The president of the Law Reform Commission, Mr Justice John Quirke,
will make recommendations within three months on supports the State can
offer women who were in the Magdalene laundries and in the training
centre on Dublin’s Stanhope Street, the Taoiseach has announced.
Tánaiste
Eamon Gilmore said last night that when it came to funding such
assistance for the women, there was a role “for the religious orders
which ran these laundries, to make a fair contribution, along with the
taxpayer”.
He said: “These laundries were private businesses, run
by those orders, which benefited from the unpaid labour of the women
committed to them. The past does not belong to the State alone.”
When
Mr Justice Quirke reports, “the Government will establish a fund to
assist the women, based on his recommendations,” he said.
Non-adversarial basis
The
terms of reference for Mr Justice Quirke were published later last
night.
These stipulate that he, taking into account the findings of the
McAleese report on the Magdalene laundries, would advise on the setting
up as early as possible of a scheme to assist the women, and on a
non-adversarial basis.
He will advise also on how best a lump sum
can be paid to the women while avoiding legal fees and expenses.
He will
make recommendations on supports such as medical cards, mental health
services, counselling services and other welfare needs the women might
have.
Industrial schools
He has been asked
to take into account payments that may have been paid to some of the
women by the redress board due to their being former residents of
industrial schools.
This was particularly so where there was direct
transfer of the women “from an industrial school to a relevant laundry
and their time or part of their time spent in a laundry or laundries”.
He
will examine the effect, if any, of making an ex-gratia payment to
women now living in the UK and how this might be arranged so as not to
affect their entitlements to benefits and supports there.
He will
advise on what can be done in this State to ensure such ex-gratia
payments or supports made to the women do not adversely affect their
social welfare entitlements and/or income tax liability.
Mr Justice Quirke retired as a High Court judge in 2012.
At
17, the scrum-half was the youngest person to play international rugby
for Ireland.
He was appointed to the High Court in 1997, where he dealt
with many personal injury cases.
He had a reputation for being particularly sensitive to families and plaintiffs traumatised by cases of death and severe injury.