Ciaran’s Peculier [sic] Blog

A view of the world from an Irish hole

Tag: FAS

Lead kindly light

So FAS has now become Solus. I remember when FAS was launched; people said that what ANCO used to be called before it went bust. Before we all became green and environmentally aware we used to use Solus bulbs. This is relevant for the new organisation which I fear will inherit the culture of the old. How many Solus employees will it take to change a light bulb? At least a thousand; one to hold the bulb and 999 Solus officials to turn the room around, but we mustn’t forget the special, highly-paid consultants brought in at enormous cost from abroad to give their opinions on office lighting, as well as the cost of printing their report on the glossiest of paper. By this time though the money will have run out and so there won’t be any left for changing the bulb.

 FAS was charged with providing training that was supposed to lead to jobs. Unfortunately there was a mismatch between the courses and employment trends, so the courses were often irrelevant and useless. Certificates were sometimes not issued to those who had pursued the courses and the only people who seemed to secure jobs as a result of FAS’ activity were those employed already by FAS. And perhaps it is best to forget the way in which FAS was used as a private holiday club by a group of former directors, offering only first class flights and accommodation in five-star resorts.  FAS / Solus (whatever it is called) is big on intentions, but I somehow think the delivery will fall short of expectation.

 I was looking for an alternative name for the organisation. The closest I could come to was fearradh, which de Bhaldraithe’s dictionary says is the Irish for faeces.

 

 

Feel the Birrrrrr

There has been many scandals in Ireland. One of the most costly has been the decentralisation fiasco. This has seen the breaking-up and atomisation of government activities in the name of a specious desire to ensure that “Dublin hasn’t got everything” and that government departments are spread more evenly throughout the country. This came before the current spate of fiscal hair-pulling,

It could have got NAMA

or we might have seen the headquarters of the NAMA located in somewhere like Manulla Junction, Co Mayo (it has the rail links.)

 Last week’s meeting odf the Oireachtas Public Accounts committee cam up with a real howler. FAS wanted to build a new headquarters in the delightful town of Birr Co. Offaly (that’s the old King’s County by the way), yet it ended up shelling out over twice the amount recommended by its own overpaid property consultants, for a site and offices in the town. Interestingly work on the new headquarters has yet to begin.

 Now I believe in the old zero – sum principle; for every winner there is an equal loser and vice versa. Well we all know who is the loser here: the Irish tax payer. But d we know who the winners are? Birr is in which constituency? That’s right: Laois Offaly, and who is one of the TDs for that constituency, whose power base is in the Offaly part of the constituency?

What’s in a name?

The Director General of FAS, O’Toole,  has hinted that the name of the bloated organisation at whose head he sits may change its name. This response shows just how rotten the organisation is.

 For a start, the title “Directo0r General”. It is, to paraphrase The Bard, full of Strength and fury, but it signifies fu7ck all, except that its holder is an over-paid intellectual dwarf who sees himself as occupying a more rarefied air than the race of common humanity, far more precious than the semi human life forms his organisation seeks to help. How many Director Generals are there are on FAS courses? Very few.. Let us excuse the FAS supervisors who generally do sterling work with very little recognition for their toil. The reality of being a member of a FAS scheme is to work hard for the equivalent of the money you’d get from the dole anyway, but yet to suffer the scorn and the ill= natured contempt of the scum, yes, the human rubbish, who believe that they have a right to look down their snot-filled on their fellow human citizens.

I challenge Mr Paul O’Toole. Is it not with these people you most readily identify rather than the people on FAS courses and schemes?

 I recall how, as an employee of Cavan Co. Council, helping to set yup Cavan County Museum, myself and the museum curator were able to count on the help and assistance of the members of a FAS scheme. If it had not been for them there would be no Cavan County Museum. Yet, on the day when the museum was to be opened,, the members of the FAS scheme were initially excluded from the invitation. This was only rectified when the Museum’s curator put his foot down and said that if they weren’t invited he wouldn’t be there either. (And let me add that I wouldn’t have darkened that pantomime of an opening with my presence either had it not been for the presence of the FAS scheme members. That way I had someone to talk to.

 Let 8s not overlook the less than honourable role being played in the FAS pantomime by the Trades Unions. Dominic Egan told me of how he relied on the FAS scheme in the County Museum, but yet he recognised that they were being used by the County Council as a form of cheap labour. (he was a decent guy who wanted to see people paid proper wages for their work, not peanuts.) He also told me that he felt that the Trades Unions would not put up with the way the FAS scheme there had been made into a permanent fixture. That was nearly fourteen years’ ago, and as far as I know the FAS scheme is still a feature of the museum’s existence – and it’s not Dominic Egan’s fault. 

 The Director General hints at a name change, yet let me suggest a name by which his organisation has been viewed by those who have participated in its “training programmes”, as well as member of the general public, as being most apposite. FARCE.  An organisation whose senior echelons are addicted to a five-star lifestyle at public expense, who hypocritically look down upon those they are supposed to help,. Let us also add here that many of those who are permanent employees of FAS, who are entrusted with teaching courses of dubious validity, are often closely related to FAS employees, so isn’t it nice to keep it in the family, and consign others to lifetimes of poverty and destitution –that’s if they’re unwilling to do the decent thing and emigrate and leave Ireland in the grip of the human crabs who’ve always ruled the roost here. .

 Let us recall some of the television advertising – all paid for by you-know-who. It featured the artiste Adele King (any relation of Adge?) better known as Twink telling people to say “FAS”. I suppose it made a change from ringing up her estranged oboist husband and telling him what a rotten faggot he was for impregnating his girl fiend and announcing the pregnancy on St  Valentine’s Day. She wasn’t intoning “You could retrain – it’s never too late”, when she was telling hubby that she was going to dip his oboe in Jay’s Fluid and stick it up his arse, after she’d cut his cock off to  prevent him making any further “bastards” with his “whores”.

A boy doing a man’s job

I hate appearing to be a hyper-critical know-it-all. Some might be surprised and a little disquieted at the way in which I seem to have founded upon the intellectual banality of a fellow Cavan historian. There will be murmurings of “Why don’t you pick on someone your own size Parker?” but the individual who has been the object of my scorn has not been content with inflating himself to the level of my equal, but has sought to portray himself as far superior. I would not have said anything, had not this individual, Dr Brendan Scott, Research Officer of Cavan County Museum, gone out of his way to belittle me. I have never had the “pleasure” of meeting him. Nobody could accuse me of spreading vile comments about him as I know nothing about him. I know he hails from Belturbet where I think his father is a town councillor. He went to St Pats (to which I went for a short period too), He has a PhD from the National University of Ireland in Galway, and I think this is on some aspect of seventeenth-century history but I’m not sure – but that’s the extent of what I know about him. He no doubt knows far more about me, but does he ever ask how much of it is true?

It is as if I don’t exist. He has never contacted me, even though there was a time when I would not have been averse to hearing from him. I heard that he had published a book on the subject. I endeavoured to send him a message asking for a copy that I might review for my Echoes of the Past column, but I never received any reply. No doubt my humble scribblings are too far below the ken of his exalted intellect. I was never been invited to any of the talks he has arranged. I don’t go to those sorts of things much, but it would have been nice to be asked.

But yet to organise a conference on the history of Cavan which included a medieval section and not invite a person who has written numerous articles and who has studied the period for over two decades was a definite snub. And what was Dr Scott’s defence of his actions? There had been trouble between me and the museum, but it was before his time. This rationale wasn’t delivered to me personally of course. I was unworthy of any reason. In the same way as I wasn’t entitled to a reason for the abrupt ending of my employment in the museum twelve years’ ago.  It sounded very much as if he had been listening to every little drop of bilge water spread by the flat earth element of the Cumann Seannchais Bhreifne.

I ask one favour of those who are going to spread lies about me. At least meet me once before doing it. Try to get to know me. Meet me in the flesh; don’t call me late on a Friday night. I’m always puzzled by those who say upon meeting me. “I never realised you were such a nice guy Ciaran” to which I jocularly respond “What exactly did you expect?”

My protests at being snubbed were met by comments from one of Scott’s friends who scoffed at my absurd “attestation” to be an expert on the history of medieval Cavan, while another commentator, who claimed to have expert knowledge of me said that the decision to snub me was my karma for my lack of generosity. (It goes without saying that I don’t believe Scott knew or approved of these comments.) I’ve been writing a column for over two years’ now for the Cavan Echo, in many of which I place my research of anyone who is bothered to read it. I have never claimed copyright protection on it, because it is of little value in Cavan, and I’m accused of being ungenerous? While blogs may be written by crazy people, those who respond to them are crazier.

But the worst response of all was from Cavan County Manager, Jack Keyes, Dr Scott’s boss, to whom I sent a mildly worded letter expressing my disbelief at what had occurred. Mr Keyes in the best spirit of the Irish Public Service never deigned to even reply. No doubt he had been provided with golden opinions of me. I know he has not enjoyed the best of health, but all he needed to do was reply, even with a brief acknowledgement saying something that there was nothing he could do. By his arrogant non-reply he identified himself fully with whatever motivated Scott, and he cannot say that he was on a frolic of his own. Mr Keyes has been quite public in his support of initiatives to help those with disabilities dealing with the County Council, but what prevents me from saying that I was deliberately victimised because I am disabled? But then as a disabled person I should know my place, and keep my mouth shut.

“Oh inti bowld Jools?”
“Sometimes he goes too far. He’ll need Cavan County Council before they’ll need him” – the f£&k he will!

The time I spent working in Cavan County Museum is something I remember with a mix of joy and frustration. He was a decent man having to operate in a shitty situation alongside shitty people. We had many a laugh together, as he was a rich reservoir of Australian slang. I often sensed that if he were a free agent he’d have been off like a shot. The last thing I want to do is contribute to the whispering campaign against him that’s been circulating for years.

Looking back, it often appears to have been a constant struggle against a plethora of hangers-on and relatives of council staff who were saw the museum as a cash cow. The curator asked me to find a job for one girl. As there was often little enough work for me to do I prevaricated, but said I’d find something for her. A week passed and the curator again asked me to find her a job. This time I came up with something that didn’t really need doing, and I was compelled to there and then telephone the girl offering her the work. She did it well and I was grateful, but I got a shock when the issue of payment for her arose in discussion. The curator proposed giving her far more money than I was getting. (Actually, to be fair to him, he didn’t actually know how little I received.) And then I remember the time when the curator, tired of the hectoring of the then county manager, threatened to resign. All of said to him: “If you go, we’re going too.” I told this to a very good friend of mine, and she said: “And do you think he’d do the same for you Ciaran?” Less than six months were to pass before I discovered how prescient my friend was. But I honestly didn’t expect him to.

One of the joys of working for the Museum was working alongside people on the FAS scheme, the form of cheap labour used by local authorities throughout Ireland for such projects. I think it worthwhile to remind people that I wasn’t the person who initially said the FAS people were not to be invited to the opening by President Robinson. If that decision had been gone along with I wouldn’t have been seen dead at the opening. The curator thankfully put his foot down as well. He asked me to draw up a list of people I’d like to invite, but not one person on my list got an invitation, and for all I know it ended up in Brian Johnston’s toilet. On the day of the opening there wasn’t a stone for more than fifty miles from under which some creepy-crawly hadn’t emerged. I say without any fear of contradiction that if it wasn’t for the people on the FAS schemes over the years there would be no museum, but yet for years they’ve been shat upon, whether by the County Council or by FAS itself.

Some might say this is all “Fart-and-tell”, the ultimate touch-stone of the scoundrel. I just want to show people I worked bloody hard in the short period I was there, but it is as if I never was in the place, and whenever my name is mentioned in the context of the museum eyes incline towards the floor as if someone had said “fuck” in earshot of the vicar. I became a “non-person”, airbrushed out of existence; credit for my work was taken by others. This is no doubt what Scott meant when he said there had been “trouble” between me and the museum, but maybe he is genuinely unaware of the work I did. Somehow I doubt it.

A lot of this happened long ago, and a lot of water had passed under my personal bridge. But I was truly distressed to find that, even after more than ten years, there were those in the Museum who still bore me ill-will. It really reopened a lot of sore memories for me.

But why am I still the black sheep? I can stand, hand on heart, and say I have nothing to be ashamed of. I was born with one disability which I attempted to overcome. The good Lord in his wisdom saw fit to saddle me with another, the degenerative disease of Multiple Sclerosis which I have also attempted to deal with, and I think, all things considered, I’ve done fairly well. I’ve never looked for sympathy, but a bit of respect wouldn’t be out of place, but then I know I look in vain for respect from people who don’t respect themselves.

No doubt all this will engender a response. There will be those who will pooh-pooh my “outburst”, but you know I don’t care. I do hope (for his sake) that Dr Scott doesn’t emulate his predecessor in the job in the museum, who once rang me up threatening to sue me and who was verbally abusive to my late mother – God be good to her – and sister. On that occasion I had, that very day in fact, received formal notification that I did indeed have Multiple Sclerosis, so I suppose I could have been forgiven for ignoring such a provocation. I would not be so passive now.

One last thing – after which the rest will be silence. I wish local politicians would stop belly-aching to me about the Museum, how much it is costing and how little it is taking in. It’s got nothing to do with me. It’s not my concern – it’s yours.

Drumnamuckagh

Welcome to Drumnamuckagh, the des-res for ireland’s beautiful people, well not really beautiful (most of them are as ugly as shite), more lucky few. The name comes from the Irish Droim na Muice meaning, yes pasti? The pig’s back. In this time of unprecedented economic uncertainty, not seen perhaps since the 1980s or even worse since 1929, it is comforting to know that the inhabitants of Drumnamuck are immune to all this turbulence and can sit back and thumb their snotty noses at the little people who have the misfortune to live in the real world and who lack ties with the movers and shakers. The denizens of Drumnamuckagh are a mixed bag of people from different backgrounds, but they have a few things in common – a lack of any worthwhile abilities except wasting money. Of course they also have pull which means that they will get all the plum jobs before people who are better qualified. You’ll find here politicians from all shades of the political spectrum, many of whom pretend to worry about the nation’s welfare but really have only their own welfare at heart. There are also their family members – sons and daughters, both legitimate and illegitimate. And if anyone as much as raises a whisper about their charmed lives they suffer eternal damnation and victimisation. I am only writing this because, let’s face it, I’m as mad as the proverbial hatter. I’m also a born loser who can’t come to terms with my own incompetence and disability, but instead tries to tarnish the glowing halos of those whom God and nature have installed above me and who is moreover so burned up with anger at being a useless cripple.

Not deterred, I intend to write more about Drumnamuck when I feel like it. For now I’ll just leave you with a taste of what’s to come – 600,000 – that’s six hundred thousand – euro to be precise. Quite a lot of shit. In fact it would be something of a handful even for a FAS director general, but I’m not talking about FAS director generals, even though a former hold of that post is a very honoured denizen of Drumnamuckagh.

The good civil servant Molloy

I have been reminded of that great unfinished classic of 20th century literature, Jaroslav Hasek’s Good Soldier Svejk. I doubt the great sage who is our prime minister, mokey-man Cowen has ever read it.

His encomium of Roddy Molloy, who resigned as “director-general” of FAS was nothing if not nauseating. He was the very model of a good civil servant. So “good” civil servants, as well as being paid huge amounts of money, should also run up outrageous expense accounts, should bring their spouses with them on foreign assignments and should always travel first class? It’s good to know where the money’s going Brian.

Kleptocracy

Taoiseach Brian Cowen has given his fulsome support to FAS supremo Roddy Molloy, following the controversy over how the state agency was able to run up bills in excess of 600,000 euro for participation of FAS executives at various events. This follows Mr Molloy’s own arrogant defence of his own practice of flying first class and bringing his wife along fo the ride.
I can’t help thinking here of the many FAS trainees who often have to stand out in heavy showers waiting for lifts to bring them to work. They don’t have the option of going first class do they.
Mr Molloy’s actions should demonstrate the nature of public spending in Ireland. It goes to keep fat cats like him; when governments decide to cut spending it is the people at the bottom who always suffer, not the types of Molloy who will continue to enjoy a pampered existence, while supposedly looking out for those less fortunate.
FAS (or ANCO as it used to be called) is, based on anecdotal evidence, one of the most inefficient and corrupt organisations in the state. It should be wound up or seriously reformed, but that will never happen because there are too many fat cats, or cats in serious danger of obesity, who have a vested interest in keeping the show on the road as it is. For years FAS schemes have been a source of cheap labour for a whole range of institutions, especially at local government level. Trainees are supposedly given skills, but even when they get these there are not always jobs there for them. My own experience of people on FAS schemes is that they are a really enthusiastic group of people, who very often are being cynically exploited.
There used to be a whole lot of very unfair barriers preventing certain categories from joining FAS schemes. For one, married women were often unable to get places, but I know of one instance where the wife of a very well-paid individual who was in charge of a very important institution in what we’ll just call the heritage area, got a place on a FAS scheme working in her husband’s institution.
Cowen’s endorsement of his good friend Molloy should hardly surprise anyone. You could say it was simlar to a code of mutual support amongst a branch of the mafia. An Irish proverb comes to mind: Aithnionn ciarog ciarog eile…

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