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Delivery of new National Children's Hospital 'at the point of no return', Harris says

Minister for Finance Donohoe, told Morning Ireland that the escalating costs of the children’s hospital should have been known earlier.

LAST UPDATE | 4 Feb 2019

MINISTER FOR HEALTH Simon Harris has said he is “very confident that we are now at the point of no return” in the delivery of the new National Children’s Hospital. 

Harris has come under fire in recent weeks after it emerged that the final project cost of the project is now €1.433 billion.

Speaking to RTÉ’s Six One News earlier this evening, Harris said that the project has been promised by politicians for many years, but that it has not been delivered. 

“I think the real scandal here would be if a Minister for Health recommended not proceeding with a hospital that has been promised in this country for decades and has not been delivered,” Harris said. 

He said that it is the job of a minister to put people in place who have professional skills to deliver a project. He added that it is a minister’s job to make tough decisions when challenges emerge. 

“The decision to proceed with this project was a tough one because of the scale of the cost, but I have no doubt that the only decision I would have regretted was if I didn’t proceed with it,” Harris said. 

I’m very confident that we are now at a point of no return in terms of actually delivering a project which has been much promised by politicians of all political hues for many, many years. 

Harris added that “the day this hospital opens, there’ll be politicians tripping over themselves to actually try to get to the opening because once this hospital opens everyone will want to have been a part of it”. 

Accountability

Yesterday, Taoiseach Leo Varadkar confirmed that the terms of reference into the inquiry of significant cost overruns in the construction of the National Children’s Hospital will be revised to ensure individuals can be held accountable. 

Speaking on RTÉ’s This Week, Varadkar said the review by consultancy firm PwC will be able to identify people who made particular mistakes which may have led to overruns in the projected costs of the hospital. 

Harris told RTÉ’s Today with Sean O’Rourke that the government had always intended on holding individuals accountable.

PwC can’t be sanctioning individuals, that’s not their job. Their job would be to identify the weaknesses. Then it will be for myself and the government to take actions in terms of sanctions if they’re required.

Harris added that there can be no assumption that all the costs could have been avoidable and that while the PwC inquiry would look to reduce costs, he would not allow for the project to be stalled. 

view-from-north-east NCH NCH

‘Should have been done differently’ 

Also speaking today, Minister for Finance Paschal Donohoe, told RTÉ Radio One’s Morning Ireland that the escalating costs of the children’s hospital should have been known earlier. 

Donohoe said that the awareness of rising costs had started to build before November but that he was not made aware of it until then despite an official from his department being on the board.

“I was not informed of the development of the issue, I do have an official on the board and that official was bound by the responsibilities that he has to the board.

Yes, things should have been done differently in relation to the flow of information. But ultimately if we do not go ahead this project, even at the higher cost, we are not going to deliver a transformative project for the health of young children in our country. 

Last week the Oireachtas Public Accounts Committee heard the total cost of the project is “highly unlikely” to come in under €2 billion

This was followed by the resignation of the chairperson of the board overseeing the development, Tom Costello

Harris told Sean O’Rourke that he did not encourage Costello to resign but that he believed it was “inevitable” that the chair of the board would step down. 

O’Donohoe said that confidence in the rest of the board will be determined when the government receives Pwc’s review. 

“I know all of the individuals who are on the board. I am sure they took their responsibility very seriously and I know that they would have been aware of the national importance of this project. 

O’Donohoe added that the review underway by PwC would yield learnings for them “regarding the nature of the governance we had there”.

Location, location, location

O’Donohoe then rejected a call from Fianna Fáil spokesperson on Health, Stephen Donnelly, for PwC’s review to look at the feasibility of moving the development to another location. 

“I think it would be useful, based on the fact that a lot of parents have raised the issue and pediatric clinicians have raised the issue for PwC to include it,” Donnelly told Morning Ireland. 

If PWC were to come back and say, ‘look at this stage it wouldn’t save any money but it could add ten years’, well then clearly we shouldn’t do it.

Rejecting the calls, O’Donohoe said that because of the progress at the St James’ site, relocation is not possible.

“Otherwise, we’re facing years of delays. I believe the location is right. It was the subject of many clinical reviews,” he said. 

With reporting by Hayley Halpin

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