Club News

IRISH SPORT UNITES TO PROTECT SPORTS FUNDING

Inniscarra Sailing & Kayaking Club
Inniscarra Sailing & Kayaking Club

REASONS: WHY IRISH SPORT MATTERS:

Sport Makes Us Feel Good
- Sport is a consistent bright spot in a difficult year
- Imagine 2009 without:
 - GAA's 125 years celebrations
 - Grand Slam Success
 - Bernard Dunne
 - Leinster and the Heineken Cup
 - Shane Lowry and the 3 Irish Open
 - The Irish Lions
 - Olive Loughnane, Dervla O'Rourke and David Gillick
at the World Athletics Championships
 - Katie Taylor and another European Boxing Championship
 - John Joe Nevin and World Bronze Medal
- Kilkenny's 4th Hurling Championship in a row

Think of a world without Irish sporting success.

Sport Drives Tourism
- 420,000 people visited the Race Village during the Galway Stopover over a two week period.
- 62.8 million TV viewers globally watched Rally Ireland in 2007
- The 2009 Tour of Ireland cycle race was broadcast to a global audience of 20 million by 220 broadcasters in 180 countries

Think of the number of indirect jobs sustained by those both participating in sport and attending sporting events.


Sport Establishes Pride in Ireland at Home and Abroad
- 46% of the population have attended at least one event in the last year
- 808, 000 people watched the 2009 All Ireland Football Final on RTE with 771,000 watching the Hurling Final
- Over 40 million overseas viewers watched Ireland in the Six Nations 2009

Sport is an investment in the worldwide Irish community. It helps enrich our Irishness.

Sport builds Communities
- 15% of adults volunteered in sport in the last 12 months which is the equivalent of 400,000 adults
- 32% of the adult population are members of at least one sports club
- 59% of players socialise regularly with fellow participants as do 53% of volunteers
- Sport is at the heart of our sense of community

It will help sustain us in the difficult times ahead.

Sport Contributes to the Economy

- Estimated that sport contributes at least a 12 fold return on State investment.
- Sport contributes approximately 1.7% of Ireland's GDP
- 1,500 jobs created by the National Governing Bodies of Sport and Local Sports Partnerships

Without the contribution made by sport we would have to borrow even more money.

Participation in Sport Improves Public Health

- 1.9 million deaths globally each year are attributable to physical inactivity.
- Reduces risk of cardiovascular disease, diabetes and osteoporosis.
- UK research has found that physical inactivity costs them up to 11% of the Health Budget.

Think of the role sport could and should play in the health of our nation.
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IRISH SPORT UNITES TO PROTECT SPORTS FUNDING

Please support this campaign and place this release on YOUR organisation's website.


All of Ireland’s Sports organisations join together to ensure that:

There are no further cuts in Irish Sports Council funding
Sport remains a separate Government Department
The Sport Capital Programme is reinstated
The National Sports Campus is developed

All of Irish sport has joined together in a campaign to highlight the importance of continued government funding of Irish sport.  Sport in Ireland spoke with one voice as it delivered its submission to Minister for Arts, Sport and Tourism, Mr Martin Cullen, TD, earlier today, Wednesday, 21 October, 2009.    Joining forces in the campaign are the Federation of Irish Sports, GAA, FAI, IRFU, the GUI, the Olympic Council of Ireland, the Paralympic Council and Special Olympics Ireland.   The Federation represents the governing bodies of 65 sports. 

Outlining the reasons for the campaign Ms Sarah O’Connor, chief executive, Federation of Irish Sports, said that “In making this submission on behalf of everyone involved in Irish sport, we wish to emphasise the important role sport plays in Irish life, in improving public health, contributing to economic activity, driving tourism, building communities and projecting a positive image of brand “Ireland” at home and abroad.”

“While we fully recognise today’s unprecedented economic conditions in Ireland it is our considered belief that Irish sport has already suffered a significant reduction in funding with the suspension of the Sports Capital Programme and a 11% reduction in 2009 of Irish Sports Council funding.   The McCarthy Report now recommends further cuts.”

“We would stress that sport is not looking for additional funding but rather to protect existing and promised investment. This includes capital developments such as the proposed National Sports Campus at Abbotstown which has been granted full planning permission and which was intended to be a cornerstone of Ireland’s programme in relation to the 2012 London Olympics.”

“In order to protect the future funding of Irish sport, we are now calling on the government to ensure that:

There is no further reduction in the budget allocated to sport through the Irish Sports Council
Sport remains as a separate Government Department
The  Sports Capital Programme is reinstated
The National Sports Campus is developed.

Speaking at the briefing Mr Paraic Duffy, Director General of the GAA, stressed that all of the sports bodies were agreed on what was required and that they would be taking their message to the millions of people who both participated and watched Irish sport every week.  

Sport, he said, “has a significant role to play in improving public health, contributing to the economy, building communities, driving tourism and establishing pride in Ireland both at home and abroad. Sport also has a remarkable power to make us feel good and that is hugely important in the current difficult times.

Every day across Ireland, thousands of people are involved in coaching, playing, volunteering and administrating sports. It is part of who we are and has a crucial role to play. We cannot underestimate the huge significance of sport in our lives. One cannot imagine Ireland as a country without sport

In the GAA alone Government funding has been vital to help put 75,000 primary school children through GAA development programmes in Dublin and to also run development programmes throughout our 2,610 clubs.”

Mr John Delaney, CEO of the FAI, said that all present acknowledged the commitment of government to Irish sport over the past decade.  “The funding both of capital projects, of sportsmen and women and of developmental programmes has been hugely important to all of our sports.  It is not, however, a particularly large budget by comparison to other countries and to cut it back further at this point in time would have disastrous effects.  We believe it could set Irish sport back many years.”

“It is recognised worldwide that you cannot simply turn sports funding on and off.  If funding dries up programmes disappear and we lose sportsmen and sportswomen with potential who may never come back into sport.”

“We are all agreed that the Irish Sports Council has a made a major difference in the way it has not alone administered the funding but also in the way it has assisted in setting up key programmes countrywide.  Indeed, the emphasis of the Irish Sports Council has been on building participation with every €1 spent on high performance sport being matched by a €3 spend on sports development. Their funds have already been cut.  Their budget cannot and should not be cut further.”

Mr Philip Browne, CEO of the Irish Rugby Football Union, said it has been estimated that sport contributes at least a twelvefold return on the funding put in by government.  It also contributes 1.7% of Ireland’s GDP.  “Major sporting occasions contribute millions to the local economy and sustain many jobs across a range of industries.  It has been well researched and documented that an Ireland v England rugby international contributes in excess of €80 million to the local Dublin economy.”

“It is often overlooked that the funding the government puts into the Sports Capital Programme has a huge return.  If we take the construction of the new Aviva Stadium,  the government has contributed €191 million.  During the construction period they will receive almost €150 million of that back in VAT and taxes. The total project, which is also being funded by the FAI and the IRFU, will represent an overall Government investment of just over €400 million.”

“And that is only part of the impact felt in economic terms.  Over the three year period since the project was begun, there has been up to 800 jobs created by the construction.  When finished, the stadium has the potential to deliver up to 1,000 jobs on match days.”

“Once we start holding other events, the stadium will become an income earner for the local Dublin economy, creating indirect jobs and also generating government revenue.  Other indirect benefits come from the exposure that major events generate for Ireland.”

Mr Patrick Hickey, President of the OCI, said he was delighted that sport had united in the campaign.  He said it was all too easy to bask in the glory of Irish sporting success without thinking of just what had gone into creating that success.

He said that it was essential that the government continued to give full backing to Irish sport if we want to continue to be successful.  He said that if investment in sport was curtailed at this point in time that not alone could Ireland virtually write off any chance of success at the 2012 London Olympics, the closest thing to a “home games” for Ireland but in all likelihood we could also forget about Rio in 2016.

The Programme
Sarah O’Connor, CEO of the Federation of Irish Sports, said that the programme was backed by each and every sports governing body and that those NGBs would be asking their members to lobby their local TDs to help the campaign realise its aims.

She also noted that following the briefing, copies of the submission would be sent to every TD in the country along with a fact sheet outlining the potential impact of funding cuts on sport in their local area.

“We have also sought meetings with the Oireachtas Committee on Sport and it is out intention to request further meetings with the officials in the Department of Finance.”

The complete submission to government could be accessed here.

In conclusion she asked the media to back the campaign.  “Every day our sports media devote a huge amount of time and space to sport.  They realise just how important a part sport plays in all our lives.  We would hope that you will help us in our efforts to remind everyone of the significance of sport to Ireland.”

The complete submission to government can be accessed here or see below attachment.
 


 


 

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