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Agency overview | |
---|---|
Formed | January 1992 |
Preceding agency |
|
Jurisdiction | Ireland |
Headquarters | 31-36 Upper Ormond Quay, Dublin, Ireland |
Parent department | Department of Rural and Community Development |
Website | Pobal website |
Pobal (English: Community) is a state-sponsored organisation in Ireland with responsibility for administering and managing government and EU funding aimed at supporting social inclusion and addressing social disadvantage in the country.[1][2][3][4][5][6] While the organisation is registered with the Charities Regulator, its charitable status was queried in 2018.[7][8]
Pobal was established in 1992 by the Irish Government, in agreement with the European Commission, to manage an EU local development grant scheme.[9][10] Originally known as Area Development Management (ADM),[11] the organisation was renamed Pobal in 2005.[12] Pobal was not established under specific legislation, and is subject to Irish company law.[13]
The agency's activities and priorities are shaped by the context and policies laid out by government in several documents, including the Programme for Government – Government for National Recovery 2011-2016, the Action Plan for Jobs, the Action Plan for Rural Development, Project Ireland 2040 and Pathways to Work. Examples of the groups supported by government through Pobal include those who have been long-term unemployed, young people, farmers / fishermen, families, Irish Travellers, older people and ex-prisoners. Pobal has formed alliances nationally and internationally,[citation needed] including with the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) and the Economic and Social Research Institute (ESRI).[citation needed] For example, in 2022, Pobal commissioned the ESRI to undertake a survey into how poverty persists from one generation to the next.[14]
Pobal allocated circa €765 million in funding in 2021, providing support for approximately 38 programmes across the country in the areas of social inclusion and equality, inclusive employment and enterprise, and early learning and care.[1] The group administers these programmes on behalf of the Department of Rural and Community Development, the Department of Children, Equality, Disability, Integration and Youth, the Department of Social Protection, the Department of Health/HSE, as well as the Department of Justice and a number of EU bodies. Pobal's lead department, the Department of Rural and Community Development conducts a Periodic Critical Review report of the organisation, the most recent of which was approved by Minister Heather Humphreys on 29 September 2021.[10]
Pobal holds a volume of data about the programmes they manage. To support governmental bodies as well as individuals in making use of this data, Pobal developed an interactive graphical information system called 'Pobal Maps'.[15] Pobal Maps is a free geographic information system (GIS) which provides a range of functions, allowing users to see where Pobal delivers funding to, as well as providing a way of accessing and using the Pobal HP Deprivation Index, details on childcare services, and a range of other funded services throughout the Republic of Ireland.[15]
The Pobal HP Deprivation Index, developed every 5 years with new data after each successive census of the country, is (according to the organisation) "Ireland’s most widely used social gradient metric".[15] The index uses information such as employment, age profile and educational attainment, to calculate this score. Pobal has been the principal sponsor of successive deprivation indices created about Ireland and maintains a dedicated section of its website to publishing reports, data files and online mapping tools for the Pobal HP Deprivation Index.[16] From 2006 to 2016, creation of these indices has been funded by Pobal in partnership with the independent social and economic consultants team of Trutz Haase and Dr. Jonathan Pratschke.[17][16] From the 2011 census onwards, information became available at the newly created "Small Area" level. Small Areas are the most granular census tract level measured in Ireland which relate to parcels of land containing between 80 and 100 households on average, allowing the user to see the extent to which every neighbourhood, suburb and village in the state is either affluent or deprived.[17][18]
The index is also used by the Department of Education for the designation of schools under DEIS (Delivering Equality of Opportunity in Schools),[19] the HSE for the creation of their Health Atlas Ireland, the Central Statistics Office for optimising sampling methodologies, the Department of Tourism, Culture, Arts, Gaeltacht, Sport and Media for sports capital application appraisals, as well as Tusla and various Drug and Alcohol Task Forces for the carrying out of resource allocation modelling.[15] Pobal's own Resource Allocation Model (Pobal-RAM) is also based on their own HP Deprivation Index.[16] As of September 2022, a Deprivation Index had yet to be released using information gathered from the 2022 census of Ireland.
The board of directors, which is appointed by the Irish government,[13] is responsible for the governance and strategic direction of Pobal.[20] The board consists of a chairperson and fifteen other directors, all of whom work in a voluntary capacity receiving no fees or remuneration for the time spent in carrying out their duties.[20] Since September 2021, Rosarii Mannion has served as chairperson of the board.
The day-to-day management of the organisation is overseen by several paid roles, including a chief executive officer (CEO), deputy CEO and financial and other roles.[21] In 2018, the independent TD Mick Wallace questioned the salary of the then chief executive of the organisation.[22]
The organisation had 270 employees in 2009,[23] growing to over 530 employees according to its 2020 annual report.[21] Pobal has offices in Dublin, Monaghan, Sligo, Clifden, Letterkenny, Cork, Galway city, Limerick, Mullingar and Kilkenny.[10] Its head office is on Upper Ormond Quay in Dublin city centre.