Hellotonever wrote: » BUT THINK OF THE CHILDREN! How can a children's hospital for the welfare of our kids possibly be a scam? We need the best and most expensive care in the world! Yes more expensive than every palace! And more expensive than the pentagon! Dont worry the taxpayer will foot it! But lets be real here. Its a scam. There is no way to justify paying so much for a three storey hospital. Its not even that specialized. There are more specialized hospitals that have been renovated multiple times and the cost never went past 1.5 billion! Its corruption at its finest. BAM and certain party members are 100% laughing all the way to the bank. They're doing this in front of you, the taxpayer and your instinctual reaction is probably to defend this right? After all how can it be a scam if its legal? Right? Pal pick up the phone. 2008 is calling.
AndrewJRenko wrote: » Which party members were involved - the party in power at the time the decision to go ahead was made? Or the party in power at the time the site was chosen? Or the party in power at the time the contract was awarded? Or the party in power at the time the decision was made to take BAM to the High Court? How do you reckon that the corrupt party members managed to get dozens of officials to go along with the scam? How did they make sure that no other builder submitted a slightly lower tender?
ExMachina1000 wrote: » From experience with tenders I can tell you that it's not uncommon for one party to be given the details of the other tenders as they come in. All done as a favour of course with a reward if the contract is awarded. That's common enough. Not saying that's what happened here obviously but it definitely goes on. Cronyism built this country my friend.
Eric Cartman wrote: » I don't think the hospital itself is a scam, but its location definitely is. In years to come there will almost certainly be a tribunal that will expose that somebody strongarmed that decision for their own gain and that the children in need of a hospital will have to suffer because it isn't correctly placed beside the M50 where it should always have been.
political analyst wrote: » Isn't it the location the hospital consultants wanted? The project wouldn't have started if they had not been kept on board. By the way, ambulances go through busy junctions all the time. I'm sure the paramedics can keep the child's condition stable until they get to the hospital.
AndrewJRenko wrote: » How much experience do you have with public sector tendering? It's fairly trivial to prevent this by not submitting your tender until the last minute. Afaik, the eTenders system works on a lockbox basis, so no details of any submitted tenders can be viewed until the expiry date has passed. This isn't their first rodeo.
smellyoldboot wrote: » The Dublin Children's Hospital. Give it 10 years we'll be building another so that anyone non Dublin based can actually reach the bloody thing in less than 4 hours.
Snotty wrote: » I cannot tell you the anxiety I feel driving my daughter to Crumlin childrens hospital , getting into the city, fighting traffic, getting parked was truly painful, it was an unneeded worry when we had larger things to worry about, the new hospital will be worse.
Fuascailteoir wrote: » It isin't just ambulances though. It is children that need to be driven to appointments. Getting across can be a nightmare
Niner leprauchan wrote: » Its central for a reason. No person needs to travel the entire lenght of the county and the closer to the city, the higher the population density. Possible smaller centres dotted around the outskirts could have worked but that wasnt on the table. Its 3km from the red cow junction. where exactly would you like it placed?
bigroad wrote: » I worked with this building company before and I will say two things about them ,they are handy at getting government contracts and they are the greatest shower of scumbags I have ever m.. ...
Nekarsulm wrote: » Apart from the location, and the limitations caused by the site, the biggest problem is that it won't increase bed capacity in the slightest. 380 beds in individual rooms and 93 day beds. So about 485 bed spaces, about the same number as will be closed in Crumlin, Temple Street and the Childrens Unit in Tallagh.