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Does Owen Keegan have a point re homeless?

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1356

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  • Registered Users Posts: 1,957 ✭✭✭Sheep breeder


    https://www.pmvtrust.ie/wp-content/uploads/2018/06/Approved-and-Signed-PMVT-Audited-Accounts-for-2017-Excluding-income-and-expenditure.pdf

    That's actually shocking. Page 23

    14 Million on Staff Costs out of 24 Million.

    How many houses would you get for that.

    The head of this trust father Pat is on huge money for one person, this is not a charity more like a business with 60% going to staff before anything is done about homelessness.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 945 ✭✭✭Always Tired


    no, he doesn't have a point, it was a disgusting 'let them eat cake' type of comment. not really much point starting a thread on it though OP as you have long had your mind made up about everyone who gets any state help, going all the way back to the water charge protest days.

    yes, the homeless have it far too good in this country. we should take away everything these people have. oh, they have next to nothing. well then we'll give them a bed to sleep on but if they use it too much we'll take it away. that'll learn em.

    Ireland is a country where we are very lucky to have social safety nets. unfortunately, it is also a very difficult place to 'raise your station' as it were. one person 'refuses' an offer of a flat and suddenly the homeless are spoiled. get a grip.


  • Registered Users Posts: 4,331 ✭✭✭Keyzer


    touts wrote: »
    He is 100% correct and I applaud his bravery to be one of the few voices willing to stand up and speak the truth on Irish media. Welfare has evolved from a last ditch safety net to instead be a viable career and lifestyle choice.

    Many of the homeless here have chosen to be homeless as part of a long term life plan. For the young of the "welfare class" 3-4 years going through "homelessness" is just as much part of their welfare "career" path as spending 3-4 years going to college is part of a normal career path for the young of working and middle classes.

    The young woman who was then interviewed on Sean O'Rourke's show who admitted she turned down an apartment proves that. She turned down a 1 bed apartment because it wouldn't be suitable for her in a few years when her son was older. No sense of her seeing it as a temporary stepping stone to something better. No concept of going to college and getting a job and saving for a house like most people have to. No. She wanted a forever house now that would sustain her and her family through a life on welfare and that was the limit of her ambition and desire.

    If her and her ilk were told to like it or lump it then we'd find the level of homelessness would plummet. In that respect Mr Keegan is absolutely correct and seems to be the one person in the civil service conscious of not wasting taxpayers money.

    This is the greatest thing I've ever read on Boards.

    Sums up my thoughts more coherently than I ever could myself.


  • Registered Users Posts: 7,770 ✭✭✭Fann Linn


    Keyzer wrote: »
    This is the greatest thing I've ever read on Boards.

    Sums up my thoughts more coherently than I ever could myself.


    Easily impressed or what!


  • Moderators, Social & Fun Moderators, Sports Moderators Posts: 51,012 Mod ✭✭✭✭Necro


    lawred2 wrote: »
    Is anyone remotely surprised any more?

    Just another slush fund..

    Half the problem in Ireland is the under-regulation of these 'charities'.

    A quick Google shows just how many different ones are operating just in Dublin.

    If the funding for these guys was cut and put into affordable housing instead it might make some tangible difference.

    The history of these type of organisations shows that while some do some Trojan work, the vast majority are just another way to board the gravy train.

    Ireland has an obsession with quangos for every facet of our existence.


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  • Closed Accounts Posts: 945 ✭✭✭Always Tired


    Keyzer wrote: »
    This is the greatest thing I've ever read on Boards.

    Sums up my thoughts more coherently than I ever could myself.

    I'll bet that's what a lot of future Nazis thought when they first heard Adolf Hitler give a speech.

    It's absolute codswallop. No child is brought up to think that they are part of a 'welfare class' and that becoming homeless is some rite of passage. the red top papers stick a few of the cases they know people will tut tut and shake their head about, like 'she refused a flat because it only had 1 BR' or whatever because reactionary dolts will eat it up. they create a big bad dolie boogieman for you to rail against and you go along with it.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 5,593 ✭✭✭Wheeliebin30


    So just on the radio, since the council scrapped families getting priority for housing if they are homeless the number has decreased by 36%!!!

    36% yes.

    And we’re told no one is or was gaming the system??

    Haha I’ve said it for years and years.


  • Posts: 13,712 ✭✭✭✭ [Deleted User]


    Hilarious when people say we need to build like the 1930s yet never mention the coating nowadays,

    To build something like that now would cost 30 billion.

    Like seriously we have or had a fiscal space of 500 million to play with before the nurses strike this year.

    But yeah we will just magic up 30 billion euro.
    Yes but why would it cost billions? Because of the laws of supply and demand.

    The obvious solution is to enhance supply. Rezone, compulsorily purchase land. Abolish vat on housing for ten years. Suddenly the curve shifts.


  • Registered Users Posts: 8,356 ✭✭✭corner of hells


    So just on the radio, since the council scrapped families getting priority for housing if they are homeless the number has decreased by 36%!!!

    36% yes.

    And we’re told no one is or was gaming the system??

    Haha I’ve said it for years and years.

    Years and years ?

    Family Hubs only opened in March 2017 , the issue with families abusing that system only became significant in late 2017 and 2018 and was highlighted by service providers then .


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 5,593 ✭✭✭Wheeliebin30


    Years and years ?

    Family Hubs only opened in March 2017 , the issue with families abusing that system only became significant in late 2017 and 2018 and was highlighted by service providers then .

    It is and was happening for years.


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  • Registered Users Posts: 8,356 ✭✭✭corner of hells


    It is and was happening for years.

    It became a significant issue when the Family Hubs were opened.
    To stay in a family you must engage with staff with a view to sourcing private rented accommodation.

    What happened was that conditions were so good in some of the hubs , families tried to brazen it out and stay indefinitely.

    Prior to the hubs you stayed in hotels or B&B's with practically no support staff .


  • Registered Users Posts: 17,840 ✭✭✭✭Idbatterim


    We are humans. Of course they will push for the most favorable outcome! Blame the morons that have created the system, entitlement culture and continue to push for the welfare vote and further boosting the welfare state. Fg included...


  • Registered Users Posts: 3,035 ✭✭✭MFPM


    Keyzer wrote: »
    This is the greatest thing I've ever read on Boards.

    Sums up my thoughts more coherently than I ever could myself.

    Might I politely suggest you broaden your reading horizons and educate yourself with some facts, you might then see it for what it is - unsubstantiated, opinionated condescension.


  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    no, he doesn't have a point, it was a disgusting 'let them eat cake' type of comment. not really much point starting a thread on it though OP as you have long had your mind made up about everyone who gets any state help, going all the way back to the water charge protest days.

    yes, the homeless have it far too good in this country. we should take away everything these people have. oh, they have next to nothing. well then we'll give them a bed to sleep on but if they use it too much we'll take it away. that'll learn em.

    Ireland is a country where we are very lucky to have social safety nets. unfortunately, it is also a very difficult place to 'raise your station' as it were. one person 'refuses' an offer of a flat and suddenly the homeless are spoiled. get a grip.

    Having been the recipient of welfare on a couple of occasions, I’m only too aware of its benefits. It was a crutch when I needed it. I did not view it as a lifestyle choice.
    I sourced my own home, in an area I could afford, not an area I wished to live in and funded it from my own wages.
    The homeless crisis seems to be centered mostly in Dublin, where most of the homeless “Charities” are based. Stop paying millions to groups who duplicate services and put it into one central government agency and build homes.
    If people are genuinely homeless and unemployed, then they cannot be fussy about where they live-within reason.
    I’m sorry if my being an advocate of one being self reliant and willing to pay ones way offends you. It’s just the way I am. My culture, if you like.


  • Registered Users Posts: 4,331 ✭✭✭Keyzer


    MFPM wrote: »
    Might I politely suggest you broaden your reading horizons and educate yourself with some facts, you might then see it for what it is - unsubstantiated, opinionated condescension.

    Calm down will ye, it was tongue in cheek comment.


  • Registered Users Posts: 39,509 ✭✭✭✭Boggles


    Another thread demonizing the homeless by the Fine Gael massive.

    All legit.

    Carry on.


  • Registered Users Posts: 13,948 ✭✭✭✭markodaly


    Boggles wrote: »
    Another thread demonizing the homeless by the Fine Gael massive.

    All legit.

    Carry on.

    Well, there is more than one way to stick your head in the sand.


  • Registered Users Posts: 11,461 ✭✭✭✭Ush1


    Boggles wrote: »
    Another thread demonizing the homeless by the Fine Gael massive.

    All legit.

    Carry on.

    Term hijacked beyond all recognition.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 4,105 ✭✭✭Kivaro


    At least Mr. Keegan's comments has started a real discussion on the imaginary homeless "crisis" in Ireland.
    It must incense many socialists that word is finally getting out about the realities of this "crisis". Lots of "charities" feeding from an enormous trough, which is overflowing at the brim; constantly filled by the Irish tax payer and gullible people who donate.

    One of these days, we may even be surprised to see an Irish media outlet actually doing an investigation into these homeless charities, or as I like to call them ......... cartels.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 2,350 ✭✭✭doolox


    There does not appear to be one single powerful agency with the necessary powers to do anything about this problem.

    I do not think Ireland on its own will solve the homelessness problem. All western democracies seem to have similar if not worse problems and they cannot solve them.

    Conventional housing as we used to know it has become too dear for most average workers of average earnings and capacities. This is because of dearer land, dearer wages and costs, higher specs and materials, more insulation and technical demands being placed on modern buildings than before.

    Even increased safety and procedural inspections and oversight add to costs but these are necessary to keep workers safe.

    The unpleasant truth is that in former times building workers were poorly paid, unpensioned and had unsafe working conditions. However the houses built were solid basic structures but were hard to heat and keep dry. Houses now are dearer because a lot of insulation and sealing out rain takes place at the initial stage to save money in heating bills later. This all costs more than in former times and makes new houses dearer upfront than old houses.

    In the 1970's and 80's a problem existed in urban areas of getting basic housing for workers in the IDA factories then being built and staffed in Ireland. The government formed the NBA, national building agency, to build very basic housing at relatively lower cost than totally private housing could provide.

    These were stripped down to the very basic needs, no chimneys or fireplaces, no plumbed central heating, air blown central heating to the front 4 rooms only and front and back walls were of extremely light construction, basic single glazed wooden windows and doors. Such houses would not be built today because of sustainability concerns and demand by government for higher spec housing. They would not get planning permission. They did get workers into some form of basic shelter in relative privacy and are infinitely better than the damp and dangerous hotel rooms, hostels and cardboard boxes used by todays' homeless people. Much retrofitting was needed to these houses but this could be done gradually over time as finances improved.

    The government imposes heavy regulation on hours worked, child minding arrangements, planning restrictions, over elaborate housing specs and planning denials and then expects the average person to house themselves. Worse still they overtax low paid people and over regulate small business so that many can no longer hire people in the way they used to, putting more people on the road to homelessness.

    It now takes two full time middle earning, mostly double degree holding people to afford the smallest house in Dublin. They need to have tiny families to do this. They need the free services of a parent for childminding in many cases. Otherwise within the M50 you will not get a house. Many people resort to long commutes in order to get housed but not everybody has the capacity to run a car and public transport areas command a high premium outside the reach of many. All capital cities and large urban areas have to provide some element of publicly funded and subsidised housing in order to accommodate junior level workers and non professional workers needed in every community. Otherwise you will have to do without services or pay higher wages for basic services.
    Employers in the future will have to house their workers like many had to in the past.Local authority housing will have to make a comeback.


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  • Registered Users Posts: 12,361 ✭✭✭✭mariaalice


    Kivaro wrote: »
    At least Mr. Keegan's comments has started a real discussion on the imaginary homeless "crisis" in Ireland.
    It must incense many socialists that word is finally getting out about the realities of this "crisis". Lots of "charities" feeding from an enormous trough, which is overflowing at the brim; constantly filled by the Irish tax payer and gullible people who donate.

    One of these days, we may even be surprised to see an Irish media outlet actually doing an investigation into these homeless charities, or as I like to call them ......... cartels.

    Not when you have decided you already know the answer, The charities NGO are not a con but they have morphed in to far more than their original remit which is not a bad thing as society has changed however they still solicit money on the basis that there helping an elderly alcoholic who is down on his luck and sleeping rough.

    They would be better off rebranding themselves as providing support to vulnerable people who cant house themselves or who will need support all their lives to house themselves.


  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    So just on the radio, since the council scrapped families getting priority for housing if they are homeless the number has decreased by 36%!!!

    36% yes.

    And we’re told no one is or was gaming the system??

    Haha I’ve said it for years and years.



    Which council has done this, I hadn't heard anything?


  • Registered Users Posts: 267 ✭✭overkill602


    I totally agree with his comments dont like the guys policy on motoring.
    The goverment should assist the new underclass who dont claim anything and pay for the entitled welfare everything.
    Back in 2010 we had 12% unemployment welfare costing 20billion in 2018 we are about 6% still the same.


  • Posts: 13,712 ✭✭✭✭ [Deleted User]


    Which council has done this, I hadn't heard anything?
    Dublin City Council.

    It isn't a policy aimed at families, as far as I know, priority has been abolished for all homeless people.


  • Registered Users Posts: 13,078 ✭✭✭✭jmayo


    touts wrote: »
    Jesus that is a shocking report. Out of 24 million raised they only spent 7.2m providing services to clients and buying houses. The rest of the money went on wages and administration. Of that close to 15 million went on wages and pensions for the staff of the "charity". 387 employees on the books? Holy hell. What are they all doing? It's like the civil service on steroids.
    The head of this trust father Pat is on huge money for one person, this is not a charity more like a business with 60% going to staff before anything is done about homelessness.


    I posted up the figures on staff because I think they need to be posted everytime that guys name and his trust are mentioned.

    What I find surprising is that people are surprised.
    :confused:

    This is the way most charities work in Ireland.
    They are jobs for the lads paid for usually by a nice chunk of government funding, tappinig some benefactors and some public fundraising, usually pulling on the heartstrings.
    The next time someone shoves a collection tin in front you, know that you are probably paying for them, their boss, the boss of that person and so on.
    That is why I now only ever pay into a couple of charities such as fundraising for hospice.

    It is a great setup because it is hard for people to ask questions.
    The media doesn't want to be caught targeting a charity, neither does the politicians.
    And how can anyone dare question anyone that has the best interests of the poor, the disabled, the mentally ill.
    The latest one is the poor refugees. :rolleyes:

    It is a fooking con.
    Necro wrote: »
    Half the problem in Ireland is the under-regulation of these 'charities'.

    A quick Google shows just how many different ones are operating just in Dublin.

    If the funding for these guys was cut and put into affordable housing instead it might make some tangible difference.

    The history of these type of organisations shows that while some do some Trojan work, the vast majority are just another way to board the gravy train.

    Ireland has an obsession with quangos for every facet of our existence.

    The Irish state and it's institutions have a long history of absolving itself of actually doing it's job.

    That was why the church got such a hold in education and healthcare.
    The state, the civil service, the polticians wanted it that way.
    It was easier, cheaper and a lot less hassel.

    Now that the church has gone out of building schools and hospitals just look at the foojking mess being made out of it.
    We can't build fecking schools without them having to be rebuilt a few years later.
    We can't build a new childrens hospital without it costing billions nad taking decades.

    We are fooking useless as a state.

    We should have been building social housing, but no it was eaier and more convenient to either just pay rental long term to private landlords, coincidentally something most politicians are, or just let some co called charity step into ctahc those unable to even afford rentals.

    And when the shyte does come out we give the usual connected lads a cushy well paid job to come up with some report that of course blames no fooker at all.

    Fook sake this country is a joke.
    And yes I would have left long ago, but for family reasons.


  • Registered Users Posts: 39,509 ✭✭✭✭Boggles


    Back in 2010 we had 12% unemployment welfare costing 20billion in 2018 we are about 6% still the same.

    The Social Protection budget is not just about the "dole".

    In 2010 "Working Age income supports" was 7.4 billion, this year it's 3.19 billion.

    Pensions are 8 billion this year, the largest expenditure in the budget, they were 5.9 billion in 2010.


  • Registered Users Posts: 13,505 ✭✭✭✭Mad_maxx


    Necro wrote: »
    Half the problem in Ireland is the under-regulation of these 'charities'.

    A quick Google shows just how many different ones are operating just in Dublin.

    If the funding for these guys was cut and put into affordable housing instead it might make some tangible difference.

    The history of these type of organisations shows that while some do some Trojan work, the vast majority are just another way to board the gravy train.

    Ireland has an obsession with quangos for every facet of our existence.

    Some reasons for that

    1. Institutional lack of accountability

    2. We are a great people for using sympathetic language but doing nothing tangible as a follow up and this really suits quangocrats, as well as virtue signalling journalists


  • Registered Users Posts: 12,361 ✭✭✭✭mariaalice


    What way should those with mental health issues, addictions, chaotic backgrounds or borderline disabilities who would find it difficult to house themselves or to maintain themselves in a home be supported? or those individuals who may need lifelong ongoing support how should they be supported?

    Who should be supporting them?


  • Registered Users Posts: 9,798 ✭✭✭Mr. Incognito


    Holy.fcuking.sh1tballs!

    That fcukhead us a pure conman. Theres no justification for that figure, is that where all the donations are going?

    What a fcuking prick. Prancing around begging for money from everyone. What a cnut.

    There are more full time employees in this ONE charity than there are actual people sleeping rough in Dublin.

    Why doesnt every person sleeping rough a job.


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  • Registered Users Posts: 2,743 ✭✭✭downtheroad


    The McVerry accounts are an eye opener. I cannot believe the gall of this man to constantly be in the media bemoaning the lack of accommodation for homeless people in Dublin, when his Trust receives €14.5m in state funding, of which €8m is paid by the Dublin Regional Homeless Executive specifically for Homeless Services (per page 19 of the report), and the Trust then spent only €2.3m on Property Running Costs and €2.8m to purchase and refurbish homes (page 23).


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