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McCarter dismayed at Fund threat 18.02.11

by Eamonn MacDermott

NEWS that US funding for the International Fund for Ireland (IFI) could be under threat from Republican plans to cut US government spending has been greeted with dismay by the former chairman of the fund Willie McCarter.
The threat to the funding comes from Republicans in the US House of Representatives who are pushing for a reduction in US government spending.
Currently the US contributes $17 million (€12.5 million) to the fund, which was set up 25 years ago to "encourage dialogue between nationalists and unionists throughout Ireland".
While the US is not the only contributor, a loss of the American contribution would put the future of the fund in jeopardy.
The Republic Party controls the House of Representatives, the lower house in the American Congress. If they vote to cut the IFI’s funding the measure will still have to be approved by Senate, which is controlled by Barack Obama’s Democratic Party.
Buncrana man Willie McCarter, who was chair of the IFI for over 12 years said that while he recognises the need to make savings, cutting the IFI would be a disaster.
He said: “Through the IFI the US has done tremendous work throughout Ireland in underpinning the peace process.
“It will not be a good thing if funding is withdrawn as the influence the US has exerted for little real outlay could be replicated in other troubled areas of the globe.”
Willie McCarter said: “The IFI has been responsible for creating over 50,000 jobs in many areas where they have been badly needed.
“Also in its own quiet way the fund offered hope for the future across the country.
“There has always been a bi-partisan approach to the fund in the US and I would hope that this would continue and that funding would not be cut.”
Mr. McCarter said that the achievements of the fund were numerous.
He added: “I suppose one of the major projects associated with the fund was the Erne/Shannon waterways link up.
Willie McCarter.
“The fund provided €1 million towards a feasibility study and then contributed another €5 million towards the completed project which effectively opened up a whole swathe of the country that had been starved of investment in the past.
“But the fund is also responsible for hundreds of local projects. Things like the Tullyarvan Mill, the revamp of Buncrana Main Street, the Inishowen Gateway Hotel were all part-funded by the fund.
“One of the great strengths of the fund was that in its own unique way it opened up the road for funding for projects as it was a ‘first on the table’ funder. In other words it gave the first funding and made it possible for projects to access other funding.”
Willie McCarter continued: “The IFI enabled a lot of projects to go ahead that might not have done so otherwise and it also meant that communities then became interested in those projects and it brought people together who may never have had dealings with each other.
“I would hope that this decision would be looked at again and the funding left untouched.”
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