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The Irish Cabinet on June 3 approved the country’s first Special Needs Assistant (SNA) Workforce Development Plan and accompanying circulars setting out the role and a redeployment scheme for SNAs.
The plan, developed over two years and based on a survey of about 13,000 of an estimated 25,000 SNAs, aims to professionalise the role through clearer contracts, minimum entry standards, enhanced training and dedicated professional development time (replacing a prior requirement for 72 additional unpaid hours). Ministers Hildegarde Naughton and Michael Moynihan said the measures include protections so no school will lose more than one SNA post in any single year from September 2027, and that there will be no reductions to SNA allocations for the 2026/2027 academic year.
The redeployment scheme will offer affected staff opportunities to move to vacancies in other schools.
Trade union Fórsa, which represents many SNAs, welcomed the plan but will run a consultation with members ahead of a ballot to accept or reject the proposals.
The move follows a public backlash and government U‑turn earlier this year after plans to reallocate SNA resources in around 200 schools were scrapped.
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Irish News | Breaking News from Ireland | BreakingNewsSchools will lose no more than one SNA a year from 2027 – minister








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