Just €1.7m of €12m earmarked for Traveller housing drawn down

More than half of local authorities have spent none of their 2018 allocation

Traveller housing in Ballymun, Dublin. Seventeen local authorities have between them failed to spend €10.3 million on Traveller housing in the first three-quarters of this year. Photograph: Cyril Byrne
Traveller housing in Ballymun, Dublin. Seventeen local authorities have between them failed to spend €10.3 million on Traveller housing in the first three-quarters of this year. Photograph: Cyril Byrne

Less than a fifth of funding allocated for Traveller accommodation this year has been spent, and more than half of local authorities have spent nothing at all, new figures show.

The data, from the Department of Housing, shows that of the €12 million earmarked for Traveller housing for 2018, just €1.7 million has been drawn down by local authorities.

Although all 31 local authorities were allocated between €2,922 (Longford) and €1,321,558 (Dublin City) to build and provide Traveller accommodation this year, 17 local authorities have not spent any of their allocation.

They are Carlow, Cavan, Cork, Donegal, Fingal, Kerry, Kildare, Laois, Leitrim, Longford, Mayo, Meath, Waterford, Westmeath and Wexford county councils, along with Cork and Galway city councils.

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Together these local authorities, many of which have Traveller families living in substandard conditions, have failed to spend €10.3 million on Traveller housing.

Just two local authorities have spent their full allocation. South Dublin County Council was allocated €869,642 and has spent €927,454 and Tipperary County Council, which was allocated €25,655, has so far this year spent €42,002.

Of the remaining 12 local authorities, however, seven have spent less than 10 per cent of their 2018 allocation. Clare County Council has spent just 1.5 per cent of the €853,250 it was allocated.

Councils failing to spend their allocated funding for Traveller accommodation could face financial penalties under proposals being examined by a Government-appointed expert group, an Oireachtas committee heard during the week.

Eoin Ó Broin, Sinn Féin spokesman on housing, who obtained the figures, said: “While we will have to wait until the end of the year to have the full picture of this year’s drawdown, the fact that just 14 per cent of the allocation has been spent by the end of the third quarter is deeply worrying. Equally concerning is the large number of councils who have not yet spent anything.

“It is not acceptable for councils to refuse to provide appropriate accommodation for Travellers.”

Kitty Holland

Kitty Holland

Kitty Holland is Social Affairs Correspondent of The Irish Times