Please allow ads as they help fund our trusted local news content.
Kindly add us to your ad blocker whitelist.
If you want further access to Ireland's best local journalism, consider contributing and/or subscribing to our free daily Newsletter .
Support our mission and join our community now.
Subscribe Today!
To continue reading this article, you can subscribe for as little as €0.50 per week which will also give you access to all of our premium content and archived articles!
Alternatively, you can pay €0.50 per article, capped at €1 per day.
Thank you for supporting Ireland's best local journalism!
'Dismay and frustration' at Executive's Anti Poverty Strategy
A number of prominent individuals and organisations across civic society in the North have co-signed a letter opposing the Anti Poverty Strategy
A number of prominent individuals and organisations across civic society in the North have co-signed a letter opposing the Anti Poverty Strategy.
Reporter:
Catherine McGinty
30 Jun 2025 8:33 AM
Email:
catherinemcginty16@gmail.com
A number of prominent individuals and organisations across civic society in the North have co-signed a letter expressing "dismay and frustration" at The Executive's Anti-Poverty Strategy (2025-2035).
The letter, drafted based on the shared input and collective sentiment from a workshop hosted by the NI Anti-Poverty Network, was signed by the Ulster Farmers Union, St Vincent de Paul, Bernadette McAliskey (Expert Panel), Goretti Horgan (Ulster University), and Dr Ciara Fitzpatrick (Ulster University), among others.
The Executive's Anti-Poverty Strategy was published on June 17 by Communities Minister Gordon Lyons. An extended 14-week consultation process on the document will close on September 19, 2025.
The text of letter read: "The undersigned agree the NI Executive's draft Anti-Poverty 'Strategy' does not meet the criteria of a reasonable strategy. It fails to fulfil what oversight bodies, including the NI Audit Office and Public Accounts Committee, outline as the basic elements of any strategy.
"The NI Audit Office said 'an integrated cross departmental anti-poverty strategy [should] ensure that the focus is on a number of properly defined and more specific actions' and 'it should include an action plan containing clearly defined indicators and targets aimed at quantifying and reducing poverty.
"The Public Accounts Committee said there is a 'clear need for targets and outcomes that are quantitative, qualitative and time-bound to properly measure performance and demonstrate the impact of strategic actions'. It also considered that 'a strategy which does not have specific resources devoted to it is never going to be as effective as it could be'.
"We acknowledge that the Minister has indicated that an action plan with targets and specific actions will follow at a later, unspecified date, but every expert, every oversight body is clear that a strategy must include measurable and time bound targets within or alongside the strategy.
"Once again, we urge you to meaningfully engage with the huge volume of research that has been produced by the Independent Expert Advisory Panel (2020), the Anti-Poverty Strategy Co-Design Group (2022), the Welfare Reform Mitigation Review (2021), the Discretionary Support Review (2022) and the hundreds of pages of Northern Ireland specific evidence produced by organisations and academics that provides clear evidence of the interventions that work to tackle poverty.
"We are committed to working with you in good faith to eradicate poverty in Northern Ireland, and therefore, we are asking the NI Executive to withdraw their support of the draft Anti-Poverty Strategy, on the basis that it is more harmful to have a strategy that will not address poverty, than no strategy at all. Our children, families and communities – your constituents – deserve better."
The letter was signed by the NI Anti-Poverty Network; Goretti Horgan, Ulster University and Expert Panel; Pauline Leeson, CiNI and Expert Panel; Mike Tomlinson, Professor Emeritus, QUB and Expert Panel; Bernadette McAliskey, Expert Panel; Barnardo’s NI; Action for Children; Children in Northern Ireland (CiNI); Save the Children NI; NICVA (Northern Ireland Council for Voluntary Action); Ulster Farmers Union; UNISON NI; Unite the Union; Gerry Murphy, ICTU Assistant General Secretary; Alan Perry, Senior Organiser, GMB Trade Union; Chartered Society of Physiotherapy; Rev David Campton, Belfast Central Mission; Rev Brian Anderson, East Belfast Mission and coalition of Christian Voices Against Poverty; Rev Dr Norman Hamilton; Rev Paul Maxwell, Chair of Dundonald Foodbank and Superintendent minister of the Belfast East Circuit of the Methodist Church in Ireland; Dr Ciara Fitzpatrick, Ulster University; Law Centre NI; Cliff Edge Coalition NI; Rural Community Network; Belfast Central Mission; Black and Minority Ethnic Women’s Network; Women’s Policy Group NI; Women’s Resource & Development Agency; Human Rights Consortium; Community Advice Fermanagh; Forward South Partnership; Women’s Spaces; Raise Your Voice; Northern Ireland Council for Racial Equality; Storehouse (NI); Conradh na Gaeilge; Disabled People Against Cuts Northern Ireland; Northwest Forum of People with Disabilities; Age NI; Dr Alexandra Chapman, Ulster University; Ann Marie Gray FAcSS, Professor of Social Policy and Co-Director of ARK; Northern Ireland Women’s Budget Group; Simon Community; Women’s Support Network; Women’s Regional Consortium; Community Foundation for Northern Ireland; Ardoyne Association; Ardoyne Bone Community Health and Leisure Trust; An Dream Dearg; St Vincent de Paul; Community Transport Association Northern Ireland; Ecojustice Ireland; NIRWN (Northern Ireland Rural Women’s Network); Participation and the Practice of Rights; and Reclaim the Agenda.
ADVERTISEMENT - CONTINUE READING BELOW
ADVERTISEMENT - CONTINUE READING BELOW
ADVERTISEMENT - CONTINUE READING BELOW
ADVERTISEMENT - CONTINUE READING BELOW
ADVERTISEMENT - CONTINUE READING BELOW
ADVERTISEMENT - CONTINUE READING BELOW
ADVERTISEMENT - CONTINUE READING BELOW
ADVERTISEMENT - CONTINUE READING BELOW
ADVERTISEMENT - CONTINUE READING BELOW
ADVERTISEMENT - CONTINUE READING BELOW
ADVERTISEMENT - CONTINUE READING BELOW
4
To continue reading this article, please subscribe and support local journalism!
Subscribing will allow you access to all of our premium content and archived articles.
Subscribe
To continue reading this article for FREE, please kindly register and/or log in.
Registration is absolutely 100% FREE and will help us personalise your experience on our sites. You can also sign up to our carefully curated newsletter(s) to keep up to date with your latest local news!
Subscribe or register today to discover more from DonegalLive.ie
Buy a paper
Buy the e-paper of the Donegal Democrat, Donegal People's Press, Donegal Post and Inish Times here for instant access to Donegal's premier news titles.
Keep up with the latest news from Donegal with our daily newsletter featuring the most important stories of the day delivered to your inbox every evening at 5pm.