DÁIL ÉIREANN

Dé Máirt, 22 Meitheamh, 2021 Tuesday, 22nd June, 2021

RIAR NA hOIBRE ORDER PAPER

44 DÁIL ÉIREANN 1207

Dé Máirt, 22 Meitheamh, 2021 Tuesday, 22nd June, 2021

An Lárionad Coinbhinsiúin, Baile Átha Cliath Convention Centre Dublin

2 p.m.

ORD GNÓ ORDER OF BUSINESS

7. Tairiscint maidir le Ceadú beartaithe ag Dáil Éireann i ndáil leis an Ordú um Acht na nOllscoileanna Teicneolaíochta, 2018 (Alt 36) (An Lá Ceaptha), 2021 a tharchur chuig Comhchoiste. Motion re Referral to Joint Committee of proposed approval by Dáil Éireann of Technological Universities Act 2018 (Section 36) (Appointed Day) Order 2021.

28. Ráitis roimh an gcruinniú den Chomhairle Eorpach an 24-25 Meitheamh, de bhun Bhuan- Ordú 124. Statements pre European Council meeting of 24th-25th June, pursuant to Standing Order 124.

GNÓ COMHALTAÍ PRÍOBHÁIDEACHA PRIVATE MEMBERS' BUSINESS

168. Tairiscint maidir le hAois Phinsin an Stáit. Motion re The State Pension age.

P.T.O. 1208

I dTOSACH GNÓ PHOIBLÍ AT THE COMMENCEMENT OF PUBLIC BUSINESS Billí ón Seanad: Bills from the Seanad

1. An Bille um Thithíocht Inacmhainne, 2021 [Seanad] — An Dara Céim. Affordable Housing Bill 2021 [Seanad] — Second Stage.

2. An Bille Oideachais (Cairt Mac Léinn agus Tuismitheoirí), 2019 [Seanad] — An Dara Céim. Education (Student and Parent Charter) Bill 2019 [Seanad] — Second Stage.

3. An Bille um Chultúr agus Stair an Lucht Siúil san Oideachas, 2018 [Seanad] — An Dara Céim. Traveller Culture and History in Education Bill 2018 [Seanad] — Second Stage.

4. An Bille um Neamhord Speictream an Uathachais, 2017 [Seanad] — An Dara Céim. Autism Spectrum Disorder Bill 2017 [Seanad] — Second Stage.

Billí a thionscnamh: Initiation of Bills Tíolactha: Presented:

5. An Bille um Thionóntachtaí Cónaithe (Uimh. 2), 2021 — Ordú don Dara Céim. Residential Tenancies (No. 2) Bill 2021 — Order for Second Stage.

Bille dá ngairtear Acht d'fhadú na Bill entitled an Act to extend the tréimhse éigeandála a shonraítear san Acht emergency period specified in the Planning um Pleanáil agus Forbairt agus um and Development, and Residential Thionóntachtaí Cónaithe, 2020; chun na Tenancies, Act 2020; for that purpose to críche sin, do leasú an Achta sin; do amend that Act; to provide for the giving of dhéanamh socrú maidir le tréimhse fógra a minimum notice period by students; to íosta a bheidh le tabhairt ag mic léinn; do restrict payments required to be made by shrianadh íocaíochtaí is gá do thionóntaí a tenants; for those purposes to amend the dhéanamh; chun na gcríoch sin, do leasú an Residential Tenancies Act 2004; and to Achta um Thionóntachtaí Cónaithe, 2004; provide for matters connected therewith. agus do dhéanamh socrú i dtaobh nithe a bhaineann leis an méid sin.

—An tAire Tithíochta, Rialtais Áitiúil agus Oidhreachta.

6. An Bille um an Naoú Leasú is Tríocha ar an mBunreacht (Toghcháin Uachtaráin), 2019 — Ordú don Dara Céim. Thirty-ninth Amendment of the Constitution (Presidential Elections) Bill 2019 — Order for Second Stage. 1209

Bille dá ngairtear Acht chun an Bill entitled an Act to amend the Bunreacht a leasú. Constitution.

—An tAire Gnóthaí Eachtracha.

Fógraí Tairisceana: Notices of Motions

7. “Go ndéanfar an togra go gceadaíonn Dáil That the proposal that Dáil Éireann approves Éireann an tOrdú seo a leanas ina dhréacht: the following Order in draft: An tOrdú um Acht na nOllscoileanna Technological Universities Act 2018 Teicneolaíochta, 2018 (Alt 36) (An Lá (Section 36) (Appointed Day) Order Ceaptha), 2021, 2021, ar leagadh cóipeanna de ina dhréacht faoi copies of which have been laid in draft form bhráid Dháil Éireann an 11 Meitheamh, 2021, before Dáil Éireann on 11th June, 2021, be a tharchur chuig an gComhchoiste um referred to the Joint Committee on Education, Oideachas, Breisoideachas agus Further and Higher Education, Research, Ardoideachas, Taighde, Nuálaíocht agus Innovation and Science, in accordance with Eolaíocht, de réir Bhuan-Ordú 95(5), agus go Standing Order 95(5), which, not later than ndéanfaidh an Comhchoiste sin, tráth nach 7th July, 2021, shall send a message to the déanaí ná an 7 Iúil 2021, teachtaireacht a chur Dáil in the manner prescribed in Standing chuig an Dáil ar an modh a fhorordaítear i Order 101, and Standing Order 100(2) shall mBuan-Ordú 101, agus go mbeidh feidhm dá accordingly apply.” réir sin ag Buan-Ordú 100(2).

—Seán Mac Ambróis, Aire Stáit ag Roinn an Taoisigh.

8. “Go mbeartaíonn Dáil Éireann go leanfaidh That Dáil Éireann resolves that sections 2 to ailt 2 go 4, 6 go 12, 14 agus 17 den Acht um 4, 6 to 12, 14 and 17 of the Offences against Chiontaí in aghaidh an Stáit (Leasú), 1998 the State (Amendment) Act 1998 (No. 39 of (Uimh. 39 de 1998) i ngníomh ar feadh na 1998) shall continue in operation for the tréimhse dar tosach an 30 Meitheamh 2021 period beginning on 30th June, 2021 and agus dar críoch an 29 Meitheamh 2022. ending on 29th June, 2022.”

—An tAire Dlí agus Cirt.

9. “Go mbeartaíonn Dáil Éireann go leanfaidh That Dáil Éireann resolves that section 8 of alt 8 den Acht um Cheartas Coiriúil (Leasú), the Criminal Justice (Amendment) Act 2009 2009 (Uimh. 32 de 2009) i ngníomh ar feadh (No. 32 of 2009) shall continue in operation na tréimhse dar tosach an 30 Meitheamh 2021 for the period beginning on 30th June, 2021 agus dar críoch an 29 Meitheamh 2022. and ending on 29th June, 2022.”

—An tAire Dlí agus Cirt.

10. “Go gceadaíonn Dáil Éireann téarmaí an That Dáil Éireann approves the terms of the

P.T.O. 1210

Chomhaontaithe Chuimsithigh Eacnamaíoch Comprehensive Economic and Trade agus Trádála idir an tAontas Eorpach agus a Agreement between the European Union and Bhallstáit, de pháirt, agus Ceanada, den its Member States, of the one part, and pháirt eile, a síníodh an 30 Deireadh Canada, of the other part, which was signed on Fómhair 2016, ar leagadh cóip de faoi bhráid 30th October, 2016, a copy of which was laid Dháil Éireann an 2 Nollaig 2020. before Dáil Éireann on 2nd December, 2020.”

——An Tánaiste agus Aire Fiontar, Trádála agus Fostaíochta.

11. “Go gceadaíonn Dáil Éireann téarmaí an That Dáil Éireann approves the terms of the Chomhaontaithe Comhpháirtíochta Straitéisí Strategic Partnership Agreement between the idir an tAontas Eorpach agus a Bhallstáit, de European Union and its Member States, of pháirt, agus Ceanada, den pháirt eile, a the one part, and Canada, of the other part, síníodh sa Bhruiséil an 30 Deireadh Fómhair signed in Brussels on 30th October, 2016, a 2016, ar leagadh cóip de faoi bhráid Dháil copy of which was laid before Dáil Éireann Éireann an 3 Nollaig 2020. on 3rd December, 2020.”

—An tAire Gnóthaí Eachtracha.

12. “Go dtabharfaidh Dáil Éireann dá haire an That Dáil Éireann shall take note of the Tuarascáil ón gComhchoiste um Report of the Joint Committee on the Fhorfheidhmiú Chomhaontú Aoine an Implementation of the Good Friday Chéasta dar teideal ‘Tuarascáil i ndáil le Agreement entitled ‘Report in Relation to Fiosrúchán Breithiúnach faoi Dhúnmharú Pat Judicial Inquiry into the Murder of Pat Finucane’ ar leagadh cóipeanna di faoi bhráid Finucane’, copies of which were laid before Dháil Éireann an 2 Nollaig, 2020. Dáil Éireann on 2nd December, 2020.”

—Fergus O'Dowd, of the Joint Committee on the Implementation of the Good Friday Agreement. [1 December, 2020]

13. “Go dtugann Dáil Éireann dá haire an That Dáil Éireann shall take note of the Tuarascáil ón gComhchoiste um Iompar agus Report of the Joint Committee on Transport Líonraí Cumarsáide dar teideal and Communications Networks entitled ‘Saincheisteanna a théann i gcion ar thionscal ‘Issues affecting the aviation industry’, copies na heitlíochta’, ar leagadh cóipeanna di faoi of which were laid before Dáil Éireann on 9th bhráid Dháil Éireann an 9 Nollaig 2020. December, 2020.”

—Kieran O'Donnell, Cathaoirleach of the Joint Committee on Transport and Communications Networks. [15 December, 2020]

14. “Go dtabharfaidh Dáil Éireann dá haire an That Dáil Éireann shall take note of the Tuarascáil ón mBuanchoiste um Chuntais Report of the Standing Committee of Public Phoiblí dar teideal ‘Scrúdú ar Ráiteas Accounts entitled ‘Examination of NAMA’s Airgeadais na Gníomhaireachta um Bainistiú 2019 Financial Statement & C&AG Special 1211

Sócmhainní (GNBS), 2019 agus Tuarascáil Report 109’, copies of which were laid before Speisialta 109 ón Ard-Reachtaire Cuntas agus Dáil Éireann on 3rd December, 2020.” Ciste’, ar leagadh cóipeanna di faoi bhráid Dháil Éireann an 3 Nollaig 2020.

—Brian Stanley, Cathaoirleach of the Standing Committee of Public Accounts. [16 December, 2020]

15. “Go dtabharfaidh Dáil Éireann dá haire That Dáil Éireann shall take note of the an Tuarascáil ón gComhchoiste um Ghnóthaí Report of the Joint Committee on European an Aontais Eorpaigh dar teideal ‘Tograí Union Affairs entitled ‘Proposals for the maidir leis an gComhdháil ar Thodhchaí na Conference on the Future of Europe’, copies hEorpa’, ar leagadh cóipeanna di faoi bhráid of which were laid before Dáil Éireann on Dháil Éireann an 16 Nollaig 2020. 16th December, 2020.”

—Joe McHugh, Cathaoirleach of the Joint Committee on European Union Affairs. [17 December, 2020]

16. “Go dtabharfaidh Dáil Éireann dá haire an That Dáil Éireann shall take note of the Tuarascáil ón gComhchoiste um Oideachas, Report of the Joint Committee on Education, Breisoideachas agus Ardoideachas, Taighde, Further and Higher Education, Research, Nuálaíocht agus Eolaíocht dar teideal ‘An Innovation and Science entitled ‘Report on Tuarascáil maidir le Tionchar COVID-19 ar the Impact of COVID-19 on Primary and an mBunoideachas agus ar an Secondary Education’, copies of which were Meánoideachas’, ar leagadh cóipeanna di faoi laid before Dáil Éireann on 20th January, bhráid Dháil Éireann an 20 Eanáir 2021. 2021.”

—Paul Kehoe, Cathaoirleach of the Joint Committee on Education, Further and Higher Education, Research, Innovation and Science. [20 January, 2021]

17. “Go dtabharfaidh Dáil Éireann dá haire an That Dáil Éireann shall take note of the Tuarascáil ón mBuanchoiste um Chuntais Report of the Standing Committee of Public Phoiblí dar teideal ‘Scrúdú ar Thuarascáil Accounts entitled ‘Examination of C&AG Speisialta 110 ón Ard-Reachtaire Cuntas agus Special Report 110 – Nursing Homes Support Ciste – An Scéim um Thacaíocht Tithe Scheme (Fair Deal)’, copies of which were Banaltrais (Cothrom na Féinne)’, ar leagadh laid before Dáil Éireann on 22nd January, cóipeanna di faoi bhráid Dháil Éireann an 22 2021.” Eanáir 2021.

—Brian Stanley, Cathaoirleach of the Standing Committee of Public Accounts. [27 January, 2021]

P.T.O. 1212

18. “Go dtabharfaidh Dáil Éireann dá haire That Dáil Éireann shall take note of the an Tuarascáil ón mBuanchoiste um Chuntais Report of the Standing Committee of Public Phoiblí, dar teideal ‘Scrúdú ar na Cuntais Accounts entitled ‘Examination of the 2018 Leithreasa, 2018 agus 2019 i gcomhair Vóta and 2019 Appropriation Accounts for Vote 26 – Oideachas agus Scileanna’, ar leagadh 26 – Education and Skills’, copies of which cóipeanna di faoi bhráid Dháil Éireann an 12 were laid before Dáil Éireann on 12th Feabhra 2021. February, 2021.”

—Brian Stanley, Cathaoirleach of the Standing Committee of Public Accounts. [17 February, 2021]

19. “Go dtabharfaidh Dáil Éireann dá haire an That Dáil Éireann shall take note of the Tuarascáil ón mBuanchoiste um Chuntais Report of the Standing Committee of Public Phoiblí dar teideal ‘An Tuarascáil Bhliantúil Accounts entitled ‘Annual Report 2020’, 2020’, ar leagadh cóipeanna di faoi bhráid copies of which were laid before Dáil Éireann Dháil Éireann an 10 Márta 2021. on 10th March, 2021.”

—Brian Stanley, Cathaoirleach of the Standing Committee of Public Accounts. [11 March, 2021]

20. “Go dtabharfaidh Dáil Éireann dá haire an That Dáil Éireann shall take note of the Tuarascáil ón gComhchoiste um Ghnóthaí Report of the Joint Committee on Foreign Eachtracha agus Cosaint dar teideal ‘An Affairs and Defence entitled ‘Report on the Tuarascáil maidir le Dáileadh Vacsaíní Distribution of Covid-19 Vaccines to Covid-19 ar Thíortha atá i mbéal forbartha’, Developing Countries’, copies of which were ar leagadh cóipeanna di faoi bhráid Dháil laid before Dáil Éireann on 5th March, 2021.” Éireann an 5 Márta 2021.

—Charles Flanagan, Cathaoirleach of the Joint Committee on Foreign Affairs and Defence. [24 March, 2021]

21. “Go dtabharfaidh Dáil Éireann dá haire That Dáil Éireann shall take note of the an Tuarascáil ón mBuanchoiste um Chuntais Report of the Standing Committee of Public Phoiblí, dar teideal ‘Scrúdú ar Chuntais Accounts entitled ‘Examination of the Leithreasa na Roinne Caiteachais Phoiblí Department of Public Expenditure and agus Athchóirithe agus na Roinne Airgeadais Reform’s and the Department of Finance’s le haghaidh 2019 agus ar Nithe Airgeadais 2019 Appropriation Accounts and Related Gaolmhara’, ar leagadh cóipeanna di faoi Financial Matters’, copies of which were laid bhráid Dháil Éireann an 12 Aibreán 2021. before Dáil Éireann on 12th April, 2021.”

—Brian Stanley, Cathaoirleach of the Standing Committee of Public Accounts. [21 April, 2021] 1213

22. “Meastacháin i gcomhair Seirbhísí Poiblí Estimates for Public Services [2021]: [2021]: Vóta 32 — Fiontar, Trádáil agus Fostaíocht Vote 32 — Enterprise, Trade and (Meastachán Athbhreithnithe Breise). Employment (Further Revised Estimate). Go ndeonófar suim nach mó ná That a sum not exceeding €1,088,159,000 €1,088,159,000 chun íoctha an mhuirir a be granted to defray the charge which will thiocfaidh chun bheith iníoctha i rith na come in course of payment during the year bliana dar críoch an 31ú lá de Nollaig, 2021, ending on the 31st day of December, 2021, le haghaidh thuarastail agus chostais Oifig an for the salaries and expenses of the Office of Aire Fiontar, Trádála agus Fostaíochta, lena the Minister for Enterprise, Trade and n-áirítear seirbhísí áirithe atá faoi riaradh na Employment, including certain services hOifige sin, chun fóirdheontais agus deontais administered by that Office, for the payment áirithe a íoc agus chun deontais áirithe faoi of certain subsidies and grants and for the scéimeanna airgead-teoranta a íoc, agus go payment of certain grants under cash-limited ndeonófar suim nach mó ná €106,200,000 trí schemes and that a sum not exceeding leithreasaí nár caitheadh agus a bhféadfar a €106,200,000 be granted by way of the dtabhairt suas a iarchur faoi Alt 91 den Acht application for capital supply services of Airgeadais, 2004, a chur chun feidhme le unspent appropriations, the surrender of haghaidh seirbhísí soláthair chaipitiúil. which may be deferred under Section 91 of the Finance Act 2004. Vóta 33 — Turasóireacht, Cultúr, Ealaíona, Vote 33 — Tourism, Culture, Arts, Gaeltacht, Gaeltacht, Spórt agus Meáin (Meastachán Sport and Media (Revised Estimate). Athbhreithnithe). Go ndeonófar suim nach mó ná That a sum not exceeding €831,212,000 chun íoctha an mhuirir a €831,212,000 be granted to defray the charge thiocfaidh chun bheith iníoctha i rith na which will come in course of payment during bliana dar críoch an 31ú lá de Nollaig, 2021, the year ending on the 31st day of December, le haghaidh thuarastail agus chostais Oifig an 2021, for the salaries and expenses of the Aire Turasóireachta, Cultúir, Ealaíon, Office of the Minister for Tourism, Culture, Gaeltachta, Spóirt agus Meán, lena n-áirítear Arts, Gaeltacht, Sport and Media including seirbhísí áirithe atá faoi riaradh na hOifige certain services administered by that Office, sin, agus chun fóirdheontais agus deontais and for payment of certain subsidies and áirithe a íoc, agus go ndeonófar suim nach mó grants and that a sum not exceeding ná €16,892,000 trí leithreasaí nár caitheadh €16,892,000 be granted by way of the agus a bhféadfar a dtabhairt suas a iarchur application for capital supply services of faoi Alt 91 den Acht Airgeadais, 2004 a chur unspent appropriations, the surrender of chun feidhme le haghaidh seirbhísí soláthair which may be deferred under Section 91 of chaipitiúil. the Finance Act 2004. Vóta 42 — Forbairt Tuaithe agus Pobail Vote 42 — Rural and Community (Meastachán Athbhreithnithe Breise). Development (Further Revised Estimate).

Go ndeonófar suim nach mó ná That a sum not exceeding €308,000,000 be €308,000,000 chun íoctha an mhuirir a granted to defray the charge which will come thiocfaidh chun bheith iníoctha i rith na in course of payment during the year ending bliana dar críoch an 31ú lá de Nollaig, 2021, on the 31st day of December, 2021, for the le haghaidh thuarastail agus chostais Oifig an salaries and expenses of the Office of the Aire Forbartha Tuaithe agus Pobail, lena n- Minister for Rural and Community

P.T.O. 1214

áirítear seirbhísí áirithe atá faoi riaradh na Development including certain services hOifige sin agus chun deontais a íoc agus go administered by that Office and for the ndeonófar suim nach mó ná €13,180,000 trí payment of grants and that a sum not leithreasaí nár caitheadh agus a bhféadfar a exceeding €13,180,000 be granted by way of dtabhairt suas a iarchur faoi Alt 91 den Acht the application for capital supply services of Airgeadais, 2004, a chur chun feidhme le unspent appropriations, the surrender of haghaidh seirbhísí soláthair chaipitiúil. which may be deferred under Section 91 of the Finance Act 2004.”

—An tAire Caiteachais Phoiblí agus Athchóirithe.

23. “Go ndéanann Dáil Éireann: That Dáil Éireann: a thabhairt dá hAire go ndéanann an notes that the Joint Committee on Foreign Comhchoiste um Ghnóthaí Eachtracha agus Affairs and Defence: Cosaint: — an gníomh neamhdhleathach a rinne — condemns unequivocally the unlawful act údaráis na Bealarúise trí eitilt Ryanair by the Belarusian authorities of the idir an Ghréig agus an Liotuáin a interception of a Ryanair flight between idirghabháil Dé Domhnaigh an 23 Greece and Lithuania on Sunday 23rd Bealtaine, 2021 a cháineadh go soiléir; May, 2021; — an tsraith smachtbhannaí arna moladh ag — acknowledges the set of sanctions Comhairle an Aontais Eorpaigh (AE) proposed by the Council of the European mar fhreagairt ar an ngníomh Union (EU) in response to this unlawful neamhdhleathach seo a aithint; act; — a thathaint ar an gComhairle Eorpach — urges the European Council and agus ar an gCoimisiún Eorpach leanúint European Commission to continue to ar aghaidh le monatóireacht a dhéanamh monitor the situation in Belarus; ar chúrsaí sa Bhealarúis; — a iarraidh go scaoilfear saor Raman — calls for the unconditional release of Pratasevich agus Sofia Sapega gan Raman Pratasevich and Sofia Sapega and choinníollacha agus go dtabharfar for guarantees for their freedom of dearbhuithe maidir lena saoirse movement to be provided; and gluaiseachta; agus — a iarraidh ar an Aire Gnóthaí Eachtracha — calls on the Minister for Foreign Affairs a chinntiú go dtabharfar an cheist anuas a to ensure that the matter is raised at the luaithe is féidir ag Comhairle Slándála na earliest opportunity at the United Nations Náisiún Aontaithe agus ag Comhairle Security Council and at the EU Foreign Gnóthaí Eachtracha AE. Affairs Council.”

—Charles Flanagan, Cathaoirleach of the Joint Committee on Foreign Affairs and Defence. [27 May, 2021]

24. “Go dtabharfaidh Dáil Éireann dá haire an That Dáil Éireann shall take note of the Tuarascáil ón gComhchoiste um Dhlí agus Report of the Joint Committee on Justice Ceart dar teideal ‘An Tuarascáil maidir le entitled ‘Report on Victim’s Testimony in Fianaise Íospartaigh i gcásanna éignithe agus cases of rape and sexual assault’, copies of 1215 ionsaithe ghnéasaigh’, ar leagadh cóipeanna which were laid before Dáil Éireann on 11th di faoi bhráid Dháil Éireann an 11 June, 2021.” Meitheamh 2021.

—James Lawless, Cathaoirleach of the Joint Committee on Justice. [15 June, 2021]

25. “Go dtugann Dáil Éireann dá haire an That Dáil Éireann shall take note of the Tuarascáil ón gComhchoiste um Report of the Joint Committee on Agriculture Thalmhaíocht agus Muir dar teideal and the Marine entitled ‘Issues impacting the ‘Saincheisteanna a bhfuil tionchar acu ar Forestry Sector in Ireland,’ copies of which Earnáil na Foraoiseachta in Éirinn’, ar were laid before Dáil Éireann on 2nd March, leagadh cóipeanna di faoi bhráid Dháil 2021.” Éireann an 2 Márta 2021.

—Jackie Cahill, Cathaoirleach of the Joint Committee on Agriculture, Food and the Marine. [15 June, 2021]

26. “Go dtabharfaidh Dáil Éireann dá haire an That Dáil Éireann shall take note of the Tuarascáil ón Roghchoiste um Chuntais Report of the Select Committee of Public Phoiblí, dar teideal ‘Scrúdú ar an gCuntas Accounts entitled ‘Examination of the 2019 Leithreasa, 2019 i gcomhair Vóta 13 – Oifig Appropriation Account for Vote 13 – Office na nOibreacha Poiblí agus Nithe Airgeadais of Public Works and Related Financial Gaolmhara’, ar leagadh cóipeanna di faoi Matters’, copies of which were laid before bhráid Dháil Éireann an 28 Bealtaine 2021. Dáil Éireann on 28th May, 2021.”

—Brian Stanley, Cathaoirleach of the Standing Committee of Public Accounts. [16 June, 2021]

27. “Go gceadaíonn Dáil Éireann an tOrdú That Dáil Éireann approves the following seo a leanas ina dhréacht: Order in draft: An tOrdú um Acht na nOllscoileanna Technological Universities Act 2018 Teicneolaíochta, 2018 (Alt 36) (An Lá (Section 36) (Appointed Day) Order Ceaptha), 2021, 2021, ar leagadh cóipeanna de ina dhréacht faoi copies of which have been laid in draft form bhráid Dháil Éireann an 11 Meitheamh, 2021. before Dáil Éireann on 11th June, 2021.”

—An tAire Breisoideachais agus Ardoideachais, Taighde, Nuálaíochta agus Eolaíochta.

ORDUITHE AN LAE ORDERS OF THE DAY

P.T.O. 1216

28. Ráitis roimh an gcruinniú den Chomhairle Eorpach an 24-25 Meitheamh, de bhun Bhuan- Ordú 124. Statements pre European Council meeting of 24th-25th June, pursuant to Standing Order 124.

29. (l) An Bille um Dhíol Ticéad (Imeachtaí Cultúir, Siamsaíochta, Áineasa agus Spóirt), 2021 — Ordú don Tuarascáil. (a) Sale of Tickets (Cultural, Entertainment, Recreational and Sporting Events) Bill 2021 — Order for Report.

30. An Bille Aerloingseoireachta agus Aeriompair, 2020 — Ordú don Tuarascáil. Air Navigation and Transport Bill 2020 — Order for Report.

31. An Bille fán nGníomhaireacht um Fhorbairt Talún, 2021 — Ordú don Tuarascáil. Land Development Agency Bill 2021 — Order for Report.

32. Bille na dTeangacha Oifigiúla (Leasú), 2019 — Ordú don Tuarascáil. Official Languages (Amendment) Bill 2019 — Order for Report.

33. An Bille Cosanta (Leasú), 2020 — Ordú don Tuarascáil. Defence (Amendment) Bill 2020 — Order for Report.

34. An Bille Fórsaí Cosanta (Fianaise), 2019 — Ordú don Choiste. Defence Forces (Evidence) Bill 2019 — Order for Committee.

35. An Bille Craolacháin (Leasú), 2019 — Ordú don Choiste. Broadcasting (Amendment) Bill 2019 — Order for Committee.

36. An Bille um Shábháilteacht Othar (Teagmhais Sábháilteachta Othair Infhógartha), 2019 — Ordú don Choiste. Patient Safety (Notifiable Patient Safety Incidents) Bill 2019 — Order for Committee.

37. Tairiscintí Airgeadais ón Aire Airgeadais [2020] (Tairiscint 7, atógáil). Financial Motions by the Minister for Finance [2020] (Motion 7, resumed). 1217

GNÓ COMHALTAÍ PRÍOBHÁIDEACHA PRIVATE MEMBERS' BUSINESS Gnó a ordaíodh: Business ordered:

38. (l) An Bille um Stocaireacht a Rialáil (Fostaíocht Iar-Théarma mar Bhrústocaire), 2020 — An Dara Céim (vótáil a cuireadh siar) (a) Regulation of Lobbying (Post-Term Employment as Lobbyist) Bill 2020 — Second Stage (postponed division)

.

Leasú ar an Tairiscint don Dara Léamh (atógáil): Amendment to Motion for Second Reading (resumed):

1. To delete all words after “That” and substitute the following:

“Dáil Éireann: — recognises that the Department of Public Expenditure and Reform’s review of the Regulation of Lobbying Act 2015 has just concluded; and — resolves that the Regulation of Lobbying (Post-Term Employment as Lobbyist) Bill 2020 be deemed to be read a second time this day six months, to allow for a proposal for draft legislation to take account of the recommendations arising from that review to be brought forward.” —An tAire Caiteachais, Phoiblí agus Athchóirithe.

39. An Bille um Chleachtadh Tréidliachta (Leasú), 2021 — An Dara Céim. Veterinary Practice (Amendment) Bill 2021 — Second Stage.

—Jackie Cahill.

40. An Bille um Pleanáil agus Forbairt (Bearta Éigeandála Aeráide) (Leasú), 2021 — An Dara Céim. Planning and Development (Climate Emergency Measures) (Amendment) Bill 2021 — Second Stage.

—Bríd Smith, Gino Kenny, Richard Boyd Barrett, Paul Murphy.

41. An Bille um Pleanáil agus Forbairt (Leasú) (Ceannaitheoirí Céaduaire), 2021 — An Dara Céim. Planning and Development (Amendment) (First-Time Buyers) Bill 2021 — Second Stage.

—Paul McAuliffe.

42. An Bille um an Naoú Leasú is Tríocha ar an mBunreacht (Ceart chun Tithíochta), 2020

P.T.O. 1218

— Ordú don Choiste. Thirty-ninth Amendment of the Constitution (Right to Housing) Bill 2020 — Order for Committee.

—Richard Boyd Barrett, Gino Kenny, Bríd Smith.

43. An Bille um an Naoú Leasú is Tríocha ar an mBunreacht (An Ceart chun Teaghaise), 2020 — An Dara Céim. Thirty-ninth Amendment of the Constitution (Right to a Home) Bill 2020 — Second Stage.

—Eoin Ó Broin.

44. An Bille um Ghrúpa Athbhreithnithe an Idirnascaire Thuaidh-Theas, 2021 — An Dara Céim. North-South Interconnector Review Group Bill 2021 — Second Stage.

—Peadar Tóibín.

45. An Bille um Pleanáil agus Forbairt (Leasú) (Léasú Chuid V a Aisghairm), 2021 — Ordú don Choiste. Planning and Development (Amendment) (Repeal of Part V Leasing) Bill 2021 — Order for Committee.

—Cian O'Callaghan.

46. An Bille um Thairgeoirí a Rialáil, 2021 — An Dara Céim. Regulation of Tenderers Bill 2021 — Second Stage.

—Mairéad Farrell, Patricia Ryan.

47. An Bille um Íocaíochtaí Iomarcaíochta (Asleagan, Gearr-Am agus Seirbhís Inríofa a Ríomh), 2021 — An Dara Céim. Redundancy Payments (Lay-off, Short Time and Calculation of Reckonable Service) Bill 2021 — Second Stage.

—Louise O'Reilly.

48. An Bille um Iascach Oileáin (Ceadúnas Oidhreachta), 2017 — Ordú don Choiste. Island Fisheries (Heritage Licence) Bill 2017 — Order for Committee.

—Martin Kenny, .

49. Bille na bPinsean (Leasú) (Trédhearcacht i Muirir), 2021 — An Dara Céim. 1219

Pensions (Amendment) (Transparency in Charges) Bill 2021 — Second Stage.

—Ged Nash.

50. An Bille um an Dáil (Ionadaíocht Uile-Éireann), 2021 — An Dara Céim. Dáil (All-Ireland Representation) Bill 2021 — Second Stage.

—Peadar Tóibín.

51. An Bille um Fhiadhúlra (Leasú), 2021 — An Dara Céim. Wildlife (Amendment) Bill 2021 — Second Stage.

—Jennifer Whitmore.

52. An Bille um Thionóntachtaí Cónaithe (Cíosanna agus Cosaintí Eile do Mhic Léinn) (Covid-19), 2021 — Ordú don Choiste. Residential Tenancies (Student Rents and Other Protections) (Covid-19) Bill 2021 — Order for Committee.

—Eoin Ó Broin, Rose Conway-Walsh, Cian O'Callaghan, Aodhán Ó Ríordáin, Bríd Smith, Joan Collins.

53. An Bille um Pleanáil agus Forbairt (Leasú) (Uimh. 2), 2021 — An Dara Céim. Planning and Development (Amendment) (No. 2) Bill 2021 — Second Stage.

—Barry Cowen.

54. An Bille um Fhógraíocht Ar-Líne agus na Meáin Shóisialta (Trédhearcacht), 2017 — Ordú don Choiste. Online Advertising and Social Media (Transparency) Bill 2017 — Order for Committee.

—James Lawless.

55. An Bille um Bunachais Pórúcháin Madraí (Leasú), 2021 — An Dara Céim. Dog Breeding Establishments (Amendment) Bill 2021 — Second Stage.

—Peadar Tóibín, Noel Grealish, Seán Canney.

56. An Bille um Aitheantas aThabhairt do Cheardchumainn, 2021 — An Dara Céim. Trade Union Recognition Bill 2021 — Second Stage.

—Richard Boyd Barrett, Paul Murphy, Bríd Smith, Gino Kenny.

P.T.O. 1220

57. An Bille um Shaoire Bhreoiteachta agus um Shaoire do Thuismitheoirí (Covid-19), 2020 — Ordú don Choiste. Sick Leave and Parental Leave (Covid-19) Bill 2020 — Order for Committee.

.

58. An Bille Leasa Shóisialaigh (Ordú Íocaíochta) (Leasú), 2021 — An Dara Céim. Social Welfare (Payment Order) (Amendment) Bill 2021 — Second Stage.

—Claire Kerrane.

59. An Bille um Locadh ag Ospidéil, 2021 — An Dara Céim. Hospital Parking Bill 2021 — Second Stage.

—Peadar Tóibín, Cathal Berry.

60. An Bille um an Naoú Leasú is Tríocha ar an mBunreacht (Ceart Vótála ag Aois 16), 2021 — An Dara Céim. Thirty-ninth Amendment of the Constitution (Right to Vote at 16) Bill 2021 — Second Stage.

—Thomas Pringle.

61. An Bille um Thrácht ar Bhóithre (Leasú), 2021 — An Dara Céim. Road Traffic (Amendment) Bill 2021 — Second Stage.

—Peadar Tóibín.

62. An Bille um Cheathrú Chultúir 1916, 2021 — Ordú don Choiste. Ceathrú Chultúir 1916 Bill 2021 — Order for Committee.

—Aengus Ó Snodaigh, Seán Crowe, Dessie Ellis, Chris Andrews, Mary Lou McDonald, Denise Mitchell.

63. An Bille um Fháltais ó Choireacht (Infheistíocht i bPobail faoi Mhíbhuntáiste) (Leasú), 2021 — An Dara Céim. Proceeds of Crime (Investment in Disadvantaged Communities) (Amendment) Bill 2021 — Second Stage.

—Mark Ward, Ruairí Ó Murchú.

64. An Bille um Thrácht ar Bhóithre (Leasú) (Trialacha Scútar Leictreach), 2021 — An Dara 1221

Céim. Road Traffic (Amendment) (Electric Scooter Trials) Bill 2021 — Second Stage.

—John Lahart.

65. An Bille um Dhliteanas Sibhialta agus Cúirteanna (Leasú), 2021 — Ordú don Choiste. Civil Liability and Courts (Amendment) Bill 2021 — Order for Committee.

, Cathal Berry, Seán Canney, Peter Fitzpatrick, Noel Grealish, Michael Lowry, Verona Murphy, Matt Shanahan, Peadar Tóibín.

66. An Bille um Dhúshaothrú Saothair agus Gáinneáil (Slabhraí Soláthair a Iniúchadh), 2021 — An Dara Céim. Labour Exploitation and Trafficking (Audit of Supply Chains) Bill 2021 — Second Stage.

—Aodhán Ó Ríordáin, Seán Sherlock, Ged Nash.

67. Bille na nArm Tine agus na nArm Ionsaitheach (Leasú), 2021 — An Dara Céim. Firearms and Offensive Weapons (Amendment) Bill 2021 — Second Stage.

—Jim O'Callaghan.

68. An Bille um Chlárú Sibhialta (Ceart Daoine Uchtaithe chun Faisnéise) (Leasú), 2021 — Ordú don Choiste. Civil Registration (Right of Adoptees to Information) (Amendment) Bill 2021 — Order for Committee.

—Kathleen Funchion.

69. An Bille um Pleanáil agus Forbairt (Forbairtí Straitéiseacha Tithíochta) (Leasú), 2021 — An Dara Céim. Planning and Development (Strategic Housing Developments) (Amendment) Bill 2021 — Second Stage.

—Róisín Shortall.

70. An Bille Uchtála (Faisnéis), 2021 — An Dara Céim. Adoption (Information) Bill 2021 — Second Stage.

—Thomas Pringle, Catherine Connolly.

71. An Bille um Cheadanna Fostaíochta (Forálacha Ilghnéitheacha), 2021 — An Dara Céim.

P.T.O. 1222

Employment Permits (Miscellaneous Provisions) Bill 2021 — Second Stage.

—Bríd Smith, Paul Murphy, Gino Kenny, Richard Boyd Barrett, Mick Barry.

72. An Bille um Chomhionannas Tuaithe, 2021 — An Dara Céim. Rural Equality Bill 2021 — Second Stage.

—Claire Kerrane, Martin Kenny, Martin Browne.

73. An Bille um Easpa Dídine a Chosc, 2020 — Ordú don Choiste. Homeless Prevention Bill 2020 — Order for Committee.

—Eoin Ó Broin.

74. An Bille um Chomhionannas (Forálacha Ilghnéitheacha), 2021 — An Dara Céim. Equality (Miscellaneous Provisions) Bill 2021 — Second Stage.

—Chris Andrews, Violet-Anne Wynne.

75. An Bille fán Údarás um Chaighdeáin Náisiúnta na hÉireann (Lipéadú Loirg Carbóin), 2021 — An Dara Céim. National Standards Authority of Ireland (Carbon Footprint Labelling) Bill 2021 — Second Stage.

—Duncan Smith.

76. An Bille um Chosaint Idirnáisiúnta (Athaontú Teaghlaigh) (Leasú), 2017 [Seanad] — Ordú don Choiste. International Protection (Family Reunification) (Amendment) Bill 2017 [Seanad] — Order for Committee.

77. An Bille um Thrácht ar Bhóithre (Leasú) (Feithiclí Leictreacha Éadroma Pearsanta), 2021 — An Dara Céim. Road Traffic (Amendment) (Personal Light Electric Vehicles) Bill 2021 — Second Stage.

—Alan Farrell.

78. An Bille um Cheartas Coiriúil (Ord Poiblí) (Cuadrothair agus Gluaisrothair Streachailte) (Leasú), 2021 — An Dara Céim. Criminal Justice (Public Order) (Quadbikes and Scramblers) (Amendment) Bill 2021 — Second Stage.

—Paul Donnelly, Dessie Ellis, Seán Crowe, Denise Mitchell, Aengus Ó Snodaigh, Darren O'Rourke, Ruairí Ó Murchú, Mark Ward, Maurice Quinlivan. 1223

79. An Bille um Chomhaltaí an Oireachtais (Ceartas Eacnamaíoch) (Covid-19), 2021 — An Dara Céim. Oireachtas Members (Economic Justice) (Covid-19) Bill 2021 — Second Stage.

—Peadar Tóibín.

80. An Bille um Láithreáin Thréigthe (Leasú), 2021 — An Dara Céim. Derelict Sites (Amendment) Bill 2021 — Second Stage.

—Seán Sherlock.

81. An Bille Sláinte (Leasú) (Dé-fháthmheas: Gach Doras Ceart), 2021 — An Dara Céim. Health (Amendment) (Dual Diagnosis: No Wrong Door) Bill 2021 — Second Stage.

—Mark Ward, Thomas Gould.

82. Bille na Leanaí (Leasú), 2021 — An Dara Céim. Children (Amendment) Bill 2021 — Second Stage.

—Jim O'Callaghan, Jennifer Murnane O'Connor.

83. An Bille um Chosaint Tomhaltóirí (Pionós Dílseachta agus Gearáin ó Chustaiméirí), 2021 — An Dara Céim. Consumer Protection (Loyalty Penalty and Customer Complaints) Bill 2021 — Second Stage.

—Ged Nash, Aodhán Ó Ríordáin, Duncan Smith.

84. An Bille um Cheartas Coiriúil (Cionta Gadaíochta agus Calaoise) (Leasú) (Peataí), 2021 — An Dara Céim. Criminal Justice (Theft and Fraud Offences) (Amendment) (Pets) Bill 2021 — Second Stage.

—Peadar Tóibín, Seán Canney, Verona Murphy.

85. An Bille Sláinte (Formhaoirsiú Parlaiminteach ar Ionstraimí Áirithe a Bhaineann le Covid-19), 2021 — An Dara Céim. Health (Parliamentary Oversight of Certain Instruments Relating to Covid-19) Bill 2021 — Second Stage.

—Pa Daly, .

P.T.O. 1224

86. An Bille um Eagrú Ama Oibre (Saoire Foréigin Baile), 2020 — Ordú don Choiste. Organisation of Working Time (Domestic Violence Leave) Bill 2020 — Order for Committee.

—Louise O'Reilly, Mary Lou McDonald.

87. An Bille Caidrimh Thionscail (Forálacha i leith Teidlíochtaí Pinsin Oibrithe Scortha), 2021 — An Dara Céim. Industrial Relations (Provisions in Respect of Pension Entitlements of Retired Workers) Bill 2021 — Second Stage.

—Bríd Smith, Gino Kenny, Richard Boyd Barrett, Paul Murphy.

88. An Bille um an Naoú Leasú is Tríocha ar an mBunreacht (Vótáil Pharlaiminteach Chianda), 2020 — An Dara Céim. Thirty-ninth Amendment of the Constitution (Remote Parliamentary Voting) Bill 2020 — Second Stage.

—Jennifer Carroll MacNeill.

89. An Bille Staidrimh (Na Deich mBliana de Chomórthaí Céad Bliain), 2020 — An Dara Céim. Statistics (Decade of Centenaries) Bill 2020 — Second Stage.

—Aengus Ó Snodaigh.

90. An Bille um Shábháilteacht, Sláinte agus Leas ag an Obair (Leasú), 2020 — Ordú don Choiste. Safety, Health and Welfare at Work (Amendment) Bill 2020 — Order for Committee.

—Louise O'Reilly.

91. An Bille um Fháltais ó Choireacht (Mórthreascairtí ar Chearta an Duine), 2020 — An Dara Céim. Proceeds of Crime (Gross Human Rights Abuses) Bill 2020 — Second Stage.

.

92. An Bille um Rialáil Tuirbíní Gaoithe, 2020 — An Dara Céim. Wind Turbine Regulation Bill 2020 — Second Stage.

—Brian Stanley. 1225

93. An Bille um Chothroime Urraime Meabhair-Shláinte, 2020 — Ordú don Choiste. Mental Health Parity of Esteem Bill 2020 — Order for Committee.

—Mark Ward.

94. An Bille um Cháilíocht Saoil in Éirinn a Thomhas, 2020 — An Dara Céim. Measuring Quality of Life in Ireland Bill 2020 — Second Stage.

—Ged Nash.

95. An Bille um Chosaint Leanaí (Ábhar Pornagrafach ar Líne), 2020 — An Dara Céim. Protection of Children (Online Pornographic Material) Bill 2020 — Second Stage.

—Peadar Tóibín.

96. Bille na dTithe (Caighdeáin le haghaidh Tithe ar Cíos), 2020 — An Dara Céim. Housing (Standards for Rented Houses) Bill 2020 — Second Stage.

—Eoin Ó Broin.

97. An Bille um Eagrú Ama Oibre (Leasú) (Saoire Bhliantúil a Thabhairt Anonn) (Covid-19), 2020 — An Dara Céim. Organisation of Working Time (Amendment) (Carryover of Annual Leave) (Covid-19) Bill 2020 — Second Stage.

—Louise O'Reilly.

98. An Bille um Choimisiún Leasa Shóisialaigh, 2020 — An Dara Céim. Social Welfare Commission Bill 2020 — Second Stage.

—Claire Kerrane.

99. An Bille um Pleanáil agus Forbairt (Tithíocht Shóisialta a Chosaint), 2020 — An Dara Céim. Planning and Development (Protect Social Housing) Bill 2020 — Second Stage.

—Chris Andrews.

100. An Bille um Thrácht ar Bhóithre (Feithiclí Uile-Thír-Raoin agus Gluaisrothair Streachailte) (Leasú), 2020 — An Dara Céim. Road Traffic (All-Terrain Vehicle and Scrambler Motorcycle) (Amendment) Bill 2020 — Second Stage.

P.T.O. 1226

—Paul McAuliffe, John Lahart.

101. An Bille um Shásamh i leith Lochtanna Neamhfhollasa, 2020 — An Dara Céim. Latent Defects Redress Bill 2020 — Second Stage.

—Eoin Ó Broin.

102. An Bille um Eagrú Ama Oibre (Leasú) (An Ceart chun Dícheangal a Dhéanamh), 2020 — An Dara Céim. Organisation of Working Time (Amendment) (Right to Disconnect) Bill 2020 — Second Stage.

—Louise O'Reilly.

103. An Bille um Thionóntachtaí Cónaithe (An Cosc ar Dhíshealbhuithe a Fhadú), 2020 — An Dara Céim. Residential Tenancies (Extension of Eviction Ban) Bill 2020 — Second Stage.

—Paul Murphy, Mick Barry, Richard Boyd Barrett, Gino Kenny, Bríd Smith.

104. Bille na dTithe (Forálacha Sealadacha maidir le Ligin Ghearrthéarma), 2020 — An Dara Céim. Housing (Temporary Provisions regarding Short-term Lettings) Bill 2020 — Second Stage.

—Peadar Tóibín.

105. Bille Náisiúntacht agus Shaoránacht Éireann (Saoránacht do Leanaí), 2020 — An Dara Céim. Irish Nationality and Citizenship (Citizenship for Children) Bill 2020 — Second Stage.

—Mick Barry.

106. An Bille um Chiontóirí Gnéis in aghaidh Leanaí (Faisnéis agus Faireachán), 2012 — Ordú don Choiste. Child Sex Offenders (Information And Monitoring) Bill 2012 — Order for Committee.

—Denis Naughten.

107. An Bille Toghcháin (Leasú) (Uimh. 3), 2014 — Ordú don Choiste. Electoral (Amendment) (No. 3) Bill 2014 — Order for Committee.

—Éamon Ó Cuív. 1227

108. An Bille um Dhaoine Soghonta, 2015 — Ordú don Choiste. Vulnerable Persons Bill 2015 — Order for Committee.

—Mattie McGrath.

109. An Bille um Thithíocht Shóisialta, 2016 — Ordú don Choiste. Social Housing Bill 2016 — Order for Committee.

—Eoin Ó Broin.

110. An Bille Rialtais Áitiúil (Coimisiún Comhairlí Baile a Bhunú), 2017 — Ordú don Choiste. Local Government (Establishment of Town Councils Commission) Bill 2017 — Order for Committee.

111. An Bille um Dhíol Ticéad (Imeachtaí Spóirt agus Cultúir), 2017 — Ordú don Choiste. Sale of Tickets (Sporting and Cultural Events) Bill 2017 — Order for Committee.

—Maurice Quinlivan.

112. An Bille um Chosaint Fostaithe (Comhiomarcaíochtaí), 2017 — Ordú don Choiste. Protection of Employees (Collective Redundancies) Bill 2017 — Order for Committee.

—David Cullinane.

113. Bille na dTithe (Teaghlaigh gan Dídean), 2017 — Ordú don Choiste. Housing (Homeless Families) Bill 2017 — Order for Committee.

114. An Bille um Athfheistiú Tithíochta Foilmhe, 2017 — Ordú don Choiste. Vacant Housing Refurbishment Bill 2017 — Order for Committee.

—Barry Cowen.

115. An Bille um Thionóntachtaí Cónaithe (Leasú), 2018 — Ordú don Choiste. Residential Tenancies (Amendment) Bill 2018 — Order for Committee.

—Róisín Shortall, Catherine Murphy.

P.T.O. 1228

116. An Bille fá Choimisinéir um Shábháilteacht Dhigiteach, 2017 — Ordú don Choiste. Digital Safety Commissioner Bill 2017 — Order for Committee.

—Donnchadh Ó Laoghaire.

117. An Bille um Chaingne Ilpháirtí, 2017 — Ordú don Choiste. Multi-Party Actions Bill 2017 — Order for Committee.

—Donnchadh Ó Laoghaire, Pearse Doherty.

118. Bille an Bhainc Ceannais (Leasú), 2018 — Ordú don Choiste. Central Bank (Amendment) Bill 2018 — Order for Committee.

—Pearse Doherty.

119. An Bille um Thionóntachtaí Cónaithe (Ráthaíocht Tionachta Níos Mó agus Cinnteacht Cíosa), 2018 — Ordú don Choiste. Residential Tenancies (Greater Security of Tenure and Rent Certainty) Bill 2018 — Order for Committee.

120. An Bille um Athbheochan Uirbeach agus Tithe (Leasú), 2018 — Ordú don Choiste. Urban Regeneration and Housing (Amendment) Bill 2018 — Order for Committee.

121. An Bille Rialtais Áitiúil (Comhairlí Baile a Aisiriú), 2018 — Ordú don Choiste. Local Government (Restoration Of Town Councils) Bill 2018 — Order for Committee.

—Brendan Howlin.

122. An Bille Rialtais Áitiúil (Truailliú Uisce) (Leasú), 2018 — Ordú don Choiste. Local Government (Water Pollution) (Amendment) Bill 2018 — Order for Committee.

—Martin Kenny.

123. An Bille um Chreidmheas do Thomhaltóirí (Leasú), 2018 — Ordú don Choiste. Consumer Credit (Amendment) Bill 2018 — Order for Committee.

—Pearse Doherty.

124. An Bille um Thithíocht Róphlódaithe, 2018 — Ordú don Choiste. Overcrowded Housing Bill 2018 — Order for Committee.

—Barry Cowen. 1229

125. An Bille um Pá Íosta Náisiúnta (Séisíní Fostaithe a Chosaint), 2017 [Seanad] — Ordú don Choiste. National Minimum Wage (Protection of Employee Tips) Bill 2017 [Seanad] — Order for Committee.

126. An Bille um Praghsáil Chothromasach ar Mhairteoil, 2020 — An Dara Céim. Equitable Beef Pricing Bill 2020 — Second Stage.

—Peadar Tóibín.

127. An Bille um Shláinte agus Leas Ainmhithe (Cosc ar Chúrsáil Giorriacha), 2020 — An Dara Céim. Animal Health and Welfare (Ban on Hare Coursing) Bill 2020 — Second Stage.

—Paul Murphy, Mick Barry, Richard Boyd Barrett, Gino Kenny, Bríd Smith, Catherine Connolly, Joan Collins.

128. An Bille um Chiontuithe Gnéasacha (Leasú), 2019 — An Dara Céim. Sexual Offences (Amendment) Bill 2019 — Second Stage.

—Donnchadh Ó Laoghaire, Martin Kenny.

129. An Bille um Nochtadh Sláinte, 2016 — An Dara Céim. Health Disclosure Bill 2016 — Second Stage.

—Denis Naughten.

130. An Bille Craolacháin (Leasú) (Iriseoireacht a Chosaint), 2019 — An Dara Céim. Broadcasting (Amendment) (Protection of Journalism) Bill 2019 — Second Stage.

—David Cullinane, Seán Crowe.

131. An Bille um Sheirbhísí Maoine (Rialáil) (Leasú) (Cuideachtaí Bainistíochta a Rialáil), 2018 — Ordú don Choiste. Property Services (Regulation) (Amendment) (Management Company Regulation) Bill 2018 — Order for Committee.

132. An Bille um Thruailliú ó Bhruscar (Leasú) (Salachar Madraí a Rialú), 2019 — An Dara Céim.

P.T.O. 1230

Litter Pollution (Amendment) (Dog Litter Control) Bill 2019 — Second Stage.

—Seán Crowe, Kathleen Funchion.

133. An Bille Loingis Cheannaíochta (Taismí Muirí a Imscrúdú) (Leasú), 2019 — Ordú don Choiste. Merchant Shipping (Investigation of Marine Casualties) (Amendment) Bill 2019 — Order for Committee.

—Mattie McGrath.

134. An Bille um Thrédhearcacht Shainordaitheach i dtaobh Praghsanna Mairteola, 2019 — An Dara Céim. Mandatory Beef Price Transparency Bill 2019 — Second Stage.

—Brian Stanley.

135. Bille Taisceadán (An Clár Maoine Luachmhaire), 2019 — An Dara Céim. Taisceadán (Valuable Property Register) Bill 2019 — Second Stage.

—Donnchadh Ó Laoghaire, Martin Kenny.

136. An Bille um Fhaoiseamh i leith Táillí Bainistíochta (Cáin Mhaoine Áitiúil), 2018 — Ordú don Choiste. Management Fees (Local Property Tax) Relief Bill 2018 — Order for Committee.

137. An Bille um Chosc ar Dhíol gan Toiliú, 2019 — Ordú don Choiste. No Consent, No Sale Bill 2019 — Order for Committee.

—Pearse Doherty.

138. An Bille um Ghnólachtaí Slándála Príobháidí a Rialáil, 2019 — Ordú don Choiste. Regulation of Private Security Firms Bill 2019 — Order for Committee.

—Donnchadh Ó Laoghaire.

139. An Bille fán nGníomhaireacht um Leanaí agus an Teaghlach (Formhaoirsiú Cúraim Altrama), 2018 — An Dara Céim. Child and Family Agency (Foster Care Oversight) Bill 2018 — Second Stage.

—Denise Mitchell, Pearse Doherty. 1231

140. An Bille um Údarás na Gaeltachta (Leasú), 2018 — An Dara Céim. Údarás na Gaeltachta (Amendment) Bill 2018 — Second Stage.

—Peadar Tóibín, Dessie Ellis, Aengus Ó Snodaigh, Donnchadh Ó Laoghaire, Pearse Doherty.

141. Bille an Ard-Reachtaire Cuntas agus Ciste (Cuntasacht Faighteoirí Cistí Poiblí) (Leasú), 2017 — An Dara Céim. Comptroller and Auditor General (Accountability of Recipients of Public Funds) (Amendment) Bill 2017 — Second Stage.

—David Cullinane, Mary Lou McDonald.

142. An Bille um Laghdú Dramhaíola (Forálacha Ilghnéitheacha), 2017 — An Dara Céim. Waste Reduction (Miscellaneous Provisions) Bill 2017 — Second Stage.

—Brian Stanley.

143. An Bille um Dhíospóidí idir Comharsana (Fásra), 2017 — An Dara Céim. Neighbour Disputes (Vegetation) Bill 2017 — Second Stage.

—Aengus Ó Snodaigh.

144. Bille na mBóithre (Leasú), 2017 — An Dara Céim. Roads (Amendment) Bill 2017 — Second Stage.

—Aengus Ó Snodaigh.

145. An Bille um Sheirbhísí Poiblí agus um Shainfháil Phoiblí (Cearta Oibrithe), 2017 — An Dara Céim. Public Services and Procurement (Workers’ Rights) Bill 2017 — Second Stage.

—Bríd Smith, Gino Kenny, Richard Boyd Barrett.

146. An Bille um Ghníomhaíocht Eacnamaíoch a Rialú (Críocha faoi Fhorghabháil), 2018 [Seanad] — Ordú don Choiste. Control of Economic Activity (Occupied Territories) Bill 2018 [Seanad] — Order for Committee.

147. An Bille um Bainistiú Dramhaíola (Leasú) (Rialálaí), 2019 — An Dara Céim. Waste Management (Amendment) (Regulator) Bill 2019 — Second Stage.

—David Cullinane, Mark Ward.

P.T.O. 1232

148. An Bille um Chosaint Tomhaltóirí (Gnólachtaí Seirbhísithe Creidmheasa a Rialáil) (Leasú), 2017 — An Dara Céim. Consumer Protection (Regulation of Credit Servicing Firms) (Amendment) Bill 2017 — Second Stage.

—Pearse Doherty.

149. An Bille um Chalcadh Cíosa (Cóirchíos), 2019 — Ordú don Choiste. Rent Freeze (Fair Rent) Bill 2019 — Order for Committee.

—Eoin Ó Broin, Mark Ward.

150. An Bille Ceardchumann (An Garda Síochána agus na Fórsaí Cosanta), 2017 — An Dara Céim. Trade Union (Garda Síochána and the Defence Forces) Bill 2017 — Second Stage.

—Aengus Ó Snodaigh, David Cullinane.

151. An Bille um Oideachas Gnéis Oibiachtúil a Sholáthar, 2018 — Ordú don Choiste. Provision of Objective Sex Education Bill 2018 — Order for Committee.

—Mick Barry, Paul Murphy.

152. An Bille um an gCeathrú Leasú is Tríocha ar an mBunreacht (Vótáil Uachtaráin), 2014 — Ordú don Choiste. Thirty-fourth Amendment of the Constitution (Presidential Voting) Bill 2014 — Order for Committee.

—Seán Crowe.

153. An Bille um an gCúigiú Leasú is Tríocha ar an mBunreacht (Uisce faoi Úinéireacht Phoiblí), 2016 — An Dara Céim. Thirty-Fifth Amendment of the Constitution (Water in Public Ownership) Bill 2016 — Second Stage.

—Thomas Pringle.

154. An Bille um an Dlí Sibhialta (Daoine atá ar Iarraidh) (Uimh. 2), 2016 — An Dara Céim. Civil Law (Missing Persons) (No. 2) Bill 2016 — Second Stage.

—Pearse Doherty. 1233

155. An Bille Sláinte (Teidlíochtaí Liachta i dTithe Banaltrais) (Forálacha Ilghnéitheacha), 2019 — An Dara Céim. Health (Medical Entitlements in Nursing Homes) (Miscellaneous Provisions) Bill 2019 — Second Stage.

—Imelda Munster.

156. An Bille i gcoinne Díshealbhuithe, 2018 — Ordú don Choiste. Anti-Evictions Bill 2018 — Order for Committee.

—Mick Barry, Paul Murphy.

157. An Bille um Shaothraithe an Phá Íosta a Chosaint, 2013 — An Dara Céim. Protection of Minimum Wage Earners Bill 2013 — Second Stage.

—Pearse Doherty.

158. An Bille um Fhorbairt Pheitriliam agus Mianraí Eile (Leasú), 2016 — An Dara Céim. Petroleum and Other Minerals Development (Amendment) Bill 2016 — Second Stage.

—Martin Kenny, Brian Stanley.

159. An Bille um Stádas Comhionann (Promhadh Comhionannais) (Leasú), 2016 — An Dara Céim. Equal Status (Equality Proofing) (Amendment) Bill 2016 — Second Stage.

—David Cullinane.

160. An Bille um Bás Dínitiúil, 2020 — Ordú don Choiste. Dying with Dignity Bill 2020 — Order for Committee.

—Gino Kenny, Mick Barry, Richard Boyd Barrett, Paul Murphy, Bríd Smith.

161. An Bille um Obair sa Bhaile (Covid-19), 2020 — Ordú don Choiste. Working from Home (Covid-19) Bill 2020 — Order for Committee.

—Alan Kelly, Brendan Howlin, Ged Nash, Aodhán Ó Ríordáin, Seán Sherlock, Duncan Smith.

162. An Bille um an gCúigiú Leasú is Tríocha ar an mBunreacht (Uisce faoi Úinéireacht Phoiblí) (Uimh. 2), 2016 — Ordú don Choiste. Thirty-fifth Amendment of the Constitution (Water in Public Ownership) (No. 2) Bill 2016 — Order for Committee.

P.T.O. 1234

—Joan Collins, Mick Barry, Richard Boyd Barrett, John Brady, Pat Buckley, Catherine Connolly, Seán Crowe, David Cullinane, Dessie Ellis, Kathleen Funchion, Gino Kenny, Mary Lou McDonald, Denise Mitchell, Imelda Munster, Paul Murphy, Carol Nolan, Louise O'Reilly, Eoin Ó Broin, Donnchadh Ó Laoghaire, Aengus Ó Snodaigh, Thomas Pringle, Bríd Smith, Peadar Tóibín.

163. An Bille fá Choimisiún na hÉireann um Chearta an Duine agus Comhionannas (Faisnéis faoin Difríocht Pá idir na hInscní), 2017 [Seanad] — Ordú don Choiste. Irish Human Rights and Equality Commission (Gender Pay Gap Information) Bill 2017 [Seanad] — Order for Committee.

—Aodhán Ó Ríordáin, Ged Nash.

164. An Bille Caidrimh Thionscail (Orduithe Fostaíochta Earnála a Dhaingniú), 2020 — An Dara Céim. Industrial Relations (Sectoral Employment Orders Confirmation) Bill 2020 — Second Stage.

—Ged Nash, Aodhán Ó Ríordáin, Duncan Smith.

165. An Bille fá Scéim um Thacaíocht Mhicrighiniúna, 2017 — Ordú don Choiste. Microgeneration Support Scheme Bill 2017 — Order for Committee.

—Brian Stanley.

166. An Bille um Rialáil Leictreachais (Leasú) (Díchónascthaí sa Gheimhreadh a Thoirmeasc), 2021 — An Dara Céim. Electricity Regulation (Amendment) (Prohibition of Winter Disconnections) Bill 2021 — Second Stage.

—Darren O'Rourke, Claire Kerrane, Réada Cronin.

167. An Bille Sláinte (Foirceannadh Toirchis a Rialáil) (Faoiseamh ó Phian d’Fhéatas), 2021 — An Dara Céim. Health (Regulation of Termination of Pregnancy) (Foetal Pain Relief) Bill 2021 — Second Stage.

—Carol Nolan, Michael Collins, Danny Healy-Rae, Michael Healy-Rae, Mattie McGrath, Richard O'Donoghue, Seán Canney, Éamon Ó Cuív, Peter Fitzpatrick, Noel Grealish, Peadar Tóibín.

Fógraí Tairisceana: Notices of Motions:

168. “That Dáil Éireann: 1235 notes that: — workers in the State make a considerable tax contribution throughout their working life and should have the right to access the full pension rate of payment when they retire at age 65; — some workers want to retire at age 65, while others want to remain at work, where they are able and willing to do so; — numerous employment contracts stipulate an end of employment date in line with when an employee turns 65 years of age; — since the abolition of the State Pension Transition payment, thousands of 65-year-olds have had to sign on for a Jobseeker’s payment; — there are now thousands of 65-year-olds who are on the Jobseeker’s social welfare rate of €203 per week instead of the State Pension rate; — there is a difference of €45.30 between the Jobseeker payments and the State Pension, leading to an annual loss of €2,355.60; and — the pension age had been scheduled in legislation to increase to 67 years of age in 2021, and 68 years of age in 2028; and calls on the Government to: — commit to restoring the State Pension Transition payment for those retiring at 65 years of age; — abolish mandatory retirement, with exceptions for security-related employment, to give workers the choice to work or retire so long as they are fit to do so; — ensure that workers who choose to work on, do so on their own terms, and in their conditions of employment they are not compelled to sign fixed- or short-term contracts of employment; — make provision for those who remain at work beyond 65 years of age to have their Pay Related Social Insurance contributions counted towards their State Pension; and — commit not to further increase the State Pension age.” — Louise O'Reilly, Chris Andrews, John Brady, Martin Browne, Pat Buckley, Matt Carthy, Sorca Clarke, Rose Conway-Walsh, Réada Cronin, Seán Crowe, David Cullinane, Pa Daly, Pearse Doherty, Paul Donnelly, Dessie Ellis, Mairéad Farrell, Kathleen Funchion, Thomas Gould, Johnny Guirke, Martin Kenny, Claire Kerrane, Pádraig Mac Lochlainn, Mary Lou McDonald, Denise Mitchell, Imelda Munster, Johnny Mythen, Eoin Ó Broin, Donnchadh Ó Laoghaire, Ruairí Ó Murchú, Darren O'Rourke, Aengus Ó Snodaigh, Maurice Quinlivan, Patricia Ryan, Brian Stanley, Pauline Tully, Mark Ward, Violet- Anne Wynne.

[22 June, 2021]

169. “That Dáil Éireann: notes that: — in May 2013, the Government announced that the National Maternity Hospital (NMH) would move to Elm Park to co-locate with St. Vincent’s University Hospital (SVUH), based on the recommendation that maternity hospitals should co-locate with

P.T.O. 1236

acute general hospitals; — between 2013-2016, a dispute regarding co-location versus ownership arose between the NMH and St. Vincent’s Healthcare Group (SVHG), which resulted in SVHG rejecting the proposal of co-location and adapting its position to demand full ownership of the NMH under SVHG; — in May 2016, Kieran Mulvey was appointed to mediate the dispute between the two hospitals and the Mulvey Agreement on the Future Operation of the New Maternity Hospital – ‘The National Maternity Hospital at Elm Park DAC’ recommended the full transfer of 100 per cent ownership of the NMH to SVHG, owned by the Religious Sisters of Charity; — following sustained public and political opposition to the deal, the Religious Sisters of Charity set up a new private company, St. Vincent’s Holdings (SVHs), into which they agreed to transfer their shareholdings of SVHG, and although SVHs was incorporated in August 2020, no transfer of ownership has yet taken place; — under the proposed lease arrangement: — the sole owners of the NMH (SVHs) will lease the site for the new hospital to the Health Service Executive (HSE) for 99 operating years; — the State is required to build the maternity hospital on the land owned by the Religious Sisters of Charity and to pay, in perpetuity, the costs of the new facility set to be owned and managed by SVHs; and — the key condition of this lease is that the HSE license SVHG to run the new maternity facility in tandem with the ‘National Maternity Hospital at Elm Park’; — a new Board of SVHs is to be appointed in August 2021 and SVHs is a private company with charitable status, and its directors are its sole shareholders, all of whom are self-appointed, and there is no provision for a public interest director/ministerial representative, a women’s interest director, HSE representative, or any representation from the NMH itself on the Board of SVHs; — the Board of the HSE is required to approve the transfer of the Religious Sisters of Charity’s shareholding in SVHG to SVHs, as it is a section 38 organisation and this approval has not yet been sanctioned; — nearly four years after they first announced their intention to depart SVHG, the Religious Sisters of Charity remain the sole shareholders of SVHG and no legal agreement has been reached on the transfer of ownership; and — under current proposals, only the shell of the hospital will be publicly owned and the State is to have no involvement in the private company set to own the new facility, nor any role in its operations; further notes that: — the Eighth Amendment of the was repealed in May 2018, paving the way for safe and legal termination of pregnancy in Ireland and Catholic teaching is fully opposed to the provision of termination services; — the 2017 SVHG Annual Report stated that future directors of SVHs will be ‘obliged to uphold the values and vision’ of Mother Mary Aikenhead, the founder of the Religious Sisters of Charity; — the core values of the original SVHG constitution, which are based on Catholic ethos, are restated in full in the constitution of SVHs; 1237

— the Religious Sisters of Charity received conditional permission from the Holy See to transfer their shareholding to the new company SVHs, with the proviso that ‘the provisions relating to the validity and lawfulness of alienations, found in Canons 638- 639 and Canons 1292-1294 of the Code of Canon Law and in Proper Law, are to be observed’, and this requirement provides that the transfer of the Religious Sisters of Charity’s shareholding in SVHG must observe Canon Law and Canon 1293 paragraph 2 requires precautions to be taken to ‘avoid harm to the Church’ and the definition of harm expressly includes ‘activity which gives rise to grave harm to ecclesiastical teaching’; and — the 2019 Report of the Independent Review Group established to examine the role of voluntary organisations in publicly funded health and personal social services concluded that, legally, the State cannot compel private Catholic entities to provide services that are contrary to their ethos; furthermore, notes that: — the cost of the construction of the NMH is likely to exceed €500 million; and — the Religious Sisters of Charity’s holdings in SVHG were valued at €661 million in October 2018; agrees that: — the Catholic ethos of the proposed new facility can no longer be a matter of doubt; — women’s reproductive healthcare would be put at risk and their safety endangered if subject to Catholic ownership and ethos; — a hospital built using State funds should be fully owned and operated by the State; — handing over ownership of a publicly funded hospital to a private company is in direct contradiction of the aims of Sláintecare; and — where the State decides to build any new hospital or facility, it should endeavour to ensure that it owns the land on which the hospital or facility is built, as recommended in the Report of the Independent Review Group established to examine the role of voluntary organisations in publicly funded health and personal social services; and calls on the Government to ensure that the proposed new publicly-funded National Maternity Hospital is constructed on land owned by the State, and that, to guarantee its secular ethos and safeguard this public investment, the new hospital be fully owned and governed by the State.” — Róisín Shortall, Catherine Murphy, Holly Cairns, Gary Gannon, Cian O'Callaghan, Jennifer Whitmore.

[22 June, 2021]

170. “That Dáil Éireann resolves that the Social Welfare (Consolidated Claims, Payments and Control) (Amendment) (No. 9) (Absence from the State) Regulations 2020 (S.I. No. 242 of 2020) be and are hereby annulled.” — Paul Murphy, Mick Barry, Richard Boyd Barrett, Gino Kenny, Bríd Smith.

[28 July, 2020]

171. “That Dáil Éireann, pursuant to Standing Order 77:

P.T.O. 1238 notes that: — on 19th August, 2020, Mr. Justice Séamus Woulfe attended a dinner organised by the Oireachtas Golf Society in Clifden, Co. Galway; — public health regulations in force at that time made it an offence to organise an indoor social event where the numbers attending exceeded 50 persons (other than in a private dwelling); — the dinner at Clifden had around 80 attendees, significantly in excess of the 50 persons permitted; — the Government had announced new guidelines on 18th August, 2020, which restricted the numbers permitted at an indoor social event to six persons; — while these new guidelines did not immediately have the force of law, they did reflect the urgent advice of public health experts in the context of a highly contagious disease; — Mr. Justice Woulfe’s attendance at an event which was inconsonant with both the public health regulations in force and those which had been publicly announced the day previously, had the effect of undermining the public health effort, which all in society were being urged to participate in, given the grave threat of the spread of Covid-19; and — Mr. Justice Woulfe’s subsequent response to the public controversy in relation to his attendance at this dinner, as illustrated by the transcript of his interview with Ms. Justice Susan Denham and his correspondence with Mr. Justice Frank Clarke, further undermined the public health effort; and calls for the removal, pursuant to Article 35.4.1° of the Constitution of Ireland, of Mr. Justice Séamus Woulfe, Judge of the Supreme Court, from office for stated misbehaviour, being his conduct in and in relation to attending the Oireachtas Golf Society dinner in Clifden on 19th August, 2020, undermining the public health effort during a pandemic, and thereby rendering himself unsuitable to exercise the office of a Judge of the Supreme Court.” — Paul Murphy, Bríd Smith, Richard Boyd Barrett, Gino Kenny.

[1 December, 2020]

172. “That Dáil Éireann, in view of the serious threat that Covid-19 poses to people all over the world: — calls on the World Trade Organization (WTO) to allow all countries to choose to neither grant nor enforce patents and other intellectual property related to Covid-19 drugs, vaccines, diagnostics and other technologies for the duration of the pandemic; — mandates the Government to demand that European Union policy is changed so as it votes at the WTO to allow this to occur, and Ireland should support the proposal brought forward by India and South Africa to suspend aspects of the WTO TRIPS Agreement until the pandemic is over; and — calls for full open disclosure of all scientific and clinical trial data related to the development and production of such vaccines, and should this occur, further calls for the convocation of an expert panel to independently analyse the data and develop public health communication strategies based on their findings, that aim to increase public trust and participation in the immunisation process.” — Richard Boyd Barrett, Mick Barry, Gino Kenny, Paul Murphy, Bríd Smith.

[16 December, 2020] 1239

173. “That Dáil Éireann: recognises that: — many forms of organised crime are rising year-on-year in Ireland; — controlled drug offences have increased by 8.7 per cent, weapons and explosives offences have increased by 12.3 per cent, and homicide and related offences have increased by 7.2 per cent from quarter 3, 2019, to quarter 3, 2020; — funds seized by the authorities, including those by An Garda Síochána and the Criminal Assets Bureau, have also increased significantly over previous years from €7.44 million in 2019 to over €16 million in 2020; — within the first month of 2021 over €2 million was seized; — seized funds are not specifically allocated but put back into the Exchequer for general Government spending; — there are international examples for channelling seized funds and confiscated assets back into community specific programmes, such as in France and New Zealand; and — there are international examples for the effectiveness of community-focused programmes to prevent crime, such as in Scotland through the Violence Reduction Unit; declares that: — Ireland should adopt changes in our approach to seized cash and assets, and follow international examples to channel seized funds back into the societal causes of crime; — funds seized by the authorities from illegal activity and organised crime should be ring-fenced and channelled back into the worst impacted communities through intervention projects; and — these funds would follow the model of violence and crime reduction and be allocated towards addiction counsellors, social workers, youth diversion programmes, training courses, education schemes, awareness programmes and more; and calls on the Government to: — produce a national strategy on violence and crime reduction to complement the An Garda Síochána Crime Prevention and Reduction Strategy - Putting Prevention First; — recognise that seized funds should be ring-fenced to address the societal causes of crime; — legislate to ring-fence seized funds to prevent said funds from being channelled back to the Exchequer; and — allocate said ring-fenced funds to community and violence reduction projects where they are most needed, such as towards addiction counsellors, social workers, youth diversion programmes, training courses, education schemes, awareness programmes and more.” — .

[10 February, 2021]

P.T.O. 1240

174. “That Dáil Éireann: notes that: — the Comprehensive Economic Trade Agreement’s (CETA) Investment Court System (ICS), a rebranded version of the Investor State Dispute Settlement (ISDS) system, does not address many of the contentious and problematic aspects of its predecessor; — the new ICS will still grant foreign corporations a special status that allows them to seek compensation outside the ordinary national legal systems used by all other parties; — under European Union (EU) law existing mechanisms are already in place to deal with any complaints by investors; — in 2017, a European Court of Justice judgement made clear that any agreement to introduce ISDS/ICS must be considered and decided by each member state and that decision cannot be delegated to EU level; — roughly half of the EU member states, including Germany and Italy, have yet to ratify the ICS amid various ongoing legal and political debates; — many new trade deals are actively avoiding unnecessary and controversial elements such as investor courts, including the trade deal between the EU and Britain, the EU- China Comprehensive Agreement on Investment, and the EU-Japan Economic Partnership Agreement; and — given that the trade aspects of CETA have already been in force since 2017, ratification of CETA by the Dáil effectively amounts to ratification of the ICS; acknowledges that: — the Government has proposed for CETA/ICS to be scrutinised by the Oireachtas Committee on European Union Affairs, however, due to the scope and breadth of CETA covering all sectors including workers’ rights, health, environment, housing, justice and many others, it is imperative that all relevant Oireachtas Committees are afforded the opportunity to debate on this far-reaching and inter-generational proposal; — the threat of being sued under an ICS of the kind created by CETA has potential to create a chilling effect on the Government’s ability or willingness to implement policy in the interest of the public good; — ratifying CETA could expose Ireland to unnecessary risks, with no gain; — chapter twenty-four of CETA:Trade and Environment is very weak when it comes to legal enforceability, in contrast to the strong provisions to protect investors and any references to sustainability, environmental protection, and adherence to international climate agreements are only aspirational and voluntary in nature; and — the combination of weak environmental protections as contained in CETA, and large pay-outs resulting from existing dispute mechanisms to large energy companies, reveals that the environment has the most to lose from the new ICS which forces national governments to pull back on ambitious climate action policies and regulation; and calls for: — all relevant Oireachtas committees to scrutinise the new ICS mechanism and any outstanding aspects of CETA before any vote takes place; — a full Dáil debate on the remaining aspects of CETA, in particular the ICS, before any vote is held in the Oireachtas; and 1241

— a full risk analysis of CETA before any final ratification of the ICS provision is applied.” — Jennifer Whitmore, Holly Cairns, Gary Gannon, Catherine Murphy, Cian O'Callaghan, Róisín Shortall.

[17 February, 2021]

175. “That Dáil Éireann: notes that: — breast cancer accounts for around 30 per cent of all invasive cancers for women, with around 3,000 cases a year; — Ireland had the eighth highest incidence rate and fifth highest mortality rate for female breast cancer in the European Union in 2020; — women aged between 50 and 64 have been screened for breast cancer since 2018, and this was subsequently extended to age 69; — in 2015: — 49 per cent of cases were accounted for in those aged between 50 and 69; — almost a quarter of cases occured in women under the age of 50, and therefore outside of the screening process; and — over 200 cases were among women under the age of 40, accounting for 7 per cent of all cases; — between 1994 and 2016, rates of breast cancer in women under the age of 50 increased by, on average, 1 per cent per year, from 34.2 per 100,000 in 1994 to 45.1 per 100,000 in 2016; — the percentage of younger women with a late stage (III or IV) diagnosis increased from 18 per cent between 1994 and 1999 to 22 per cent between 2008 and 2015; — in contrast, there was a large increase in the percentage presenting with stage I cancer for women in the screening age-group (50-64 years), from 23 per cent between 1994 and 1999 to 44 per cent between 2008 and 2015; — the rate of increase in late stage breast cancer was 2.4 per cent per year for younger women, while the rate for women in the screening age band was 0.4 per cent; — the National Cancer Registry Ireland has said that ‘This suggests that there has been some stage replacement in the women who are eligible for screening’; — screening from age 40 takes place in a number of countries, such as Austria, Greece, Hungary, Iceland, Slovakia and Portugal; — in some regions in Sweden where screening was introduced for 40-49 year olds, the death rate reduced by 26 per cent compared to regions that didn’t; — young women generally face more aggressive cancers and lower survival rates as well as being more liable to get cancer due to genetic mutations; — women under 40 years of age are reporting that they are finding it hard to access early diagnosis; — there is no national data on the proportion of breast cancer cases which are due to the

P.T.O. 1242

BReast CAncer gene (BRCA) mutations and no comprehensive national policy on genetics and genetic testing in Ireland; — while Ireland has established criteria for genetic testing for hereditary breast cancer, these are more restrictive than in many other European countries; — Ireland does not make genetic testing available to all asymptomatic women at high risk of BRCA related breast cancer; — waiting times for an initial public consultation, genetic testing and counselling are high, placing a burden on people waiting for tests and potentially delaying initiation of necessary treatment; — women are being forced to seek private genetic testing at a cost of up to €1,800; and — poorer women are therefore barred from accessing this service; and therefore, calls on the Government to: — introduce screening for breast cancer from the age of 40, provided by publicly funded and run programmes; — guarantee immediate access to diagnostics services for young women at risk of breast cancer; — ensure access to a triple assessment for young women who present with possible breast cancer; — immediately revise the criteria for access to genetic testing so that all women at high risk of the BRCA related breast cancer have access to genetic testing and genetic counselling in the public health system; and — initiate a publicly funded education programme in schools in relation to breast examination.” — Gino Kenny, Bríd Smith, Richard Boyd Barrett, Paul Murphy.

[10 March, 2021]

176. “That Dáil Éireann: notes: — that breastfeeding is the biologically normal way to feed babies and is optimum for the mental and physical health of babies, as well as being protective of multiple health risks for mothers; — that according to the Irish Maternity Indicator System National Report 2019, Ireland’s breastfeeding initiation rate is one of the lowest in the world at 63.8 per cent compared to rates of 90 per cent in Australia and 81 per cent in the United Kingdom, and by the time babies leave hospital just 37.3 per cent are exclusively breastfed; — the World Health Organization's (WHO) global ambition is to improve maternal, infant and young child nutrition by 2025 includes the target of at least 50 per cent rate of exclusive breastfeeding in the first six months of a baby’s life, however, in Ireland the exclusive breastfeeding rate stands at only 6 per cent compared with the global average of 38 per cent and the European average of 25 per cent (WHO, 2013); — that most women want to breastfeed but face a range of barriers including, limited access to education in schools, antenatal education and lactation consultation, insufficient in-hospital/community/work supports, social disadvantage and a lack of an overall supportive culture of breastfeeding in Irish society; 1243

— the recent announcement of funding to the Health Service Executive (HSE) for an additional 24 lactation consultants across Irish maternity hospitals and units but notes that there are currently only 30.39 Whole Time Equivalent (WTE) dedicated lactation consultant posts, an increase of just 12.97 WTE posts in the last four years, with 9.5 posts under recruitment; — that massive variations in breastfeeding rates exist between urban and rural areas, according to 2019 figures, with 44 per cent in Donegal, 53 per cent in Wexford and 49 per cent in Waterford, compared to 84 per cent in Dublin South East, and these rates coincide with a stark regional divide in the provision of lactation consultants across Irish hospitals and are most evident in these counties where hospitals have no lactation consultant posts at all; — the crucial work that in-hospital staff and primary care staff undergo to support women breastfeeding with very limited resources, working in understaffed postnatal wards; — that since funding ceased for the Baby-Friendly Hospital Initiative (BFHI) in 2017, there has been no independent assessment of maternity units in Ireland, however, acknowledges the recent commitment by the HSE to dedicated implementation supports for the initiative this year; — the slow progress in implementing the Creating a Better Future Together – National Maternity Strategy 2016-2026 and the HSE Breastfeeding in a Healthy Ireland – Health Service Breastfeeding Action Plan 2016-2021, to date; — that May 19th is the internationally designated World Day of Human Milk Donation, a day to promote the importance of donating human milk to non-profit human milk banks; — that the Republic of Ireland currently has no milk bank and relies solely on breast milk donations from the Western Trust Human Milk Bank in Northern Ireland, for infants in need, and there is no national policy on the provision of donor human milk, resulting in an unequal supply to babies across hospitals in the State; — that May 21st marks the 40th anniversary of the adoption of the International Code of Marketing of Breast-milk Substitutes, which Ireland, unfortunately still has not fully implemented and which has led to a continued lack of regulation on formula products for babies after six months of age and health workers’ vulnerability to various marketing practices; and — that the economic cost of low breastfeeding rates in the country is estimated to cost the State €800 million annually and most crucial is the potential cost to life, where it is estimated that up to 823,000 deaths in infants aged under five and 20,000 deaths in women from breast cancer occur worldwide, which, according to Victora et al., The Lancet (2016) and the WHO, could be prevented if breastfeeding were scaled up globally to universal levels; and acknowledges: — the urgent need for improved access to breastfeeding supports before, during and after pregnancy, in hospital settings, within the home and workplace and in public, to further the development of a supportive and open breastfeeding culture in the country with committed funding in Budget 2022 for breastfeeding supports; — that this year marks the end of the current HSE Breastfeeding in a Healthy Ireland – Health Service Breastfeeding Action Plan 2016-2021 and welcomes the extension of the plan into 2022;

P.T.O. 1244

— the recent announcement of funding for an additional 24 lactation consultants, but notes the barrier to progress remains with recruitment and that previous funding commitments, since 2020, have still not resulted in hospital posts being filled and the HSE must ensure that these posts are dedicated time; — that the new Breastfeeding Policy for Staff working in the Public Health Service came into effect in February, 2021, supporting health staff to continue to breastfeed on return to work following maternity leave, allowing for 1-hour paid breastfeeding/pumping breaks until a child’s second birthday; — that all new and existing maternity and paediatric hospitals should be breastfeeding friendly by adopting the WHO/United Nations Children's Fund updated BFHI for Neonatal Wards (Neo-BFHI) standards initiated in other European countries which includes criteria for standards of care, discharge planning, post-discharge assessment, and routine specialist support for mothers; — that the delivery of the proposed National Maternity Hospital and National Children’s Hospital provides a once in a lifetime opportunity to transform breastfeeding services in this country; — and welcomes the development of a new Code of Marketing of Breast Milk Substitutes in public health services currently in its final draft and due for implementation across all health services in 2021, but highlights the urgent need to incorporate strong regulation of marketing practices in Ireland within the new Code, in line with the WHO’s International Code of Marketing of Breast-milk Substitutes and subsequent relevant World Health Assembly (WHA) resolutions; and — the need to tackle socio-economic barriers to breastfeeding through targeted supports for vulnerable groups, including people with disabilities, younger mothers, and women from the Traveller community, as much of the recent research on breastfeeding support has found that women need tailored support, not a one-size fits all approach with specific supports aimed at marginalised groups; and calls on the Government to: — establish a new, ambitious, interdepartmental, cross-party breastfeeding action plan after the current extension, with measurable targets, data collection, regular reporting and wider stakeholder involvement including the Neo-BFHI Ten Steps to Successful Breastfeeding and ensure the new plan pays particular attention to addressing socio- economic barriers to breastfeeding and barriers facing marginalised women; — commit to the establishment of a community-owned, not-for-profit human milk bank in the Republic of Ireland with ties to the National Maternity Hospital, including a 24- hour depot and links to research, whilst maintaining existing access to the Western Trust Human Milk Bank in Northern Ireland; — draft a national human milk donation policy for babies in the State, to ensure equal access of donated milk to infants across the Republic of Ireland; — develop an infant feeding emergency preparedness plan as recommended by the WHO, to ensure safe access and safe preparation of infant formula and to include the protection of breastfeeding during a crisis, i.e. non-separation of mothers and babies, and access to pumping equipment should separation happen; — ensure dedicated funding is provided for in Budget 2022 for the full implementation of the existing Creating a Better Future Together – National Maternity Strategy 2016- 2026 and the HSE Breastfeeding in a Healthy Ireland – Health Service Breastfeeding Action Plan 2016-2021 and beyond the one year extension of the current breastfeeding action plan; 1245

— publish a comprehensive implementation report on key performance indicators of the current HSE Breastfeeding in a Healthy Ireland – Health Service Breastfeeding Action Plan 2016-2021, in order to determine whether it has the potential to bring about radical changes in approaches to breastfeeding supports in the Irish healthcare system; — recruit the outstanding 33.5 International Board Certified Lactation Consultant (IBCLC) posts within the maternity system through a well-funded, rigorous and focused recruitment drive, with a particular emphasis on regions significantly underrepresented, such as, the North West and South/South East regions which currently have zero hospital lactation consultants, and ensure that these posts are dedicated time; — join the other 98 countries by participating in the World Breastfeeding Trends Initiative, to help comprehensively identify all areas for improvement in the Irish context; — provide more funds directed to independent breastfeeding research in Ireland; — extend and regularise workplace supports as contained in the new Breastfeeding Policy for Staff working in the Public Health Service to all sectors, including the provision of lactation breaks to all breastfeeding mothers up to two years, in line with the HSE, Civil Service and education sector, and address the inconsistency in breastfeeding supports for staff, including breastfeeding rooms, across all Government departments and agencies; — provide for free hospital grade electric breast pumps at all Irish maternity and paediatric hospitals and for home use, alongside milk containers and pump connectors; — target all new mothers with one visit at home, free of charge, from a qualified IBCLC, while, in the interim, all public health nurses and general practitioners should have access to an IBCLC for referral of a mother and baby free of charge and in the meantime, provide funding for training of Public Health Nurses in line with IBCLC and funding, community and peer-to-peer groups in line with IBCLC; and — urgently implement the remaining aspects of the WHO’s International Code of Marketing of Breast-milk Substitutes and subsequent relevant WHA resolutions, to ensure full regulation of formula products for babies after six months and other negative marketing practices, and strongly calls for the State to replace the private sector sponsorship of various initiatives that promote formula feeding, including promotional material, sponsorship of helplines and other fundraising activities.” — Jennifer Whitmore.

[19 May, 2021]

177. “That Dáil Éireann: notes that: — in the first eight days of this Israel-Palestine conflict, over 60 children have been murdered by the Israeli Defence Forces; — the current escalation of violence was instigated by the attempt to ethnically cleanse 28 Palestinian families from the Sheikh Jarrah area of Jerusalem, as part of an ongoing and systematic campaign of illegal Israeli settlements and ethnic cleansing of

P.T.O. 1246

Palestinians from their land; — Israel’s current military actions in Gaza, similar murderous attacks over recent years and the siege of Gaza amount to war crimes; — the ongoing ethnic cleansing of Palestinians, and illegal settlement expansion into Palestinian land, represent flagrant breaches of international law; and — the Israeli Ambassador’s presence in Ireland is untenable in these circumstances; and — therefore, calls on the Government to expel the Israeli Ambassador to Ireland in response to this continuing violence against Palestinians and that he should be expelled with immediate effect.” — Gino Kenny, Richard Boyd Barrett, Paul Murphy, Bríd Smith, Mick Barry, Thomas Pringle, Joan Collins, Richard O'Donoghue, Gary Gannon.

[27 May, 2021]

178. “That Dáil Éireann: recognises: — the views of the members of Dáil Éireann as outlined during the private members’ debate of the 21st October, 2020; — that a sustainable nationwide post office network is a key component of the economic and social infrastructure in both rural and urban areas; — that post offices provide crucial public and financial services to communities all around Ireland, especially to those in rural and isolated areas; — that from 1st July post offices face a major challenge as a significant reduction in payment rates will take effect; and — the need to put the post office network on a sustainable operational and financial footing in line with the Cabinet decision in 2017; and calls on the Government to: — introduce an interim solution that will be effective and deliverable from July 2021, to guarantee the current post office network and prevent any further closures; — provide long-term certainty in order to enable postmasters to invest, develop and grow their businesses; — ensure that all citizens have full access to the important services they provide; — designate the post office network as the ‘offline gateway’ of choice for citizens availing of State services, due to its unique nationwide network and existing strong relationship with offline citizens; — reinvigorate the post office network by extending the services which post offices provide and by retaining existing services such as social welfare payments; — commence the provision of offline Government services, with the availability of motor tax renewal through the post office network; and — give recognition to the existing post office network as both a rural economic lifeline service and a locus for future development of financial services outside of the existing banking framework.” — Cathal Berry, Seán Canney, Peter Fitzpatrick, Noel Grealish, Michael Lowry, Verona Murphy, Denis Naughten, Matt Shanahan, Peadar Tóibín. 1247

[15 June, 2021]

179. An Dáil a chur ar athló. Adjournment of the Dáil.

BILLÍ AR SIÚL AGUS GNÓ ATÁ ORDAITHE BILLS IN PROGRESS AND BUSINESS ORDERED Déardaoin, 25 Lúnasa, 2022 Thursday, 25th August, 2022

An Bille um an Seachtú Leasú is Tríocha ar an mBunreacht (Cearta Geilleagracha, Comhdhaonnacha agus Cultúir), 2018 — Ordaíodh é a léamh an dara huair an 25 Lúnasa, 2022. Thirty-Seventh Amendment of the Constitution (Economic, Social And Cultural Rights) Bill 2018 — Ordered to be read a second time on 25 August, 2022.

Déardaoin, 11 Samhain, 2021 Thursday, 11th November, 2021

An Bille Oideachais (Ligean Isteach i Scoileanna), 2020 — Ordaíodh é a léamh an dara huair an 11 Samhain, 2021. Education (Admission to Schools) Bill 2020 — Ordered to be read a second time on 11 November, 2021.

Dé Céadaoin, 4 Lúnasa, 2021 Wednesday, 4th August, 2021

An Bille um Ghníomhaireacht Bainistíochta Abhainn na Sionainne, 2020 — Ordaíodh é a léamh an dara huair an 4 Lúnasa, 2021. River Shannon Management Agency Bill 2020 — Ordered to be read a second time on 4 August, 2021.

Dé hAoine, 24 Meán Fómhair, 2021 Friday, 24th September, 2021

An Bille Sláinte (Leasú) (Cúram Baile Gairmiúil), 2020 — Ordaíodh é a léamh an dara huair an 24 Meán Fómhair, 2021. Health (Amendment) (Professional Home Care) Bill 2020 — Ordered to be read a second time on 24 September, 2021.

Dé Céadaoin, 25 Lúnasa, 2021 Wednesday, 25th August, 2021

P.T.O. 1248

An Bille um Brústocaireacht a Rialáil (Leasú), 2020 — Ordaíodh é a léamh an dara huair an 25 Lúnasa, 2021. Regulation of Lobbying (Amendment) Bill 2020 — Ordered to be read a second time on 25 August, 2021.

Déardaoin, 25 Samhain, 2021 Thursday, 25th November, 2021

An Bille Árachais (Srian le Praghsáil Dhifreálach agus Próifíliú), 2021 — Ordaíodh é a léamh an dara huair an 25 Samhain, 2021. Insurance (Restriction on Differential Pricing and Profiling) Bill 2021 — Ordered to be read a second time on 25 November, 2021.

Dé Céadaoin, 2 Márta, 2022 Wednesday, 2nd March, 2022

An Bille um Chomhairle na mBreithiúna (Leasú), 2021 — Ordaíodh é a léamh an dara huair an 2 Márta, 2022. Judicial Council (Amendment) Bill 2021 — Ordered to be read a second time on 2 March, 2022.

Déardaoin, 12 Bealtaine, 2022 Thursday, 12th May, 2022

Bille na gCuideachtaí (Cearta Fostaithe a Chosaint i Leachtuithe), 2021 — Ordaíodh é a léamh an dara huair an 12 Bealtaine, 2022. Companies (Protection of Employees’ Rights in Liquidations) Bill 2021 — Ordered to be read a second time on 12 May, 2022.

Déardaoin, 16 Meitheamh, 2022 Thursday, 16th June, 2022

An Bille um Thalamh Forbraíochta a Fháil (Measúnacht ar Chúiteamh), 2021 — Ordaíodh é a léamh an dara huair an 16 June, 2022. Acquisition of Development Land (Assessment of Compensation) Bill 2021 — Ordered to be a read a second time on 16 June, 2022.

BILLÍ I ROGHCHOISTÍ, I gCOISTÍ SPEISIALTA NÓ I gCOMHCHOISTÍ BILLS IN SELECT, SPECIAL OR JOINT COMMITTEES

An Bille um Fhorbairt Peitriliam agus Mianraí Eile (Leasú) (Bearta Éigeandála Aeráide), 2018 — An Roghchoiste um Chomhshaol agus Gníomhú ar son na hAeráide. Petroleum and Other Minerals Development (Amendment) (Climate Emergency Measures) Bill 2018 — Select Committee on Environment and Climate Action. 1249

An Bille um Cheartas Coiriúil (Leasú), 2021 — An Roghchoiste um Dhlí agus Ceart. Criminal Justice (Amendment) Bill 2021 — Select Committee on Justice.

(l) An Bille fán Scéim um Thacaíocht Tithe Banaltrais (Leasú), 2021 — An Roghchoiste um Shláinte. (a) Nursing Homes Support Scheme (Amendment) Bill 2021 — Select Committee on Health.

An Bille um Dhlínse Mhuirí, 2021 [Seanad] — An Roghchoiste um Ghnóthaí Eachtracha agus Cosaint. Maritime Jurisdiction Bill 2021 [Seanad] — Select Committee on Foreign Affairs and Defence.

BILLÍ DÁLA SA SEANAD DÁIL BILLS WITH THE SEANAD

An Bille um Fhaisnéis faoin Difríocht Pá idir na hInscní, 2019. Gender Pay Gap Information Bill 2019.

An Bille um Ghóchumadh, 2020. Counterfeiting Bill 2020.

An Bille um Ghníomhú ar son na hAeráide agus um Fhorbairt Ísealcharbóin (Leasú), 2021. Climate Action and Low Carbon Development (Amendment) Bill 2021.

An Bille um Sheirbhísí Slándála Príobháidí (Leasú), 2021. Private Security Services (Amendment) Bill 2021.

SCRÍBHINNÍ A LEAGADH FAOI BHRÁID NA dTITHE DOCUMENTS LAID BEFORE THE HOUSES1 Reachtúil Statutory

Tairiscint Ceadaithe ag Teastáil Requiring Motion of Approval

Níl aon scríbhinn á leagan faoin gCatagóir None seo

1 I gcás nach leagtar scríbhinn ach faoi bhráid aon Teach amháin, cuirfear (D) – Dáil nó (S) – Seanad ina diaidh dá réir sin. Where a document is laid before one House only it will be appended with (D) – Dáil or (S) – Seanad accordingly.

P.T.O. 1250

In-neamhnithe le Tairiscint Open to Motion to Annul

Na Rialacháin um Cheadanna Fostaíochta Employment Permits (Amendment) (Leasú), 2021 (I.R. Uimh. 286 de 2021). Regulations 2021 (S.I. No. 286 of 2021).

An tOrdú um an Acht Inimirce, 2004 (Víosaí) (Leasú) (Uimh. 2), 2021 (I.R. Immigration Act 2004 (Visas) Uimh. 287 de 2021). (Amendment) (No. 2) Order 2021 (S.I. No. 287 of 2021).

Eile Other

Corparáid Baincéireachta Straitéiseach na Strategic Banking Corporation of Ireland. hÉireann. An Tuarascáil Bhliantúil agus Annual Report and Financial Statements, na Ráitis Airgeadais, 2020. 2020.

Ráiteas i scríbhinn maidir leis na téarmaí Statement in writing of the terms and agus na coinníollacha (conradh) faoina conditions (contract) under which Special ngníomhaíonn nó faoinar ghníomhaigh an Adviser, Bernadette Flanagan, acts or Comhairleoir Speisialta, Bernadette acted as a Civilian Driver to Senator Flanagan, mar Thiománaí Sibhialta don , Leader of the Seanad, Seanadóir Regina Doherty, Treoraí an with effect from 21 October, 2020, tSeanaid, le héifeacht ón 21 Deireadh pursuant to section 19(4)(a) of the Ethics Fómhair 2020, de bhun alt 19(4)(a) de na in Public Office Acts 1995 and 2001. hAchtanna um Eitic in Oifigí Poiblí, 1995 agus 2001.

Ráiteas i dtaobh an gaol an Comhairleoir Statement as to whether Special Adviser, Speisialta, Bernadette Flanagan, a Bernadette Flanagan, who acts or acted as ghníomhaíonn nó a ghníomhaigh mar a Civilian Driver to Senator Regina Thiománaí Sibhialta don Seanadóir Doherty, Leader of the Seanad, is a Regina Doherty, Treoraí an tSeanaid, leis relative or civil partner of the office an sealbhóir oifige, nó an í a páirtnéir holder, pursuant to section 19(4)(c) of the sibhialta í, de bhun alt 19(4)(c) de na Ethics in Public Office Acts 1995 and hAchtanna um Eitic in Oifigí Poiblí, 1995 2001. agus 2001.

Ráiteas i scríbhinn maidir leis na téarmaí Statement in writing of the terms and agus na coinníollacha (conradh) faoina conditions (contract) under which Special ngníomhaíonn nó faoinar ghníomhaigh an Adviser, Lisa Tavey, acts or acted as a Comhairleoir Speisialta, Lisa Tavey, mar Personal Assistant to Deputy Leo Chúntóir Pearsanta don Teachta Leo Varadkar, Tánaiste and Minister for Varadkar, Tánaiste agus Aire Fiontar, Enterprise, Trade and Employment, with Trádála agus Fostaíochta, le héifeacht ón effect from 27 June, 2020, pursuant to 27 Meitheamh 2020, de bhun alt 19(4)(a) section 19(4)(a) of the Ethics in Public de na hAchtanna um Eitic in Oifigí Poiblí, Office Acts 1995 and 2001. 1995 agus 2001.

Ráiteas i dtaobh an gaol an Comhairleoir Statement as to whether Special Adviser, Speisialta, Lisa Tavey, a ghníomhaíonn nó Lisa Tavey, who acts or acted as a a ghníomhaigh mar Chúntóir Pearsanta Personal Assistant to Deputy Leo don Teachta Leo Varadkar, Tánaiste agus Varadkar, Tánaiste and Minister for Aire Fiontar, Trádála agus Fostaíochta, Enterprise, Trade and Employment, is a 1251 leis an sealbhóir oifige, nó an í a relative or civil partner of the office pháirtnéir sibhialta í, de bhun alt 19(4)(c) holder, pursuant to section 19(4)(c) of the de na hAchtanna um Eitic in Oifigí Poiblí, Ethics in Public Office Act 1995 and 1995 agus 2001. 2001.

Bord Oideachais agus Oiliúna an Longfoirt agus na hIarmhí. An Tuarascáil Bhliantúil, Longford and Westmeath Education and 2020. Training Board. Annual Report, 2020.

CCÉ (Cumann Cógaiseoirí na hÉireann). An Tuarascáil Bhliantúil, 2020. PSI (Pharmaceutical Society of Ireland). Annual Report, 2020. Ráiteas i scríbhinn maidir leis na téarmaí agus na coinníollacha (conradh) faoina Statement in writing of the terms and ngníomhaíonn nó faoinar ghníomhaigh an conditions (contract) under which Special Comhairleoir Speisialta, Clare Mungovan, Adviser, Clare Mungovan, acts or acted as mar Chomhairleoir Speisialta don Teachta a Special Adviser to Deputy Leo Leo Varadkar, Tánaiste agus Aire Fiontar, Varadkar, Tánaiste and Minister for Trádála agus Fostaíochta, le héifeacht ón Enterprise, Trade and Employment, with 27 Meitheamh 2020, de bhun alt 19(4)(a) effect from 27 June 2020, pursuant to de na hAchtanna um Eitic in Oifigí Poiblí, section 19(4)(a) of the Ethics in Public 1995 agus 2001. Office Acts 1995 and 2001.

Ráiteas i scríbhinn maidir leis na téarmaí agus na coinníollacha (conradh) faoina Statement in writing of the terms and ngníomhaíonn nó faoinar ghníomhaigh an conditions (contract) under which Special Comhairleoir Speisialta, Philip O' Adviser, Philip O' Callaghan, acts or acted Callaghan, mar Chomhairleoir Speisialta as a Special Adviser to Deputy Leo don Teachta Leo Varadkar, Tánaiste agus Varadkar, Tánaiste and Minister for Aire Fiontar, Trádála agus Fostaíochta, le Enterprise, Trade and Employment, with héifeacht ón 27 Meitheamh 2020, de bhun effect from 27 June 2020, pursuant to alt 19(4)(a) de na hAchtanna um Eitic in section 19(4)(a) of the Ethics in Public Oifigí Poiblí, 1995 agus 2001. Office Acts 1995 and 2001.

Ráiteas i scríbhinn maidir leis na téarmaí agus na coinníollacha (conradh) faoina Statement in writing of the terms and ngníomhaíonn nó faoinar ghníomhaigh an conditions (contract) under which Special Comhairleoir Speisialta, Niamh Allen, Adviser, Niamh Allen, acts or acted as a mar Chomhairleoir Speisialta don Teachta Special Adviser to Deputy Eamon Ryan, Éamon Ó Riain, Ceannaire an Leader of the Green Party and Minister Chomhaontais Ghlais agus Aire for the Environment, Climate and Comhshaoil, Aeráide agus Cumarsáide, le Communications, with effect from 27 héifeacht ón 27 Meitheamh 2020, de bhun June, 2020, pursuant to section 19(4)(a) of alt 19(4)(a) de na hAchtanna um Eitic in the Ethics in Public Office Acts 1995 and Oifigí Poiblí, 1995 agus 2001. 2001.

Ráiteas i scríbhinn maidir leis na téarmaí agus na coinníollacha (conradh) faoina Statement in writing of the terms and ngníomhaíonn nó faoinar ghníomhaigh an conditions (contract) under which Special Comhairleoir Speisialta, Éamonn Fahey, Adviser, Éamonn Fahey, acts or acted as a mar Chomhairleoir Speisialta don Teachta Special Adviser to Deputy Eamon Ryan, Éamon Ó Riain, Ceannaire an Leader of the Green Party and Minister Chomhaontais Ghlais agus Aire for the Environment, Climate and

P.T.O. 1252

Comhshaoil, Aeráide agus Cumarsáide, le Communications, with effect from 27 héifeacht ón 27 Meitheamh 2020, de bhun June, 2020, pursuant to section 19(4)(a) of alt 19(4)(a) de na hAchtanna um Eitic in the Ethics in Public Office Acts 1995 and Oifigí Poiblí, 1995 agus 2001. 2001.

Ráiteas i scríbhinn maidir leis na téarmaí agus na coinníollacha (conradh) faoina Statement in writing of the terms and ngníomhaíonn nó faoinar ghníomhaigh an conditions (contract) under which Special Comhairleoir Speisialta, Pat Mc Parland, Adviser, Pat Mc Parland, acts or acted as mar Chomhairleoir Speisialta don Teachta a Special Adviser to Deputy Micheál Mícheál Ó Máirtín, , le Martin, Taoiseach, with effect from 27 héifeacht ón 27 Meitheamh 2020, de bhun June, 2020, pursuant to section 19(4)(a) of alt 19(4)(a) de na hAchtanna um Eitic in the Ethics in Public Office Acts 1995 and Oifigí Poiblí, 1995 agus 2001. 2001.

Ráiteas i dtaobh an gaol an Comhairleoir Speisialta, Clare Mungovan, a ghníomhaíonn nó a ghníomhaigh mar Statement as to whether Special Adviser, Chomhairleoir Speisialta don Teachta Leo Clare Mungovan, who acts or acted as a Varadkar, Tánaiste agus Aire Fiontar, Special Adviser to Deputy Leo Varadkar, Trádála agus Fostaíochta, leis an sealbhóir Tánaiste and Minister for Enterprise, oifige, nó an í a pháirtnéir sibhialta í, de Trade and Employment, is a relative or bhun alt 19(4)(c) de na hAchtanna um civil partner of the office holder, pursuant Eitic in Oifigí Poiblí, 1995 agus 2001. to section 19(4)(c) of the Ethics in Public Office Act 1995 and 2001. Ráiteas i dtaobh an gaol an Comhairleoir Speisialta, Niamh Allen, a ghníomhaíonn nó a ghníomhaigh mar Chomhairleoir Statement as to whether Special Adviser, Speisialta don Teachta Éamon Ó Riain, Niamh Allen, who acts or acted as a Ceannaire an Chomhaontais Ghlais agus Special Adviser to Deputy Eamon Ryan, Aire Comhshaoil, Aeráide agus Leader of the Green Party and Minister Cumarsáide, leis an sealbhóir oifige, nó an for the Environment, Climate and í a pháirtnéir sibhialta í, de bhun alt 19(4) Communications, is a relative or civil (c) de na hAchtanna um Eitic in Oifigí partner of the office holder, pursuant to Poiblí, 1995 agus 2001. section 19(4)(c) of the Ethics in Public Office Act 1995 and 2001. Ráiteas i dtaobh an gaol an Comhairleoir Speisialta, Éamonn Fahey, a ghníomhaíonn nó a ghníomhaigh mar Statement as to whether Special Adviser, Chomhairleoir Speisialta don Teachta Éamonn Fahey, who acts or acted as a Éamon Ó Riain, Ceannaire an Special Adviser to Deputy Eamon Ryan, Chomhaontais Ghlais agus Aire Leader of the Green Party and Minister Comhshaoil, Aeráide agus Cumarsáide, for the Environment, Climate and leis an sealbhóir oifige, nó an é a Communications, is a relative or civil pháirtnéir sibhialta é, de bhun alt 19(4)(c) partner of the office holder, pursuant to de na hAchtanna um Eitic in Oifigí Poiblí, section 19(4)(c) of the Ethics in Public 1995 agus 2001. Office Act 1995 and 2001.

Ráiteas i dtaobh an gaol an Comhairleoir Speisialta, Pat Mc Parland, a Statement as to whether Special Adviser, ghníomhaíonn nó a ghníomhaigh mar Pat Mc Parland, who acts or acted as a Chomhairleoir Speisialta don Teachta Special Adviser to Deputy Micheál Mícheál Ó Máirtín, Taoiseach, leis an Martin, Taoiseach, is a relative or civil sealbhóir oifige, nó an é a pháirtnéir partner of the office holder, pursuant to sibhialta é, de bhun alt 19(4)(c) de na section 19(4)(c) of the Ethics in Public 1253 hAchtanna um Eitic in Oifigí Poiblí, 1995 Office Act 1995 and 2001. agus 2001.

Neamhreachtúil Non-Statutory

An Roinn Fiontar, Trádála agus Department of Enterprise, Trade and Fostaíochta. An Tuarascáil Bhliantúil, Employment. Annual Report, 2020. 2020.

Eascaire do Dháilcheantar Chuan Bhaile Issue of Writ for the Constituency of Átha Cliath Theas a chur amach: 16 Dublin Bay South: 16th June, 2021. (D) Meitheamh 2021. (D)

An tÚdarás Náisiúnta Míchumais. An National Disability Authority. Report on Tuarascáil ar Chomhlíonadh Chuid 5 den Compliance with Part 5 of the Disability Acht um Míchumas, 2005 don bhliain Act 2005 for 2019. 2019.

An Roinn Caiteachais Phoiblí agus Department of Public Expenditure and Athchóirithe. Meastacháin Reform. Further Revised Estimates for Athbhreithnithe Bhreise i gcomhair Public Services 2021: Enterprise, Trade Seirbhísí Poiblí 2021: Fiontair, Trádáil and Employment. (D) agus Fostaíocht. (D)