No Financial Irregularities Found At Clare 250 Cancer Centre

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Photo (c) Clare 250 Cancer Centre

An extensive ten month inquiry by the compliance and enforcement unit of the Irish Charities Regulator has found no issues or irregularities with the accounts of the Clare 250 Cancer Centre.

The inquiry, which was facilitated by the charity’s management and trustees after what the charity describes as sustained online and media criticism last September, was formally completed on July 8th.

 

Funded by private donations and proceeds from the Clare 250 mile cycle, the Cancer Centre At Ballygriffey was developed to promote the physical and mental wellbeing of cancer patients from all over the county.

An estimated €4.8 million has been raised through fundraising since 1980 and the charity says that up to 1994, the proceeds were allocated to a wide range of recipients including the Clare Youth Pilgrimage, Clare Scouts and the Mental Health Association.

In a statement to Clare FM, the charity says most of the money raised since then has gone towards site acquisition and construction costs associated with the Cancer Centre, and a church at Ballygriffey.

An additional €1.3 million was spent on bringing 1,873 cancer patients and helpers on the annual Clare 250 pilgrimage to Lourdes.

Following completion of the inquiry, additional controls have been introduced relating to the segregation of duties to ensure that purchases are approved and authorised by separate members of the management team.

The trustees have also set expenditure approval limits for both the Centre Manager and individual trustees,

Separately, the management and trustees are to agree a future direction and succession strategy for the Centre and its assets which will be revised at regular intervals.

Clare 250 Cancer Centre founder, John Dunne said “The past few months have been extraordinarily difficult for everyone associated with the Centre and the conclusion of the Charities Regulator inquiry has come as an enormous relief. It has taken a huge personal toll on the management and trustees as well as ending all our fund-raising activities.

“Because we are dealing with people who are immunocompromised, the Covid lockdowns in 2020 and 2021 had a more severe effect on our activities than those of other organisations. This not only put our activities on hold for a sustained period but also had severe consequences for our finances,” Mr Dunne explained.

“However badly effected we were by the lockdowns, we were absolutely devastated by uninformed and unfair criticism of the cancer centre which not only undermined our work but called our honesty, integrity and motives into question,” he declared.

The Clare 250 Cancer Centre’s audited and approved accounts to the end of 2022 can be
accessed on the Regulator’s website, charities regulator.ie and includes abridged accounts to the end of 2022 which were approved by the Board of Trustees on September 23 of last year.

The charity is also registered with the Companies Registration Office (CRO), with its full annual returns and governing documents accessible on the CRO.ie website.