Deputy Rose Conway-Walsh

Mayo TD 'gravely concerned' by resignation of entire appeals board

A Mayo TD has expressed grave concern at news that the entire Disabled Drivers Medical Scheme Appeals Board has resigned after expressing concerns that the criteria for obtaining a Primary Medical Cert is too stringent.

Deputy Rose Conway-Walsh said: “Many disabled people are effectively being denied the ability to travel due to the stringent criteria for obtaining a Primary Medical Certificate.

“This is denying disabled people their rights under the United Nations Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (UNCRPD) to live fully independent lives.

“An immediate review of this scheme and the criteria it sets needs to take place with input from Disabled Persons Organisations and other relevant stakeholders taken on board.

"This must include detailed actions to widen eligibility to the scheme and improve its administration.

“Disabled people should have the ability to travel.

"Lack of transport can be devastating for people's ability to work, to socialise and to complete everyday tasks which enable them to live full and independent lives.

"The impact that loss of transport has on disabled people's lives is difficult to overstate and carries a huge practical and emotional toll.

"The government must recognise this, listen to disabled people and prioritise this issue.

“That the criteria for obtaining a Primary Medical Certificate was overly stringent was, in effect, confirmed by the Supreme Court ruling in June 2020 which overturned the board's decision to deny two families a Primary Medical Certificate.

“This ruling led to the suspension of the scheme which was only reopened in January 2021 after an amendment to the Finance Bill.

“This was supposed to be an interim measure and a review of the scheme was promised by the Minister for Finance in September 2021 to be carried out by his Department whose remit it comes under, but this was never delivered.

“The Department of Finance statement reported by RTÉ News today instead stated that ‘a working group – led by the Department of Children, Equality, and Disability [Sic] – will review the Disabled Drivers and Passengers Scheme’.

“This only confirms that the Minister for Finance and his department has not carried out the review he had undertaken to do five months ago and 18 months after the Supreme Court ruling.

“For years I have asked for a review of the discriminatory nature of this scheme.

"It was first brought to my attention around 10 years ago when a women who was an amputee, having lost her arm, was refused a medical certificate on the basis that it was not a lower limb she had lost.

"I did everything possible to overturn the decision but to no avail.

"How can this be right?

"Similarly with blind applicants who rely on their spouse or family member for transport. Again deemed not eligible.”