from several points of view. It is putting up, as the Minister said, a limit that some authorities might be anxious to strive to reach, even though it would not be necessary. From every point of view, a limit is bad, because you must feed the poor. If we have any consciences, they must not be allowed to die of starvation. The Minister gave us probable figures for the year ending the 31st March, 1930. He estimates that in [1160] the Dublin Union area the cost will be £93,000, roughly. General Mulcahy General Mulcahy General Mulcahy: That was the estimate for ordinary relief made in the beginning of this year. Mr. O'Kelly Mr. O'Kelly Mr. O'Kelly: That is an estimate made in the beginning of this year by the Union authorities. If that sufficed, then it was strange that a gentleman who ought to know what he was talking about, one of the Commissioners for Dublin, Dr. O'Dwyer, could suggest, as he did, that this might mean a charge of anything from £200,000 to £250,000 additional. He did say that. Mr. Good Mr. Good Mr. Good: For the additional liability under this Bill. Mr. O'Kelly Mr. O'Kelly Mr. O'Kelly: The original liability. That was his statement as it appeared in the “Independent” of the 22nd October. He meant, of course, spread over the whole area. The Minister gave a figure that was certainly far and away below that. I wonder on what he bases his estimate. The Commissioner definitely stated that 5,000 additional cases would be put on the outdoor relief list, and that the total cost would be from £200,000 to £250,000 per annum. That is a fairly definite statement. If the Minister's figures are correct—and, after all, his officials ought to know, and I am sure do know what the expenditure has been in the past in this respect and what it is likely to be in the future—there is a wide discrepancy, and there was justification for alarm in the minds of those business people in Dublin who saw danger facing them as a result of the great additional cost that was foreshadowed by the Commissioners. But it does not speak highly, if the Commissioner's figures are incorrect, as the Minister would suggest, for the competence of the Commissioner that he would give an estimate of that kind and do what the Minister suggests—shake the confidence of the people of the city of Dublin by raising a scare of that kind. I take it that the Minister's figures are correct. General Mulcahy General Mulcahy 1161 [1161] General Mulcahy: May I intervene? I have not quoted a figure, but I have said that, taking it that the estimate for ordinary relief this year is £93,000, and that the figures I have quoted for the three years before were as I stated, I do not accept it that £200,000 is going to be spent in dealing with this additional class of relief. Mr. Briscoe Mr. Briscoe Mr. Briscoe: Could the Minister give us any figure as to the amount he thinks might be spent? General Mulcahy General Mulcahy General Mulcahy: I could not. Mr. Briscoe Mr. Briscoe Mr. Briscoe: How then can the Minister dispute it? General Mulcahy General Mulcahy General Mulcahy: I take it that the rates generally throughout the country, whether in cities or in the rural districts, have not risen anything like that proportion because of the putting in of this particular class of relief. It is impossible to say, because the local bodies do not keep their figures in that particular way, what proportion of the money spent on outdoor relief since 1924 has been spent on the able-bodied. I have been able to get the figures for the city of Limerick. Limerick is a city where a Commissioner had to be put in recently to deal with the Poor Law side of administration. In the city of Limerick the proportion of the total expenditure on outdoor relief last year spent on the able-bodied was 36 per cent. If the expenditure in Limerick on this particular class of relief has been a third of the total expenditure on outdoor relief. I cannot bring myself to see that it is going to be 60 or 70 per cent. of the total amount of money spent on general relief here in the city of Dublin. When I quoted a figure of £93,000 for this year I meant the whole of the Dublin Union —the rural parts and the city parts. Mr. Briscoe Mr. Briscoe Mr. Briscoe: The Minister is aware that the Shannon scheme is in Limerick and not in Dublin. General Mulcahy General Mulcahy 1162 General Mulcahy: I am aware that many people complain that the Shannon [1162] scheme, through bringing workmen into Limerick, has thrown a large number of able-bodied on the outdoor relief list in Limerick who would not otherwise be there, and that is part of the argument in connection with requiring a residential qualification in the city. Mr. Good Mr. Good Mr. Good: On this figure that the Minister has given, I should like some more information. The Minister has a Department behind him, and this House is entitled to expect an estimate from him. There is no use in the Minister saying that he cannot form an estimate. The Minister should be able to give the House an estimate of the probable expenditure. As I take it, the figure given by the Minister is his estimate of the charge which will fall on the city— that is, the additional burden— namely, 2/9 in the £. General Mulcahy General Mulcahy General Mulcahy: Assuming that the worst happens and that it costs £200,000. Mr. Good Mr. Good Mr. Good: Let us take it that the worst has happened. That is the Minister's estimate. General Mulcahy General Mulcahy General Mulcahy: It is certainly not my estimate that this additional relief is going to cost £200,000 in the city. I have said that more than once. Mr. Good Mr. Good Mr. Good: We have got the figure of 2/9 from the Minister. Let us take that basis to start with. It is quite clear that any deficiency in the estimate of this year will have to be a first charge on the rates for that particular purpose for next year. Rates are struck on 31st March, and we have four months of this year to go—four of the worst months of this year from the point of view of the burden on the rates. Whatever that amount will be, it will have to be added to the rates next year. That has been estimated at something like 50 per cent. of the rates, in view of the period we have to run through. The Minister has given us 2/9 as an outside figure. General Mulcahy General Mulcahy 1163 [1163] General Mulcahy: For a normal year. Mr. Good Mr. Good Mr. Good: We will not take an abnormal year—we will take a normal year. The figure is 2/9. Add 50 per cent. to that for the period of this year which is unexpired and for the burden accruing out of that period, which will be the first charge on the rates next year, and what do you get? Over 4/-. That is the Minister's estimate. We are told that the figures given by Dr. Dwyer are fallacious. Let me read his figures:— If this expenditure were a Union-at-large charge it would be about 2/6 to 3/- in the £ of an extra rate. If it were charged only on the city, it would be 3/6 to 4/6 in the £ extra on the city rate. In addition, any expenditure incurred and not provided for in any year must be paid in the following year. That is, if this relief were granted as from 1st October, 1929, the extra rate next year would be, if a Union-at-large charge, 3/9 to 4/6 in the £ and, if a city charge only, 5/3 to 6/9. Then he proceeds:— The conference called by the Minister for Local Government of representatives of the contributory bodies and the poor law authorities of Dublin has since recommended that the Dublin Union be divided into two districts—the city and urban district in one area and the rural portion of the Union in the other area. If such a proposal is adopted the increase in the city rates will be about 12½ per cent. more than if the entire cost were a Union-at-large charge. 1164 Dr. Dwyer says that if it is a Union-at-large charge it will be 2/6 to 3/- in the £. The Minister says that according to his estimate in a normal year it will be 2/9. There is not very much variation there. Then it is pointed out that you have to add the additional burden for the period of this year that will have to be included next year. That will bring it up, if it is a Union-at-large charge, to from 3/9 to 4/6. But, as it is not [1164] going to be a Union-at-large charge, as the area is to be restricted, you have to add to that 12½ per cent., and that would bring it up to 5/-. That will show the seriousness of the situation. This is the first time we have had a figure from the Minister, although we were entitled to have it at an earlier stage. I can only say, with regard to Deputy Murphy's amendment, that if the House refuses to put a limit of 3/- on the additional expenditure that this will put on the estimate for next year, that fact will create a further element of suspicion in the minds of the ratepayers that 3/- is inadequate to carry the burden. That is all I will say at present on the matter. Mr. J.X. Murphy Mr. J.X. Murphy Mr. J.X. Murphy: The Minister said that he was not in a position to give an estimate, or else that he would not give one—that he would only express an opinion. All that I can hope is that his opinion is correct and that Dr. Dwyer's estimate is wrong. Deputy O'Kelly and Deputy Lemass seemed to think that I was inhuman and that I would rather that the rates were not increased above 3/- and that the people should die of starvation. I do not really think they meant that. What I wanted to convey was that if the 3/- in the £ should not produce sufficient to keep up the scale of relief as mentioned by Dr. Dwyer, whoever administered the relief would have to cut down their scale so as to fit the amount raised by a 3/- rate. With regard to Deputy Boland and the small ratepayers, surely he is just as concerned with the small ratepayers as with the large business men. Any increase in the rates will fall very harshly on them. If we went into the Division Lobby on this amendment we would be a very small minority and there is not the slightest use in wasting time over it. However, I think the Minister should consider the matter, if he can, at a later stage. Mr. O'Kelly Mr. O'Kelly 1165 Mr. O'Kelly: Might I point out to Deputy Murphy as one more reason for my voting against this amendment limiting it to 3/-, that [1165] I have here the second Report of the Department of Local Government and Public Health for 1925-27, in which it is set out that the number of people in the Dublin Union in receipt of outdoor relief in 1925-6 was 6,873, and in 1926-7, 6,933? If we take the total of the Dublin Union, the Balrothery Union, and the Rathdown Union, all three of which will be concerned in this Bill, the total receiving relief in 1925-6 was 8,103, and, in the second period, 8,755. Even suppose the number has increased in the last year or two, it is probably not very much beyond 9,000. I take it that Deputy Murphy, in putting on this extra 3/-, would imply that the number that would secure relief would be trebled, because the total charge for outdoor relief for this particular purpose on the rates in the Dublin Union was 1/0¾, according to | |||||||||||||||||||||||