A clear look at the figures as €14.5m is doled out in Leinster House post-election payouts.
More than €14.5 million has been paid out in severance-style supports, redundancy and pension lump sums to former TDs and Senators and their staff since last year’s election, according to figures released under FOI and explanatory notes from the Oireachtas. The payments fall into two broad streams: supports for departing politicians and exit payments for staff employed under the Oireachtas scheme.
Leinster House.
Termination payments to former TDs and Senators: The Oireachtas said €2.98 million was paid in monthly termination payments to politicians who retired or lost their seats. That money was shared among 70 people, working out at an average of about €41,800 per recipient. These monthly payments are made to TDs and Senators who meet service requirements and are described as a measure intended to help members transition back into ordinary employment after leaving office. Separately, a total of €1.14 million was paid in termination lump sums under the Oireachtas departure package. Again, this related to 70 former TDs and Senators, averaging around €16,000 each.
An information note accompanying the figures sets out the basic rule: where eligibility conditions are met, a termination lump sum equivalent to two months of salary, including salary allowances held during the period of continuous service, is payable, subject to Revenue rules on severance payments.
Pension lump sums and annual pensions: In addition to termination supports, FOI figures show a further €3.022 million was paid in pension lump sums to retiring and departing TDs and Senators. This pot was shared among 22 people, an average of just over €137,000 per recipient. Those individuals also qualified for annual pensions, with reported yearly amounts ranging from €7,796 to €63,467. Some may also be entitled to ministerial pensions, though those payments are handled through the Department of Finance rather than the Oireachtas administration.
One point highlighted in the reporting is transparency: In previous years, names and individual amounts were published, but that practice has now ceased, with privacy cited as the reason.
Staff severance and redundancy: €7.45m: A large share of the overall €14.5m relates to staff working for TDs and Senators, whose employment ended after the election. Documents released under FOI show around €7.45 million was paid to staff members of former TDs and Senators. This included severance payments of €6.189 million paid to 187 people, an average of about €33,000 each. A further €1.26 million was paid in statutory redundancy to 116 former staff, worth an average of just under €11,000 per recipient. The records also show that nine people were re-employed after the election, triggering repayment requirements. The Oireachtas said €192,875 was repaid in severance by nine people, and one person additionally repaid €14,116 in redundancy. The Oireachtas note explains that where someone who received an exit payment takes up employment under the scheme again within one year, they must repay the money received plus any compound interest that has accrued. It also states that where an exit payment has been repaid, any future payment or pension lump sum will be based on the person’s full service under the scheme.
What it means: Supporters of these arrangements argue elections can bring abrupt job losses and that structured payments provide a buffer for both politicians and staff. Critics tend to focus on the overall cost and optics, particularly at a time when most workers outside politics rely on standard redundancy rules.
Either way, the FOI figures put a firm number on the post-election bill, and ensure the debate around value for money, transparency and reform is likely to continue.
Lyrics and Vocals: American singer, Song writer, Musician and Actor the late Kris Kristofferson. (1936–2024).
The Late Kris Kristofferson.
Kris Kristofferson’s gospel-leaning country classic ‘Why Me ?’ feels less like a performance and more like a plainspoken prayer. Released as a single in March 1973 from the album “Jesus Was a Capricorn“, it became the biggest solo hit of his career, topping Billboard’s Hot Country Songs in July 1973. Kristofferson later linked it to a moment at a church service when the preacher asked, ‘Is anybody feeling lost?’, and his hand went up. So, with that honesty at the heart of it, here’s ‘Why Me ?’.
‘Why Me ?’
Why me Lord, what have I ever done, To deserve even one, Of the pleasures I’ve known. Tell me Lord, what did I ever do, That was worth loving You, Or the kindness You’ve shown. Lord, help me Jesus, I’ve wasted it, So help me Jesus, I know what I am, But now that I know that I’ve needed You, So Help me Jesus, my soul’s in Your hand. Try me Lord, if You think there’s a way, I can try to repay, All I’ve taken from You. Maybe Lord, I can show someone else, What I’ve been through myself, On my way back to You. Lord, help me Jesus, I’ve wasted it, So help me Jesus, I know what I am. But now that I know that I’ve needed You, So help me Jesus, my soul’s in Your hand. Lord, help me Jesus, I’ve wasted it, So help me Jesus, I know what I am. But now that I know that I’ve needed You, So help me Jesus, my soul’s in Your hand. Jesus, my soul’s in Your hand.
In his 90th year and pre-deceased by his parents Jack and Nora; Mr Crowley passed away peacefully, following a short illness.
His passing is most deeply regretted, sadly missed and lovingly remembered by his sorrowing family; loving wife Mary (née Treacy), daughter Noreen, grandchildren Rachelle and Patrick, son-in-law PJ (Bowden), brothers-in-law, sister-in-law, nephews, nieces, cousins, extended relatives, neighbours and friends.
For those persons who would wish to attend Requiem Mass for Mr Crowley, but for reasons cannot, same can be viewed streamed live online, HERE.
The extended Crowley and Treacy families wish to express their appreciation for your understanding at this difficult time, and have made arrangements for those persons wishing to send messages of condolence, to use the link shown HERE.
In front of a record Páirc Uí Chaoimh crowd, Cork Rebels go clear late, to overcome All-Ireland Champions Tipperary.
Cork 0-29 – Tipperary 0-22.
Cork made it three wins from three in Division 1A of the Allianz Hurling League after finishing strongly to defeat Tipperary by seven points on Saturday night at SuperValu Páirc Uí Chaoimh, in front of a record regular-season crowd of 30,910.
Leading 0-16 to 0-12 at half-time, Cork’s advantage was never reduced below three points in the second half, despite a late Tipperary surge that briefly cut the gap and added real tension to the closing minutes.
The opening period was marked by an incident-packed spell either side of the 35th minute stage, when a prolonged melee resulted in straight red cards for Shane Barrett and Jason Forde, following earlier yellow cards for Alan Connolly and Willie Connors. Referee Liam Gordon brought the half to an end immediately after issuing the dismissals, with both sides playing the second half with 14 men.
Cork had threatened to put daylight between the sides in the first half when they won a penalty after a black card for Johnny Ryan, but Declan Dalton was denied from the spot by Rhys Shelly.
Key scores came from Alan Connolly (0-8) and Darragh Fitzgibbon (0-7), as Cork closed out the game with a late burst to seal a seven-point win and maintain their perfect start to the campaign.
After the match, Cork boss Ben O’Connor defended the officials on the night while criticising the wider system around assessments, saying: “I’m not blaming Liam Gordon… I’m blaming the GAA officials.”
Meanwhile, Fitzgibbon said the physical edge was simply part of top-level championship preparation: “You have to have a bit of fight and edge because if you don’t, you’re not going to win.”
Cork now sit on six points from three games and next travel to face Kilkenny after a break in the league schedule.
Scorers Cork: A Connolly 0-8 (4pts from f), D Fitzgibbon 0-7 (1 from 65), W Buckley 0-3, D Healy 0-3, E Downey 0-2, M Coleman 0-2, S Barrett 0-2, B Hayes 0-1, T O’Mahony 0-1.
Scorers Tipperary: E Connolly 0-4 (3 from f, +1 from 65), J Morris 0-3 (1 from f), J Forde 0-2 (2 from f), D McCarthy 0-2 (2 from f), W Connors 0-2, A Ormond 0-2, plus 0-1 pt each from C O’Reilly, C Morgan, S Kennedy, C Stakelum, O O’Donoghue and S O’Farrell.
Tarmac, Trolleys, Plastic Bags and Trampled Trees.
Double Ditch Obliterated, Then Abandoned.
Please first see the video immediately hereunder before preparing yourself to weep.
Now may I suggest you quickly grab a box of tissues.
Once upon a time, there was a place in rural Thurles, Co. Tipperary that had the cheek to be historic. They called it “The Double Ditch”; a raised path built through wet ground, faced with limestone, and rooted in the grim practicality of the once Great Famine, (1846-1849), to keep people working, to keep families alive, to keep feet dry enough to move. Yes, same was a civic scar, but an honest one, and a rare thing to be found in modern Ireland; a piece of lived history, a public walkway you could still walk on.
A recent abandoned attempt at cleaning the area.
Naturally, this could not be tolerated. So it became “connected”, “improved”, “enhanced”, “brought forward”, (whatever soothing verb local councillors, the local Municipal District Administrator and her officials would prefer), until all of it were “totally and wantonly obliterated”, its ancient hedgerows removed and the route flattened under heavy machinery, without so much as the courtesy of admitting what was being lost to the residents of our struggling town. Then, after much denial of its existence, with a straight face that would even shame a Victorian undertaker, it reappeared in planning language as being a “paved, pedestrian, walking route along a historical walking path”, despite being described by local councillors and politicians as not paved at all, before being levelled and left with only a temporary skin of tarmacadam.
And now we arrive at the masterpiece of their planning – “The Aftercare”.
Because nothing says “community amenity” like building a walkway and then abandoning it to rot, as if maintenance were an optional lifestyle choice, like decaf or seatbelts. The grand vision, a safe walking route on Mill Road, Thurles, tied into wider footpath plans, presented as “overdue” and “necessary”. The execution, however, appears to have followed the classic local-government model; do the ceremony; pour the tarmac; maximise the photocredit, then disappear vanishing into the mist.
So the area has now again begun its return to nature, that sacred Irish policy position otherwise known as “leaving it in a hape”. First came the willow saplings, same thrusting up through the tarmac like a botanical middle finger to uninterested municipal district officials, while rooting themselves into every crack that sheer neglect has kindly widened for them. Then arrived the briars and brambles, years of Autumn’s leaves, nettles and rank grass, all working in quiet co-operation like they’ve been awarded the contract. Soon enough, the walkway becomes less of a public route and more of a living demonstration of what happens when you build infrastructure with no real future plan to mind it, other than personal glorification.
And the litter, ah, the litter; not the dainty odd sweet-wrapper sort. No, this is the full rural-civic anthology, large plastic bags flapping like distressed flags; tyres slumped in the verge; broken wire fencing sagging like exhausted excuses. The occasional supermarket trolleys, thoughtfully dumped to ensure nobody confuses the place for cared-for land. If you’re lucky, a washing machine or two, because why wouldn’t you add white goods to a heritage corridor?
But the true flourish, the one that should make even the most hardened press-release writer blush, is how the site has been used as a stage for virtue, and then as a bin for its consequences.
In spring 2025, the area beside ‘Dun Muileann‘ on Mill Road, Thurles, became part of the One Hundred Million Trees planting push, funded locally by Allied Irish Banks’ Thurles branch, with students and the odd idle volunteer turning up to plant a dense mini-forest, using the Miyawaki Method; the whole point being fast-growing biodiversity and a carbon sink. The public reporting around it speaks of over two thousand native saplings planted at the site, a serious effort, and no small gesture of community buy-in.
And then, in the sort of anticlimax Ireland has successfully perfected; those young trees are left in a space now allowed to slide into total disorder, where over the past number of months horses are permitted to trample through the plantings that were meant to be protected long enough to establish themselves. A “green space”, promised and photographed, now reduced to a patch of scruff and horse manure, where the only thing thriving is the evidence of nobody being responsible.
That’s the moral of it, really, the fetish for the new, paired with the total inability to mind what’s then built.
Because it takes a special kind of civic arrogance to first flatten a famine-era landmark that once, literally, put bread into mouths, and then to shrug at the basic upkeep required to stop the replacement from becoming an overgrown dumping lane.
We are told, endlessly, about “heritage”, “biodiversity”, “active travel”, “community”. The words are always there; the maintenance however rarely is.
And so the Double Ditch, the real one, survives mostly as an idea: something that mattered, that was walkable, that carried memory in its stones. What’s left on the ground is the modern tribute: tarmac, blocked drains, weeds, rubbish, bent fencing, and the quiet certainty that nobody, supposedly in authority, will be held to account for any of it.
On behalf of myself, I offer my sincere apologies to Thurles Branch of AIB; (Sponsors), to MrRichard Mulcahy (Co-founder of the 100MT Project initiative) and to all those students who enthusiastically and eagerly took part in last April’s planting. Hopefully some of the trampled saplings will continue to survive, after all horse dung is a nutrient-rich organic fertilizer and soil conditioner.
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