A CLARE PRINCIPAL has publicly backed school secretaries and caretakers in their efforts to secure pension parity and access to sick and bereavement leave equivalent to their colleagues in the education sector.

Industrial action is about to enter its first full week in Clare and across the county as secretaries and caretakers continue their fight to be classified as public servants by the Department of Education.

With secretaries and caretakers marked as lathair from their duties it has increased the workload and pressures on principals.

At certain locations across the county, principals have joined their colleagues on the picket line in an act of solidarity but principal of Inch NS, Conor McKenna has gone a step further with his public backing for their cause and has highlighted that secretaries such as Carole Linnane in trying to keep services running smoothly due to under-funding from the Department of Education.

He said, โ€œEverybody plays their part, we view the staff here as a team, it is a collective effort, the success of the school is built on the effort of all the team members, Carole is a very important member of that, part of me feels it is an indication of the under-funding that has gone on in schools in recent years. Carole spends her days scrimping and scraping trying to find pennys in everything we buy and order into the school, she does untold work papering over the cracks from underfunding at Department level, if anybody deserves a bit more money from the Department and the Government it is Carole and her colleaguesโ€.

All staff are fully behind Carole in her actions, he confirmed. โ€œWe fully support Carole in her action and the other secretaries, Carole in many ways is the first voice for people on the phone, she is the first face people see during the school day when they come to the door, she is well-deserving of anything they are campaigning forโ€.

Speaking to The Clare Echo, the Miltown Malbay man noted that the return to school is always challenging but it has been more difficult with a strike thrown into the equation. โ€œThe first four days of school are generally busy anyway but this brings an extra layer of a challenge added to the mix, weโ€™ve managed fine but it is the little things that are adding up, communication and communication with parents, if something arises during the day youโ€™re having to leave class or come down to the office to make a phone call. Iโ€™m a teaching principal so what is greeting me at the end of the day is an inbox of emails that have gone unanswered, calls that have to be returned, small things like that add up to make the burden of September a little bit greaterโ€.

Maintaining levels of communication with parents and guardians is impacted when there is no secretary in the office, he flagged. โ€œWe even had an incident today of a child falling in the yard, weโ€™d give a phonecall home to update the parents, if the parents miss the call you go back to class, they return the call and it goes unanswered, there is a lag in the communication whereas if Carole was here that communication is much more streamlined and efficientโ€.

Value of school secretaries in education settings will become more and more obvious, the longer the strike continues, Conor outlined. โ€œThere are certain things that out of support for Carole we can leave undone but the school has to function, the children have to learn, they are non-negotiable, the kids canโ€™t be collateral damage in an industrial action but at the same time thereโ€™s certain things that only Carole does and that are her responsibility, the longer they go on the more people affected such as suppliers or orders being unpaid, there is a wider web of people that are going to be impacted by this, it is only as this web spreads out from the school that the cries will get louderโ€.

McKenna continued, โ€œTrying to keep things going without somebody who you work so closely with and you have such a good working relationship with and who you know you can leave certain tasks to them, there is going to be a backlog is the number one thing, when Carole comes back and this is resolved in the hopefully not too distant future, she will have to catch up on her things and there will be bits that is left undone in the meantimeโ€.

A dozen schools in Clare are no longer part of the Hot School Meals Scheme but Inch remains on the scheme, however their secretary Carole is tasked with organising the distribution of lunches. โ€œEven today we had an issue with the delivery of lunches where we were left short with a few, they are experiencing their own technical difficulties but Carole wasnโ€™t in the office to contact them to correct it so it went unnoticed until 12:20 when the kids were waiting to collect their lunches, it is those little things crop up during the day that Carole can pick up the phone which is what her time is for addressing those kind of issues, it is very difficult for anyone else on the staff to do the little things like thatโ€.

Related News

michael lorigan 1
Kilkee woman to enter guilty plea for dangerous driving causing death of 'inspirational' school teacher
รฉire รณg v st josephs doora barefield 12-10-25 jack daly 1
Civic reception requested for historic ร‰ire ร“g senior champions
court seat
Father tells court he did not know his son had been circumcised
catherine connolly noreen lynch 1
Irish Presidential front-runner Connolly dodges media during Mid-West stop
Latest News
รฉire รณg v st josephs doora barefield 12-10-25 jack daly 1
Civic reception requested for historic ร‰ire ร“g senior champions
o'callaghans mills vs clarecastle 19-10-25 aidan o'gorman 3
Mighty Mills seal senior return to keep Magpies at intermediate
court seat
Father tells court he did not know his son had been circumcised
raymond o'mahony david reidy 1-2
Reidy revels in the big day to deliver player of the week performance
big build clarecastle 1
Clarecastle family appear on RTร‰ as house undergoes renovation for teenager awaiting spinal surgery
Premium
Father tells court he did not know his son had been circumcised
Madden hopeful Mills can lift the roof in PIHC decider
Daniels helps deliver historic success for ร‰ire ร“g
Inagh/Kilnamona win senior camogie championship for fifth time
Foudy & Inagh/Kilnamona looking to bridge five year gap for senior success

Advertisement

Subscribe for just โ‚ฌ3 per month

If youโ€™re here, you care about County Clare. So do we. Did you rely on us for Covid-19 updates, follow our election coverage, or visit The Clare Echo every week for breaking news and sport? The Clare Echo invests in local journalism and we want to safeguard its future in our county. By becoming a subscriber you are supporting what we do, will receive access to all our premium articles and a better experience, while helping us improve our offering to you. Subscribe to clareecho.ie and get the first six months for just โ‚ฌ3 a month (less than 75c per week), and thereafter โ‚ฌ8 per month. Cancel anytime, limited time offer. T&Cs Apply. www.clareecho.ie.