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Dole cheats chase cross border cash 10.12.08

by Damian Dowds, Inishowen Independent

NORTHERN dole cheats are taking advantage of high social welfare payments on this side of the Border and are signing on here in substantial numbers further adding to already burgeoning dole queues, the Inishowen Independent can reveal. And the sharp increase in the volume of new claimants over the past 12 months in Buncrana and other Donegal social welfare offices is presenting more opportunities for fraudulent claims.
This newspaper has received several reports of individuals from the North making claims through the addresses of relatives resident in the Republic. It is also understood that vacant homes in Inishowen are being used as addresses of convenience by young unemployed persons from the North from which to make claims for dole and rent allowance.
Dole payments in the Republic are €197 per week for a single person, as compared to €69.40 (£60.50) in the North. A rental allowance of €90 will also be paid in this State, if the applicant qualifies under a means test.
Last week the Department of Social Welfare allocated two additional staff to its Buncrana office to deal with the backlog of claims which is running at up to ten weeks, although no new claims investigators have been appointed.
The rights to social welfare for so-called ‘frontier workers’ are covered by EU Directives, and the body established under the Good Friday Agreement to provide advice to claimants on either side of the border admits that the higher benefits in the Republic “aggravate an already confusing situation”.
When one is made unemployed, one must make a social welfare claim in the State in which one is normally resident rather than the State in which one worked. However, if a worker is intermittently unemployed for short periods of time, they can claim unemployment benefits in the State in which they were last employed.
The Department says it is committed to ensuring that social welfare payments are available to those who are entitled to them, but also determined to ensure that abuse of the system is prevented and is dealt with effectively when detected.
“People who move from Northern Ireland to Ireland may have an entitlement to a social welfare payment,” the Department stated. “However, if there is any suspicion of a fraud being perpetrated this is investigated by local social welfare inspectors.”
In the ten months to the end of October, 48 cases relating to social welfare fraud were submitted to the courts in the Donegal-Sligo-Leitrim region, of which 28 were finalised in the District Court; of those finalised 21 received fines, four received the Probation Act and three cases were struck out.
The maximum penalty for cases taken in the District Court is a fine of up to €1,500, or up to six months in prison.
The Department says it has carried out 19,000 reviews in Donegal-Sligo-Leitrim in the year to October and savings of €16 million have been achieved.
The Buncrana Social Welfare office has received a “substantial increase” in reports from the public of suspicious claims from non-residents, while the Health Service Executive, whose Community Welfare Officers pay rent allowance and interim dole payments while social welfare claims are being processed, said the upsurge in Northern applicants is “posing problems numerical-wise”.
One Community Welfare Officer described his clinic as “being like Shantallow”.
“Every case of suspected fraud reported by members of the public is investigated by inspectors and all such cases are treated in strictest confidence,” the Department statement concluded.
The website www.borderpeople.info contains information on social welfare entitlements for citizens living on either side of the Border.
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