Deputies Bríd Smith and Cian O'Callaghan send their apologies. I thank the House for selecting this slot and for the Minister of State for taking it. This really flows from an audiovisual room briefing that we hosted last week. It was with a group of principals from about 30 schools from some of the most generationally disadvantaged areas in the country, including Tallaght, Ballymun and Darndale, who have been pushing very impressively for the establishment of a new category of DEIS+ for primary schools. I pay tribute to those principals who obviously have a lot of work to do in their day jobs and yet manage to find the time to come together to campaign for this category that would make a meaningful difference for the children they are currently teaching, for other children in their communities, and for children into the future.
The idea of DEIS+ is to give additional supports to the most socioeconomically and generationally disadvantaged primary schools in the country. The idea of it is summed up with the notion that the greatest level of need should get the greatest level of support. The surveys done and the evidence from 17 different schools that were surveyed, including a number of schools in west Tallaght, underline the point of the need for this establishment of a new band. A spring 2024 survey of those 17 schools found that nearly half of the school students had experienced a serious direct trauma, such as homelessness, abuse, bereavement, suicide, crime, violence or addiction. These schools also have four times the level of additional needs compared to non-DEIS schools. Some 54% of the children have special educational needs compared to 14% in non-DEIS schools. These kids are really up against it. They need additional supports above and beyond what is provided through the current DEIS programme. Multidisciplinary teams of occupational therapists, speech and language therapists, counsellors and psychologists are needed alongside enhanced teacher allocation, extra funding and room space for trauma-informed practice. We are not talking about huge sums of money here. The Government had a €24 billion surplus. The State has enough money to provide for DEIS+. The Department of Education is spending €9 million on mobile phone pockets. It is a question of political priorities. Obviously, this is not going to happen before the next general election. Certainly People Before Profit will be including a call for DEIS+ in its election manifesto. I hope the Green Party and other parties here will be doing likewise.