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    Audit finds Irish Language Scheme for Irish Colleges plagued with serious shortcomings

    Report found duplicate payments, no evidence of Garda vetting, and missing engineering reports among hosts and accommodation providers. By Conor O’Carroll. An internal audit of the Irish Language Scheme has found a number of serious deficiencies requiring immediate rectification by management. The audit, conducted by consultancy firm BDO and obtained by Village, found several of the hosts, when audited, had no evidence of Garda vetting on file. The report notes that “anyone who works or volunteers with children and vulnerable adults on behalf of the Department must be Garda vetted” and that it is “a legal offence to permit a person to carry out activities without receiving a vetting disclosure from the National Vetting Bureau”. The Department of Tourism told the auditors that administration of the Garda vetting process for host families is outsourced to Comhchoiste Náisiúnta na gColáistí Samhraidh, the group representing the majority of Irish colleges. Inspections are carried out on a spot-check basis, and that the frequency of visits was not formally defined meaning some hosts may go years between inspections The Irish Language Scheme is run by the Department and sees families in the Gaeltacht receive daily subsidies for hosting second and third-level students attending Irish language colleges. The scheme has been running for over 50 years and aims to support and enrich the Irish language and Gaeltacht areas. Approximately 26,000 students attend Irish language courses every year and are housed by roughly 500 registered active Gaeltacht Hosts. As well as individual host families, two residential college accommodation-providers were audited and were also found to have no evidence of Garda vetting on file. The report found that no “oversight of Garda vetting” is sought by the Department “prior to granting a college accommodation recognition to host students”. These providers also had no evidence of the relevant engineering certificates on file or any site inspection reports. The Department told the auditors that these site visits are used to ensure “that the Host’s accommodation is maintained to an acceptable standard and upholding the recognition requirements”, including checking the premises are safe and that Garda vetting is in place. However, they also said that inspections are carried out on a spot-check basis, and that the frequency of visits was not formally defined meaning some hosts may go years between inspections. The audit, conducted by consultancy firm BDO and obtained by Village, found several of the hosts had no evidence of Garda vetting on file when audited The Department told the auditors that efforts are made to visit hosts that had “not received a visit in the previous couple of years”. The audit also criticised the lack of an IT system to assist in processing payments made to host families. This, they say, increases the risk of human error and contributed to duplicate payments worth almost €25,000 being made to nine households in 2022. The error was eventually identified by the Department and the money has since been recovered, but the auditors recommended they review all payments made in 2022 to ensure further errors weren’t missed. Other recommendations made by the audit relating to ensuring each host and accommodation-provider has the necessary Garda vetting and safety certificates were accepted by the Department and a number of actions were set up to improve the failings identified. A spokesperson for the Department of Tourism said: “The Department has accepted the recommendations made by its Internal Audit Unit and has now put structures in place in order to ensure that they are implemented within the timescales committed to in the audit report”. They also outlined a new policy put in place after the audit whereby “the Department will now insist that all individuals above the age of sixteen years sector, including members of all host families, successfully complete a Garda Vetting process every three years, rather than on a once-off basis as was the case previously”. This article has been updated to include a response from a Department of Tourism spokesperson received after publication.

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    How to save Irish

    Latin, a dead language, is taught in thousands of schools. A Latin online news bulletin gives the world’s news and carries ads. A radio station broadcasts the news weekly in Latin. Latin enthusiasts organise social gatherings. But despite all this, Latin remains a dead language. Is Irish on the way to becoming that? Most of us don’t want to speak Irish, but we like to have Irish in our lives. We cherish it, the surveys show, as a precious part of our national heritage. We are glad there are Gaelscoileanna, a Radio na Gaeltachta and a TG4; that the destinations of buses are shown in Irish as well as English, and to hear that there is a news-and-comment magazine in Irish on the internet. We would not like everything in Ireland to be in English only. However, it is one thing for a minority language under pressure by a dominant language to give pleasure to those who speak and write it and to comfort others by its presence in their lives. It is quite another for that language to live into the future as many of us hope it will. To do that it must at least be the spoken language of a sizeable self-renewing community as Latin, for example, is not. With the former Gaeltacht districts now completing Ireland’s shift from Irish to English, the Irish language has no such community. This fact constitutes an emergency for lovers of the Irish language; an emergency that needs to be countered by dramatic new action – not by the State which has lost interest in Irish but by the lovers of the language themselves. The most valuable achievement of the Irish language movement is that there are now several thousand men and women throughout Ireland who speak and write Irish well; that is, as correctly, and with as wide a vocabulary, as the average educated user of any other European language. Collectively, these people in their speech and writing are a national treasure because they embody the Irish language alive today. Indeed, because of their wide diversity of circumstance and occupation, they embody it more fully than any Gaeltacht ever did. The initiative that is called for is to convert this national human treasure, which embodies the Irish language as it is today, into a living ‘language bank’ that yields high interest—is self-renewing— through adding new people to its number each year. For a start, it would be a matter of establishing – insofar as now possible and with the personnel now available—the kind of community that is necessary for ensuring the continuance of Irish as a living language. The personnel available for that are those several thousand men and women who speak and write Irish well. Identify a thousand of them and obtain their consent to be jointly responsible – together with others whom they would admit to their number through an annual examination – for the survival of Irish as a spoken and written language. Have them agree on a collective name for the language community they would form; undertake to hold general and regional conventions; and choose a discreet badge that they would wear on their clothing to identify themselves to each other and to people generally. That badge would become a mark of positive distinction. The annual entrance examination for new members, which would become a big national occasion, would provide a prestigious goal for Gaelcholáistí and for the university courses in Irish. Apart from the holding of its conventions, this body of Irish-language perpetuators would carry out its remit simply by living, speaking and writing, and growing annually towards an initial complement of, say, 8000 members. The present Irish-language activities and occasions would continue undisturbed. Because the members of the language community would not be living next door to each other, they would not be a self-renewing community of the ideal kind. But it would be the best that can be done under present circumstances. The annual entry exam would give the secondary Gaelscoileanna and the university courses in Irish a concrete and prestigious goal to aim at. In time the initial goal of 8000 members might well need to be extended. It must be clear that unless this scheme or something like it is implemented, the spoken and written Irish language will enter in the coming years a period of gradual, ragged, ignominious, death, with very minority-interest programmes on radio and television recalling the real thing. Desmond Fennell Dr Desmond Fennell’s last book was ‘Third Stroke Did It: The Staggered End of European Civilisation’. www.desmondfennell.com

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