THE GOVERNMENT is to ask religious orders to hand over title to property worth up to €200 million, the Department of Education has confirmed.
The €200 million is the shortfall the State considers it is owed by the 18 religious orders which agreed to share the cost of the €1.36 billion bill for survivors of institutional abuse.
Last year the 18 congregations named in the Ryan report on clerical sexual abuse agreed to pay €476 million towards the cost of compensation. As this is €200 million short of an even split of the bill with the State, proposals for the remaining payment are being sought.
It is understood the religious orders paid €128 million in 2002. Some €110 million was promised in cash and €235 million was promised in property. Minister for Education Ruairí Quinn has pointed out this amount leaves the €200 million shortfall, and he is now seeking the transfer to the State of the legal ownership of religious-owned schools to meet this deficit. A spokeswoman for the Department of Education last night confirmed Mr Quinn was seeking ownership of the schools for the State.
Mr Quinn has indicated he did not want to bankrupt the religious orders and was not intending to change the structure by which the religious orders were in charge of the schools.
The Minister’s concern is said to be in relation to the amount of the total compensation bill which will have to be paid by the taxpayer.