One-fifth of Traveller families are living in poor accommodation five years after the launch of a dedicated housing programme, it was claimed today.
Traveller representative group Pavee Point said 1,463 Traveller families, or 22 per cent, had no permanent quality accommodation.
Spokesman Mr Martin Collin said these figures came five years after the adoption of Local Authority Traveller housing programmes. He claimed some "basic service bays" were often flooded, rat-infested and had only basic facilities such as taps.
Pavee Point said they were concerned at the lack of traditional types of Traveller accommodation such as transient sites, halting sites and group housing schemes.
The latest figures from the Department of Environment and Local Government showed there were 788 families on unauthorised sites - 408 on the roadside, with 380 in private houses and on other sites.
Mr Collins said another 323 families were sharing basic facilities with other family members. He claimed there were 352 families housed in emergency and temporary facilities.
A review of the Housing (Traveller Accommodation) Act, 1998 found there were 319 units of permanent Traveller-specific accommodation constructed between 2000 and 2003.
The Minister of State for Housing and Urban Renewal, Mr Noel Ahern, said local authorities had accommodated or assisted an additional 1,369 families into permanent housing during the period 2000 to 2003.
Mr Ahern said he accepted the numerous recommendations from the report of the National Traveller Accommodation Consultative Committee (NTACC) on the 1998 Act. He said some of them had already been implemented and he would act to ensure the others were pushed through.
Pavee Point called on the Government to establish a National Traveller Accommodation Agency. Mr Ahern rejected this demand, saying he did not accept such an agency was required.
PA