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Should the taxpayer bear all the unnecessary expenses? Are there any answers to these questions!

Did the company make a mistake in the grade controversy? Is the company liable for the financial expenses incurred by the State as a result? Has the Department of Education given the wrong instructions? Does the taxpayer have to bear all these wasteful expenses? These are the questions that were asked in Dale yesterday.

Anto leader Peter Tyben, who has described the latest installment of the government’s Fiasco factory as a new controversy, has raised these questions that the people of Ireland keep inside.

Green Party leader Eamon Ryan came to the rescue when the education minister flinched at the question. The arguments of the Minister were repeated but none of the questions raised remained unanswered.

Only one thing was understood; Those who deserve higher grades can rejoice, Because the grades they get will stay the same.

If the Minister of Education can be trusted, it can be assumed that all the children who are eligible for the higher grade but who are in the lower grade will get what they deserve and they will never be deprived.

When asked by Sinn Finn education spokesman Don Chad O’Leary to clarify how Polymetrica got the contract, Minister Foley replied that the appointment of the department was through negotiation procedures.

Foley said the company had been commissioned to advise on the estimated grades since May, but he did not elaborate on what was discussed.

Strong opposition protests erupted in Dale over the grade controversy that rocked the education sector.

Green Party leader Ryan told TD that if the issue had been released before all the information was available, it would have caused great pain and anxiety. That is why there was a slight delay in releasing the matter, he said.

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