The chair of the Joint Oireachtas Committee on Fisheries and Maritime Affairs has said the Government and the Irish Aviation Authority (IAA) have “serious questions to answer” following reports that Coast Guard helicopter crews are being subjected to unsafe working-hour arrangements that could put lives at risk.
Conor McGuinness, who is Sinn Féin TD for Waterford and party spokesman on rural affairs, community development and the Gaeltacht, said the revelations highlight “a shocking failure of oversight and leadership from government and the regulator.”
As The Sunday Independent has reported, the Irish Airline Pilots’ Association (IALPA) says the IAA has permitted the current Irish Coast Guard search and rescue (SAR) contract holder to allow a 24-hour roster system to be logged as a total of 16.5 hours in total.
The Waterford TD confirmed that he has invited the Irish Coast Guard to appear before the Oireachtas Committee this month to discuss safety at sea, including concerns around working time, fatigue, and regulatory oversight
He said he has also written to the IAA and to the Minister for Transport to raise his “very serious concerns” about the matter.
“The IAA has a statutory duty to ensure that all aviation operations are conducted in full compliance with safety standards,” McGuinness said in a statement.
“Yet we now have a situation where 24-hour rosters are being logged as just 16.5 hours worked - a sleight of hand that reduces costs for employers but increases the risks faced by crews,” he said.
“These are the same crews who risk their lives in the most dangerous conditions imaginable to save others at sea. They deserve proper protection, not loopholes and corner-cutting. It is deeply alarming that crews themselves believe it is only a matter of time before there is a serious incident. The regulator cannot stand over that, and neither can the Government,” he said.
“It seems that very little has been learned since the tragedies off Tramore in 1999 and off north Mayo in 2017. The loss of Rescue 116 was supposed to mark a turning point for safety culture and oversight in Irish search and rescue operations. Instead, we are witnessing a steady erosion of protections for those doing this critical work,” McGuinness said.
Deputy McGuinness, who as a Waterford councillor led the campaign that forced a government U-turn on plans to remove Rescue 117 and the Waterford Airport search and rescue base from tender documents, added:
“In Waterford and the wider south-east, we know all too well how essential this service is — and how hard communities had to fight to keep it.”
“The safety of our air crews and the reliability of our national rescue network are non-negotiable. The Minister for Transport must act immediately to ensure that working-time arrangements fully comply with European law, and that the Coast Guard has the oversight, staffing and resources it needs. This cannot be another case of kicking the can down the road until the next tragedy,” he said.
“The Government has had years to get this right. The message from crews is clear: the current system is unsafe. It’s time for accountability, and it’s time for change,” he said.

















































