News

State will pay €100,000 to families of healthcare workers who died of Covid (via Irish Times)

It is thought the families or estates of more than 20 people who contracted the virus at work will benefit from the tax-free payment

The State will pay €100,000 to the families of healthcare workers who died from Covid-19 during the pandemic under plans going to Cabinet on Tuesday.

Minister for Health Stephen Donnelly will seek approval for a scheme that will cover a small number of healthcare workers. To qualify people will have to have contracted the virus in the workplace.

It is thought that the families or estates of more than 20 workers will benefit from the tax-free payment, which will be paid on a flat rate and on an ex-gratia basis, unrelated to the salary of the person who died.

To read the full story, please vist:
https://www.irishtimes.com/news/ireland/irish-news/state-will-pay-100-000-to-families-of-healthcare-workers-who-died-of-covid-1.4820882

Law Society Update: ‘80% of measures’ to reduce cover costs now in place

A report on the Action Plan for Insurance Reform shows that 80% of planned measures have been implemented.

https://www.lawsociety.ie/gazette/top-stories/2022/80-of-measures-to-reduce-cover-costs-now-in-place

Tánaiste and Minister for Enterprise, Trade and Employment, Leo Varadkar said that the Government was committed to bringing down the cost, and increasing the availability of, insurance.

The end goal was to make Ireland’s insurance sector more competitive and consumer-friendly, supporting enterprise and job creation, he added.

Decreased awards
“We have seen some evidence that our plans, so far, are working – PIAB data shows the average award has decreased by approximately 50%.

“Data from the Central Bank shows the average cost of claims for motor-insurance policies has decreased by 20%,” he said.

However, more needs to be done to reduce costs, he added.

“In 2022, our focus will be on legislative reforms. Specifically, reform of occupier’s liability, competition enforcement, and the Personal Injuries Assessment Board.

“The Insurance (Miscellaneous Provisions) Bill will also be progressed. We will continue to monitor costs to make sure the changes we are making are reflected in premium reductions,” he said.

According to the Government, actions to date include:

  • Personal-injury guidelines have been given effect,
  • Legislation to strengthen the laws on perjury,
  • Establishment of an office to promote insurance-market competition,
  • An Insurance Fraud Coordination Office has been established.

The following steps are planned for 2022:

  • Reform of duty-of-care legislation,
  • Progress the Personal Injuries Resolution Bill 2022,
  • Enactment of the Insurance Miscellaneous Provisions Bill 2021,
  • Enactment of the Competition Amendment Bill 2022.
  • Justice minister Helen McEntee said that her department had completed a review of the Occupiers’ Liability Act, and was engaging with the Office of the Attorney General on proposed amendments to the act.

“It is my intention that, subject to receiving that advice, these proposals, which seek to ensure an appropriate, fair, and constitutional balancing of the rights of all concerned, will be brought to Government for approval in the coming weeks,” she said.

Providers must ‘expand risk appetite’
Sean Fleming (Minister of State Department of Finance with responsibility for financial services, credit unions and insurance) welcomed the recent launch of the Central Bank’s new databank, which will provide a focal point for insurers considering entering the Irish market.

“This initiative should help attract overseas providers into the Irish market, as well encouraging existing providers to expand their risk appetite,” he said.

However, the Law Society’s personal-injury expert Stuart Gilhooly SC hit back, saying: “While it is gratifying that Government is making steps to reduce the cost of insurance, it continues to focus its efforts in the wrong direction.

“Injury victims have seen their compensation slashed and with minimal return to consumers,” the senior counsel added.

‘Disingenuous industry’
“Damages are down by at least 50%, but the numbers of claims made have also reduced by approximately one-third since 2019.

“The fact that insurance premiums have seen such paltry reductions is a poor reflection on the insurance industry – but certainly no surprise. They will continue to take advantage of the gradual erosion of victims’ rights, which will carry on unchecked while they sit in their ivory towers counting their super-profits.

“When will Government stop kowtowing to this disingenuous industry at the expense of ordinary citizens, injured through no fault of their own?” Stuart Gilhooly SC queried.

Up to 20 new High Court judges are still required to deal with Covid backlogs, the president of the High Court has said.

During a preliminary hearing yesterday, Mrs Justice Mary Irvine said the court “is short about 18 or 20 judges at the moment and we have arrears across all divisions”, the Irish Independent reports.

She went on to say she was not able to set a date for the two-day hearing of ex-Rehab Group CEO Angela Kerins’s damages claim against the Dáil because “we are very short of judges in Dublin”.

The judge’s comments come roughly a year after she first issued a widely-reported call for the appointment of 15 to 20 new judges.

The government subsequently appointed five new judges, with Mrs Justice Irvine saying she was “speechless” at the low number.