80 per cent of prisoners at Limerick Prison suffering from addiction

The Limerick Prison campus at Mulgrave Street.

EIGHTY per cent of prisoners arriving into Limerick Prison are suffering from drug or alcohol addiction, or both, Fianna Fรกil senator Dee Ryan told the Seanad this week.

Highlighting Justice Minister Jim O’Callaghan’s recent visit to the Treaty City, Senator Ryan said that the common theme across each of the sites he visited was drug and alcohol addiction.

“He had a very full and busy day, with a long itinerary that started with inspecting the construction of the new Garda station that is under way at Newcastle West. We expect that development to be handed back to the State in the summer of 2026. He then went on to Limerick City, and I accompanied him on his visit to Limerick Prison and to a briefing with Gardaรญ at Henry Street on the community access support team and the results so far from that innovative new pilot programme between HSE mid-west and the Garda,” she explained.

Senator Ryan continued: “He went on to meet with members of the business community who are predominantly involved in retail and hospitality in the city centre and then on to the Bedford Row project, a voluntary organisation that provides support for the families and loved ones of prisoners. Finally, we finished at Adapt House, on what was my second visit in just a short few weeks. We wanted the Minister to see the fantastic work being done there by one of the largest women’s refuge centres in the country.”

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Ryan told the upper house of the Oireachtas how governor of Limerick Prison, Mark Kennedy, and the director general of the Irish Prison Service, Caron McCaffrey, highlighted that 80 per cent of prisoners arriving into Limerick Prison are suffering from drug or alcohol addiction, or both.

“When we went on to visit other organisations with the Gardaรญ, members of the community access support team talked to us about how much de-escalation of situations fuelled by, or originating in, drug and alcohol addiction they are dealing with.

“The families in the Bedford Row support centre talked about how their children and their lives are impacted by their loved ones going to prison.”

The Limerick politician asked the Minister of State with responsibility for public health, well-being and the national drug strategy, Deputy Jennifer Murnane Oโ€™Connor, for an update on the goals of the programme for Government around this issue.

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