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25 Kommentare

  1. Recent-Lemon-9930 on

    16k in tourist accommodation, 42k in the ARP scheme. About 70% of arrivals in just those 2. Gonna be some craic when they’re expected to support themselves.

  2. Bulky_Pilot9293 on

    Ok I have sympathy for them, but most of the ones living in a local hotel (skibbereen) just spend half the day smoking outside. 

  3. It was always unrealistic to think the tap could just be left running forever. The article itself notes that the Government is now pulling back from using tourist and commercial accommodation and winding down the payment scheme, which shows the system was never sustainable long term. I feel that the Government pushed ahead in the early stages because they wanted to look good for their European partners, but it came at a massive cost to Irish taxpayers and put huge pressure on housing and public services. At some point, reality was going to catch up.

  4. Relevant-Bobcat-2016 on

    Should have been done at least a year ago. No reason why the Ukrainians can’t be self sufficient. Many of them are taking the complete piss, heading over and back to Ukraine for holidays and for medical treatment.

  5. There isn’t a hope of some of them heading back to Ukraine, there’s been literally millions of homes destroyed so they’ve nowhere to go

    2.5 million as of Nov 2025

    [https://news.un.org/en/story/2025/11/1166360](https://news.un.org/en/story/2025/11/1166360)

    Entire cities, towns and villages no longer exist

    You’re honestly taking a decade or two to fully rebuild and even then……

  6. Life_Breadfruit8475 on

    Surely they should only get the accomodation for a year to learn English and find a job?

    I can’t imagine these people don’t have qualifications. Or otherwise they could work in construction, which is desperately needed anyway? They’ll make money and can find their own appartment…

    I’m ignorant though, don’t know enough about their situation. Take this as a quick potentially inaccurate opinion.

  7. I process payments for the ARP scheme it’s such a shitshow. Lots of Irish landlords making a lot of money from it. One person is getting upwards of 40k per month tax free from it.

  8. Youngfolk21 on

    I often wonder how other Ukrainians feel, those who had been here for years?  Grafting for years. And then seeing others get housing etc. 

  9. astralcorrection on

    I went out with a Ukrainian lady, my God she had beautiful eyes. She left West Cork where she rented a house and went back to Kiyv, two years ago. For her the nightly air raid alarms were less bothersome than the eight month Irish winter.

  10. GrahamR12345 on

    Sure they go home every other month on holidays and show off their Irish bling we gave them…

  11. TheBoneIdler on

    It will be interesting to see whether the proprietors of these fine tourist & commercial accomodation once the state guaranteed easy money is withdrawn will have the get-up-&-go to dive back into the hurly burly commercial market, where there is no guaranteed monthly cheque. Plus, I think some of them will have wrecked their local reputation, especially in villages & small towns where the local hotel was a hub of the local economy. For a couple of reasons, once the state tap is turned off I expect the owners to sell the properties. The golden goose will have died, so time to offload the corpse.

  12. Captain____Awesome1 on

    The funniest thing will be all the guys who bought places to leech from the system and will have to offload them now. It’ll have an impact on all the leeches coming from the north too when they realize there’s no room at the inn. Hopefully it’ll free up housing for those genuinely in need.

  13. Separate-Sand2034 on

    I’m not sure what comments Im dreading more, the racism or the armchair generals

  14. We have been an incredibly soft touch for Ukrainians with our ridiculous social benefits. Supports should be significantly reduced and they need to start paying their own way in society.

    Also, the temporary protection order ending should see the majority being removed from the state. Their country will need them and they are not Ireland’s responsibility. Young families (school going kids etc) could be offered visas, as it can be incredibly difficult uprooting young people in formative years.

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