Dundalk IT are reportedly set to change their policy in relation to the appointment of the college chaplain by tendering for the role for the first time ever.
Their decision comes after a local atheist applied for the position in the college after being ordained as a minister within a non-Christian church back in May.
Castleblayney man John Hamill hit out at Dundalk IT earlier this year for spending €30,000 of state funds towards the provision of a Catholic chaplaincy service and €1,200 a year to a similar Presbyterian role.
He claimed that the payment breaches Article 44.2.2 of the Irish Constitution, which says that “the State guarantees not to endow any religion,” thus prohibiting the funding of a specific church using public funds.
Hamill insisted that no decision was ever recorded by the college’s board to make these annual payments and that no tender was issued or process followed to allow other religious or secular bodies to offer pastoral services to students.
Hamill said this was “nakedly sectarian as the role is not advertised and no other Churches or secular bodies are invited to participate.”
In response he applied for the role as an Ordained Minister in the Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster. He did so “such that any attempt to award the role to a Catholic Bishop without tender, would be discriminating against me on a sectarian basis.”
Having applied for the chaplain’s position, the college responded to him this week suggesting they would change their policy to tender for the role for the first time.
Their letter, signed by Dundalk IT president Denis Cummins last Friday, read: “We are currently considering the type of Chaplaincy Service that we will, in future, provide at the Institute. The tender documents etc. will be issued following this exercise.”
Fr Paddy Rushe has been the Dundalk IT chaplain in recent years with Reverend Stanley Millen making himself available to Presbyterian students when required.




