Enable Ireland

Enable Ireland is a non-profit state-funded organisation that provides free services to children and adults with disabilities and their families in Ireland. The core of its funding comes from the HSE, the Republic of Ireland's public health sector.[1]

Enable Ireland
The current logo, in use since 2015
FormationJuly 14, 1951 (1951-07-14)
FounderDr. Robert Collis
TypeCharitable organisation
Legal statusNon-profit
PurposeTo work in partnership with people with disabilities to achieve "independence, choice and inclusion in their communities."
Location
Region served
Ireland
Parent organization
Health Service Executive
National Youth Council of Ireland
WebsiteOfficial Site

Background

Enable Ireland was founded in 1948 originally as Cerebral Palsy Ireland. Its founder, Dr Robert Collis, used a £100 donation from the Marrowbone Fund to establish an assessment clinic for children with disabilities. Initially, assessment and treatment services were provided on a voluntary basis.

The National Association of Cerebral Palsy was then established in 1951 and worked in conjunction with the Irish government, mostly through County Councils, Regional Health Boards and the Department of Education, in order to provide a range of services for children with physical disabilities and their families. In the 1980s a branch network was created by families throughout Ireland to meet the need for assessment and treatment. These volunteers carried out roles as advocates and fundraisers which contributed to the growth of Enable Ireland and its notability.

By the 1980s, Enable Ireland had also established an innovative fundraising strategy. A retail chain was founded to supplement the running costs and build a capital fund to boost State provisions. The profits generated have enhanced Enable Ireland's capacity to work in partnership with the State in the expansion of services and facilities.[2]

Guinness world record

A new world record in the Guinness Book of Records was broken in Nenagh in County Tipperary on the 18 December 2011 when 936 people gathered dressed as elves.

The record it originally broke was set in New York City on the 7 December 2009, when just over 600 elves gathered in one place.

The event was organised by the local council and was aimed at raising over 40,000 euros for Enable Ireland.[3]

gollark: As weird as it is, potatOS is actually some of the most battle-tested CC sandboxing stuff.
gollark: `pcall(getfenv)` triggered an optimization or something which made it return the wrong environment, so I had to hackily bodge around that in PotatoBIOS.
gollark: Another one was when websockets were shared incorrectly due to some really stupid code, leading to... issues with websocket events again.
gollark: Honestly I should probably just have some sort of message passing approach to this.
gollark: Oh, another one was PS#2DAA86DC. That was when you could run a privileged function in a coroutine and... also feed it fake events.

See also

References

  1. "Frequently Asked Questions". Enable Ireland. Retrieved 2012-02-10.
  2. "About Enable Ireland". Enable Ireland. Retrieved 2012-02-10.
  3. "Nenagh elves enter Guinness Book of Records". RTÉ News. 2011-12-18. Retrieved 2012-02-10.


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