Inside the State’s latest care scandal: The at-risk children on Tusla’s ‘no beds list’

In the News podcast: How private care providers charge nearly €60m to fill gaps in failing service

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Judges are increasingly exasperated at the patchwork of care arrangements facing these vulnerable children. Photograph: iStock
Judges are increasingly exasperated at the patchwork of care arrangements facing these vulnerable children. Photograph: iStock

In the entire country there are just 26 places for vulnerable children in need of the highest level of specialist care and supervision that Tusla is charged with providing.

And only 15 of these beds are currently available.

What this means is that when the child and family agency petitions the courts to have a vulnerable and in-danger child taken into its special care, it then has to admit to the judge that it has no beds available.

Judges are increasingly expressing their frustration and exasperation at this situation – and at the patchwork of care arrangements facing these children. These typically involve special emergency arrangements (SEAs), often in B&Bs, hotel rooms or private apartments. This is provided by private companies, charging the State nearly €60 million in 2024 alone.

Social Affairs Correspondent Kitty Holland explains the background to this failure and why the increasingly loud comments from the bench just might effect change.

Presented by Bernice Harrison. Produced by Suzanne Brennan.

Bernice Harrison

Bernice Harrison

Bernice Harrison is an Irish Times journalist and cohost of In the News podcast

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