Current Campaigns
- General Register Office
Press Release by the Council of Irish Genealogical Organisations
26 March 2002
The Social Welfare (Miscellaneous Provisions) Bill 2002 is currently
before the Oireachtas. It contains items which will have far reaching
consequences for future public access to civil records of birth, death
and marriage. Parts of the Bill include measures to bring about the modernization
and computerisation of Ireland's civil registration system which has remained
largely unchanged since the mid-nineteenth century. The sections dealing
with birth registration are a marked improvement on the existing legislation,
and finally give effect to the provisions in the 1987 Status of Children
Act. Unfortunately, those concerning registration of deaths fail to address
the fact that too little information is currently recorded in Irish death
certificates. In the 21st century death certificates need to record a
deceased person's date & place of birth and the maiden name of a married,
widowed or divorced woman. They've been doing this in Northern Ireland
since 1973.
Another part of the Bill removes the public's current statutory entitlement
to view the original registers (dating back to 1864) of births, deaths
and marriages in the various superintendent registrars' offices throughout
the country. If passed, this would have a major impact on those involved
in legal and probate work, property conveyance, and, of course, genealogists
and family historians working and living outside the Dublin area. It might
also have serious legal implications for public access to the microfilm
copies of these records held by the Church of Latter Day Saints' (Mormon)
international network of family history libraries. It certainly doesn't
bode well for the various county-based genealogical heritage centres,
many of which have obtained copies of their county's civil registers for
the 19th century and a good deal of the 20th. All of these centres have
been set up through funding made available from such sources as the European
Union and the International Fund for Ireland.
There is widespread concern among genealogists internationally about
the constantly deteriorating level of access to Ireland's civil records.
An on-line survey concerning this matter was conducted for CIGO by a Boston-based
genealogist. The resulting petition, containing comments and scathing
complaints from several thousand family historians spread throughout the
world, has been submitted to the Minister for Social, Family and Community
Affairs, Mr. Dermot Ahern T.D., whose department is taking over responsibility
for the civil registration system.
In May 2001 the Departments of Health & Children and of Social, Community
& Family Affairs jointly announced a month of public consultation
about the future of civil registration in Ireland. CIGO received no feedback
from the Departments on this matter, and no indication that legislation
to alter the civil registration system was imminent. The proposed legislation
currently before the Oireachtas was introduced as one of various "miscellaneous
provisions" discretely hidden in a Social Welfare Bill. This suggests
that the month of consultation last May was mere a cynical ploy to give
the public the illusion of having an input into the decision making.
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