Sinn Féin TD’s for Donegal, Pearse Doherty and Pádraig Mac Lochlainn, have commented on the leaking of the Attorney General’s advice to Government regarding the Defective Block Redress Scheme.
Published by The Ditch, Attorney General Paul Gallagher, in correspondence regarding the government’s scheme, suggested that as a matter of legal principle, it would not be unfair to require the banks to make some contribution to the scheme in respect of the benefit they would receive.
Payments from the state to affected homeowners would help banks secure their loans because the value of affected properties would be maintained.
Speaking today, Teachta Doherty said:
“This latest leaking of the Attorney General advice to government is further evidence of what we have always said: the banks should be contributing to the government’s defective blocks redress scheme.
“It seems government have no interest in even asking them to do so.
“We now must ask why this is. Why was our advice and the advice from the Attorney General not listened to?
“Why was so much of the Attorney General’s other advice regarding saving the state money listened to and not this?”
Teachta Mac Lochlainn added:
“Sinn Féin have been calling for banks to contribute in some way to the redress scheme given how much they will benefit from it.
“As far back as March 2021, I called on the then Minister for Finance to ensure that the banks made a contribution to the cost of the Defective Concrete Block redress scheme.
“It now turns out that he ignored both me and his own Attorney General.
“The government must now explain to us why this was the case. What is their justification?”
July 24, 2024
Government was told banks should contribute to redress scheme – Doherty and Mac Lochlainn