Transport Minister says shortfall in roads policing is down to recruitment

Minister Darragh O'Brien.

THE Minster for Transport said that a shortfall of 127 Gardai in Roads Policing Units (RPUs) nationally was due to recruitment and not funding.

However, despite only 23 out of 150 additional Gardaรญ being recruited to RPUs, Minister Darragh Oโ€™Brien said, during a visit to Limerick this past Friday, that he expected the Garda Commissioner to reach his target to recruit the additional 127 Gardaรญ by the end of this year.

Garda Commissioner Drew Harris set a target of 75 additional Gardaรญ to RPUs last year, however only 23 were recruited. A target of an additional 75 was set this year.

A study undertaken by the road safety campaign group Parc found that 22 Garda divisions lost RPU personnel between 2021 and 2024.

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Nationally, since 2009, there has been a decline of 40 per cent in RPU members, apart from only the Limerick Garda Division having the same number of RPU Gardaรญ as it had 15 years ago.

Last year, although there was a decrease of seven in the number of person killed on the roads, it remained a sobering year for road fatalities, with 174 people killed, compared to 181 deaths in 2023.

Speaking to reporters in Adare, Minister Darragh Oโ€™Brien said that โ€œfunding isnโ€™t the issueโ€ in respect of the current shortfall in RPU Gardai.

โ€œThe assignment of members of An Garda Sรญochรกna to any unit, in this instance, the roads unit, is a matter for the Garda Commissioner, the government don’t control that,โ€ Minster Oโ€™Brien said.

Minister Oโ€™Brien said resourcing roads policing was โ€œcritically important to ensure that enforcement is there, and that our roads are as safe as possible, and that requires investment in the infrastructure, but it does require, as well, the human resourcesโ€.

โ€œI am assured by what the Commissioner has said, that the quantum of 150 Gardaรญ in the units will be attained by the end of this year, and I expect that to be the case.โ€

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