Hoteliers still owed 'six-figure sums' for housing Ukrainian refugees

ireland
Hoteliers Still Owed 'Six-Figure Sums' For Housing Ukrainian Refugees
The Department of Integration has confirmed that accommodation providers are owed €41 million in unpaid bills. Photo: PA
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Vivienne Clarke

A guesthouse owner has told of how he is owed a six-figure sum for providing accommodation to 27 Ukrainian refugees.

Micheál Brophy, who runs a guesthouse in Kilkenny, has called for a direct debit payment system to ensure accommodation providers are paid on time by the State.

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Mr Brophy told RTÉ radio’s Morning Ireland that there were many providers in the same position who were not being paid.

Under his current contract Mr Brophy provides lodging, laundry and food to the 27 Ukrainian refugees who are the sole occupants of his guest house. He also allows access to two small cars because the guesthouse is in a rural area.

At present he is owed payments for November, December, January and February.

“It should be set up on a direct debit basis so that we're paid in a timely fashion. If somebody was in a position like my position in a normal, everyday job and they weren't getting paid for three or four months, I don't understand their position.

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“We have our expenses. We have to pay for oil. We have our expenses with electricity.”

Lorraine Sweeney of the Wilton Hotel in Bray, Co Wicklow, which is home to 140 Ukrainian refugees told Morning Ireland that a “considerable six-figure sum” was also due to them since last October, but she acknowledged they were fortunate to have cash flow from “the other side of the house” as part of the hotel remains open to tourists.

While they were “totally devoted to our Ukrainian guests” there was no way a business could survive waiting five months for payment.

Fine Gael Senator Martin Conway said he had been receiving calls from struggling hoteliers all over the country, some of whom had not been paid since last September.

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Earlier this week, the Department of Integration confirmed that accommodation providers are owed €41 million in unpaid bills.

Senator Conway said it was “totally unacceptable” that after almost a year of the Ukrainian crisis happening that the Department of Children still had not sorted out their payment structure to ensure the people were getting paid in a timely fashion

“I still have to keep my business running, and if I'm not in a position to keep it running - I have no alternative but to discontinue. That's a real possibility at this stage,” said Mr Bropy.

Ms Sweeney warned: “I think the Minister has enough challenges finding enough accommodation. Now if he doesn't treat this as very serious and bring people up to date and pay them, he'll have a major problem on his hands because he won't have anywhere for people to stay.”

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