EXORBITANT pensions paid to bankers have come under fire from the Catholic Church authorities in Naas.
The front page article in Sunday’s (November 11)
parish newsletter attacks both the scale of the payments to retired bank
bosses and the failure of Taoiseach Enda Kenny and Finance Minister
Micheal Noonan to act.
In a commentary which will resonate with
the personal experiences of many parishioners it states: “We heard of
the enormous pensions some former bankers are receiving; one (Eugene
Sheehy) made a voluntary cut to his pension, reducing it to a ‘mere’ €250,000.”
It goes on: “It’s important to remember that the bank
in question (AIB) is almost totally owned by the taxpayer; so it’s the
ordinary person on the street who is contributing to this pension.”
At
the same time, the article points out, an 89 year old woman, who worked
all her life had her one hour of home help a week cut.
The article challenged the Taoiseach to hold a referendum “to allow the people to voice their opinion on whether they want to bring about change.”
This
referred to Mr. Noonan’s claim that he would do nothing about the
pensions because contractual arrangements required constitutional
change.
The priest pointed out that a reduction to the pensions
would not alter Ireland’s overall financial position; however this is
not the point.
“How can we stand by as the vulnerable in or
society take severe cuts while those in leadership positions who acted
irresponsibly receive the award of outrageous pensions ?“ he asks.
Parish priest Fr. John Brickley said he was unaware which priest wrote the article.
“I
don’t look after the articles and I didn’t write it but my
understanding is that they look as Scripture and look at what is
happening in the community and try to connect both. It is reflection for
people to take with them and the intention is to link some event during
the week with the Gospel,” Fr. Brickley said.
Naas curate Fr. PJ
Madden, appointed to the Naas Sallins Two Mile House parish in
September, spoke on local radio on Monday but made no reference to the
article.
An outspoken clergyman, Fr. Madden was ordained in 2005 –
some 6 years after the death of his wife and he served in
Graiguecullen, Co. Carlow.
Last week, Kildare town resident and
former Fine Gael minister Alan Dukes defended the €500,000 salaries paid
to those running the former Anglo Irish Bank, the institution most
closely associated with the collapse of the economy.