Grant payment delays forcing students out

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GRANTS intended to help the poorest students get through college are being paid so late that Limerick students are dropping out or seeking help from the St Vincent de Paul, it has been claimed.
The V de P regional president, Michael Murphy, is hoping to arrange a meeting with representatives of the University of Limerick and the Limerick Institute of Technology to discuss why some student grants take months to come through.

โ€œItโ€™s very difficult for people in college to make ends meet without having to hang in there waiting for money which they qualify for and are entitled to,โ€ said Mr Murphy.
โ€œStudents are coming to us for help because grants are not being paid until November in some cases. I am hoping to sit down with the two third level institutions and see what can be doneโ€.
He explained that grants are processed by two principal bodies, the local authorities and the Department of Social Protection.
โ€œHow prompt or late the grant is depends on who youโ€™re dealing with and where you live. Pick a date,โ€ Michael told the Limerick Post.
The Students Union in the University of Limerick has been a port of call for students desperately trying to hang in until their grant cheque arrives.
โ€œMature students especially are having a very difficult time,โ€™โ€™ said UL Studentsโ€™ Union Welfare officer and deputy president, Tara Feeney. โ€œStudents are dropping out of college because of this. I had a girl come to me last week because she literally didnโ€™t have money to eat and she had been in that situation for some timeโ€.
Ms Feeney said that some grants hadnโ€™t been paid up to the start of December, despite the fact that students applied promptly after being offered a college place.
โ€œAnother problem is the change to distance qualification. To qualify for a maintenance grant before, people had to live 24 kilometres from the college. Thatโ€™s changed now to 45 kilometresโ€.
The union has an emergency fund but can only loan money to students- the fund itself is not large.
โ€œPeople have such a struggle to get here in the first place and especially if they are in fourth year, they want to hang in to finish, but these delays are forcing people to drop out,โ€ concluded Tara.

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