450 people had welfare payments suspended
The Department of Social Protection suspended the welfare payments of about 450 people who failed to go through an identity registration process for the public services card (PSC), it has emerged.
The Department of Social Protection suspended the welfare payments of about 450 people who failed to go through an identity registration process for the public services card (PSC), it has emerged.
Officials from the department appearing before an Oireachtas committee said much of the negative commentary concerning the PSC has been āmisleadingā and āincorrectā and repeatedly drew attention to the media reportage that has been directed at the project.
āThere has been too much emphasis on the card,ā said official Tim Duggan.
Mr Duggan said the card is āabout making sure weāre dealing with the right peopleā.
He said it is āvery difficult to answerā how many people have had benefits suspended due to a refusal to register for a PSC as āit is a very fluid situationā.
Mr Duggan said that about 4,000 free travel passes have been revoked due to a failure to register, but that āmost of those people have never engaged with the departmentā.
He indicated many of these cases relate to elderly people who might no longer be using their entitlement to free public transport.
Roughly 450 other cases have seen the suspension of a payment, he said, adding that in the departmentās opinion, āwe think theyāve gone abroadā.
The official said in the āvast majorityā of cases where payments had been suspended, it was not because people had objected to the card or did not believe there was a legislative basis for it.
The committee was told three-quarters of the adult population of the State, or 2.65m people, now have a public services card. Some 3.14m had been issued as of Thursday.
It was ānot a national ID cardā and there was āno intentionā for it to be such, said Mr Duggan.




