Warning over cash for
hospital
By - Elaine Keogh.
Minister for Foreign Affairs Dermot Ahern has said "there
is not a red cent in the exchequer" to pay for the
proposed new regional hospital in Navan, provoking bitter
reactions from opposition politicians in the
northeast.
He was responding to news that consultants have
recommended to the HSE that Navan rather than Drogheda
would be the preferred site for the new regional
hospital.
It had been anticipated that a site in Co. Louth, where
the Minister is a TD, in particular Ardee or Drogheda,
would be selected.
The report by consultancy firm Health Partnership will be
considered by the board of the HSE and the Cabinet before
the project can move to the next stage.
Speaking on the Michael Reade programme on local radio
station LMFM yesterday, Mr. Ahern said he did not believe
there was any likelihood of the hospital being built "in
the foreseeable future".
"This is a report which will be . . . for some time on
some shelf because there isn't a red cent in the
exchequer for this new hospital and that's the reality",
he said.
"I have said this over the last while to [chief executive
of the HSE Prof.] Brendan Drumm and [other] people", he
said, adding, "in effect there is no money for it, nor is
there any likelihood of money for it in the foreseeable
future, particularly in the context of the economic
situation and the exchequer situation".
The location chosen for the hospital is in the Meath
constituency of Mr. Ahern's Cabinet colleague, Noel
Dempsey. Mr. Dempsey could not be contacted for
comment.
But Mr. Ahern's remarks drew a heated response from other
TDs in the region with Meath deputy Shane McEntee (FG)
saying: "I was taken aback at the comment of Minister
Dermot Ahern that there is no money to develop the
hospital. His comment was a real slap in the face for the
people of the northeast and to me sounds like sour grapes
on his part".
The Minister's comments were called "a complete
bombshell", and "bigger than Bertie's resignation", by
Louth TD Arthur Morgan (SF).
The decision to choose Navan over Drogheda was described
as flawed by Louth Fine Gael TD Fergus O'Dowd.
He said he believed the decision-making process "did not
give any weighting to staff in its determination. When
they put Navan and Drogheda up against each other, the
value given to 1,500 people who work in the hospital was
significantly reduced".
Speaking in Cork last night, Prof. Drumm said he hadn't
yet seen the report recommending Navan as he was out of
Dublin.
"In fact the only firm information I have is what I've
heard on the radio so if that's the case, 'not a red
cent', well how many hospitals in Ireland have ever been
proposed [for] which there has been money up front?"
"The more important thing is that we have to do something
about the situation in the northeast which has bedevilled
Irish healthcare for 40 years where we're providing care
over five sites totally inappropriately, where there's a
significant risk in doing that", he said.
"The people of the northeast deserve a better service",
he added.
© The Irish Times, 5th. April 2008.