Fianna
Fáil leader, Micheál Martin, said the project was estimated at €650m in
2016. But last September it was put at over
€1bn before rising to over €1.7bn at the end of the year.
Mr
Martin said this amounted to almost a tripling of costs in little over two
years. He also noted that no extra beds,
beyond the planned 473 beds, will be provided while a similar project in Sweden
costing over €2bn had provided 1,340 beds.
But
the Taoiseach, Leo Varadkar, has defended the cost over-runs and said the
hospital will serve Irish children for the coming century.
RUNAWAY
building costs for the children’s hospital project – currently running at
€1.7bn – must be probed by a parliamentary inquiry with powers to compel
witnesses to give evidence, the Dáil has been told.
“Not
an additional bed will be provided despite that extraordinary cost increase,”
Mr Martin said.
The
Fianna Fáil leader said the issue should be examined by a public inquiry where
witnesses would be obliged to appear and explain the details. He believed a Dáil committee would be the
best way of doing this.
The
Taoiseach said the costs were being examined by the accountancy firm, PWC, on
behalf of the Health Department and a report would be provided in a few months’
time.
Mr
Varadkar said no single item drove up costs but some of the factors included
provision of two satellite services in Connolly and Tallaght services, VAT,
increased construction costs and other factors, including making the hospital
fully digital for the modern age.
No comments:
Post a Comment