• 621 early learning and childcare settings have accepted the Equal Start priority designation to date.

• These settings been objectively identified as operating in the context of the highest levels of concentrated disadvantage.

• More settings expected to accept the Equal Start Priority Designation in the coming weeks.

Minister for Children, Equality, Disability, Integration and Youth, Roderic O’Gorman has today published the first group of early learning and childcare settings to receive a funding boost through the Equal Start scheme.

Equal Start, launched earlier this year, is a new, DEIS-style funding model. It provides a set of universal and targeted measures to support access to, and full participation in, early learning and childcare for children and their families who experience disadvantage.

The services announced today have been objectively identified as operating in the context of the highest levels of concentrated disadvantage and given ‘priority designation’ under Equal Start, meaning they are now in line to receive additional State funding and supports under Equal Start from this month.

In the first year of Equal Start, settings with a priority designation will receive funding for additional staff hours that can be used to support engagement between the settings and families, engagement between the settings and other child and family support services, training in inclusive practices and to support other educators and practitioners in the provision of early learning and childcare to children with higher levels of need.

To date:

• 246 Tier 1 settings serving 11,000 children are benefitting from additional funding to support a 15% increase of staffing hours; and

• 375 Tier 2 settings serving 18,000 children are benefitting from additional funding to support an 8% increase of staffing hours

More settings are expected to accept the Equal Start Priority Designation in the coming weeks.

For year 1, some €11 million has been allocated by the Minister for additional staff hours, with an additional €2.5 million allocated towards the delivery of other Equal Start supports – both universal (for all early learning and childcare settings) and targeted (for Equal Start priority cohorts and settings). Other supports include:

• Full roll out of the Traveller Parenting Support Programme to all 17 Tusla areas, with new responsibilities on Family Link Workers to engage with Traveller parents of children aged 1-5 years, supporting them to attend and participate in early learning and childcare, avail of the ECCE programme and where applicable applying for the NCS.

• Appointment of Traveller and Roma Advisory Specialists to work in Better Start which is hosted in Pobal to promote and enhance inclusive high-quality early learning and childcare.

• Review and updating of the Equality, Diversity and Inclusion Guidelines and associated training.

• Review of the current Inclusion Co-ordinator role and updating of Leadership for Inclusion Programme.

• Development of a new Family Community Liaison role and development and rollout of associated training programme.

• Roll-out of Early Talk Boost to Equal Start target settings.

• Roll-out of Meitheal training and engagement by early years educators and school-age childcare practitioners in Meitheal.

• Development and roll out of Communications and Engagement Plan.

• Development of a new strand of funding under the existing Case Management Process for critical incidents.

• Roll-out Equal Start literacy and numeracy initiatives under the National Literacy, Numeracy and Digital Literacy Strategy.

Equal Start will be fully rolled out in three phases over a five-year period, 2024-2028.

Commenting on today’s announcement, Minister O’Gorman said:

“I am delighted to announce the first group of early learning and childcare settings that have accepted Equal Start priority designation.

“These settings been objectively identified as operating in the context of the highest levels of concentrated disadvantage and are playing a vital role in mitigating the impacts of early disadvantage on the development and life chances of children in their care.

“I am delighted, through Equal Start, to support these settings with their vital work with 35000children and their families throughout the country.”

Speaking about the importance of Equal Start, Corduff Childcare Services, Dublin 15 Manager Noeleen Keating said:

“Accepting an Equal Start Priority Designation is very important to us as it means that we will be able to improve the quality of the service we are providing. We have children with higher levels of need in every room in our service, so we have higher ratios of staff to children required.

“Families in our community are really going to benefit from this additional funding and support as it will allow us to look after the early learning and childcare needs of young children in our community and give their parents the opportunity to get back into work or education.”


Find us on

View Laois County Childcare Committee facebook posts on this site

View posts

Search Laoischildcare

This website uses cookies to enhance your browsing experience. By using this site you agree to our Cookie Policy Ok