Kivaro wrote: » Speaking of subjects, the Kings and Princes of the oil-rich kingdoms in the Middle East must be looking at Ireland and wondering how our leaders were able to subjugate its subjects to such a level. Ireland, one of the most indebted country on planet earth, building the most expensive hospital on planet earth. Wonder if there is a correlation? I'm sure that the Kings of Saudia Arabia, UAE, and Kuwait will be sending their engineers over to examine our new hospital with the gold gilded corridors and fresco paintings by Banksy, because that is what they expect with the price that the subjects are paying for this grandiose building.
PhilOssophy wrote: » Because it isn't costing anybody involved money. It is costing people who lose out on services, but people on a project board like this don't care because, well, its tax payers money. We are a terrible country of protest - we protest about the wrong things. We should have been on the streets for this demanding answers and heads rolling. But instead, KPMG or whoever made a fortune on a report that nobody cares about. But we have a culture in the HSE where the hand is always out for more money, rather than looking at how it is spent in the first place. Until this mentality changes, we can't really expect anything other than a scandal like this.
AndrewJRenko wrote: » Sure lookit, don't let a lack of expertise hold you back in having all the solutions to all of life's little problems. Expertise isn't needed on boards.ie threads.
AndrewJRenko wrote: » Billion euro overspends would certainly never happen in the private sector, surely?https://www.fintechfutures.com/2019/03/fears-over-bank-of-ireland-e2bn-tech-revamp-cost/
Deleted User wrote: » Latest estimate was what, €2.4 billion. Around $2.88 billion. New World Trade Centre was $3.8 billion. But people will defend and hand-wave away.
Pete_Cavan wrote: Is there a link for the €2.4bn figure?
fvp4 wrote: » Why is BOI relevant?
Northernlily wrote: » We couldn't run a piss up in a brewery in this country. BOI operates very similar structurally to the public sector. Plenty of gombeens and yes men promoted way above their capability. Similar to the NCH the project was probably scoped and designed badly from the offset. On the bright side us consultants will continue to make hay of such wreckless squandering.
Northernlily wrote: » On the bright side us consultants will continue to make hay of such wreckless squandering.
PhilOssophy wrote: » I think that is the case. An entire industry has been made in consultants, etc just cleaning up due to the money waste across the public and semi-state sectors. Every time I hear of a "report" being prepared, I cringe at the reality that EY/Deloitte/KMPG/etc are absolutely making a fortune writing a report which nobody will read, which will hold nobody accountable, but the tax payer will pony up the cash for the report as well as for the fk up which resulted in the report being written in the first place.
fvp4 wrote: » This is basically an attempt to shut down all discussion. People don't have to be experts to know when something has gone tits up. If an upgrade to my phone blocks my phone, I don't have to be a mobile phone guru to know that something has gone wrong. If a bridge collapses in a stiff breeze I don't have to be a structural engineer to know that the bridge was designed badly. If a pilot flies into a mountain I don't have to be a pilot or a aerospace engineer to suggest something has gone wrong. This appeal to undeserved authority is a logical fallacy.
PhilOssophy wrote: » No way. We have had plenty of experiences to learn from. We've had any amount of over-ran projects which we could have learned from. We didn't.
PhilOssophy wrote: » The cost overrun is nothing to do with brain surgery drilling techniques. Its to do with the scope of the project changing post-tender and BAM having the government by the balls at that stage and screwing them for every penny they could (and they have form in this regard).
PhilOssophy wrote: » Also - we're not just bar stool experts. PWC (at no doubt exorbitant cost) did a report into it.https://www.merrionstreet.ie/en/news-room/releases/government_publishes_pwc_independent_review_of_escalation_in_national_children_hospital_costs.htmlhttps://merrionstreet.ie/merrionstreet/en/news-room/releases/20190409_nch_report.pdf
AndrewJRenko wrote: » Just like every other country and every other sector. This isn't a 'typical Ireland' issue. You know how design/build projects work, right? You know that it is not possible to complete the design to sufficient detail to get a fixed price before tender? That's the nature of design/build contracts, the procurement method used for major projects like this all over the world. Sure, I'd give the PWC report some credence. I'd give 99% of the posts I've seen on this thread very little credence.
AndrewJRenko wrote: » What's the connection between the James site and the escalating costs?
PhilOssophy wrote: » Because putting a hospital where only people can drive to on one of the most congested road networks in Europe would be absolute madness. At least here, it is linked to every major transport hub by a tram (1 stop from a train station serving well over 1/2 the country), people have options to get there and it is located with relatively high-density population, co-located beside a teaching hospital. The only discussion should have been whether it should have been beside whatever replaces Holles Street, not putting it on the M50.
AndrewJRenko wrote: » Gotta love the 'Typical Ireland' moaning which ignores the reality of the world. Substantial project overruns are not unusual outside of Ireland or outside of government.https://hbr.org/2011/09/why-your-it-project-may-be-riskier-than-you-thinkhttps://insuranceoctopus.co.uk/business-insurance-blog/building-projects-that-have-gone-over-budget/https://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/politics/coronavirus-test-trace-dido-harding-report-b1814714.htmlhttps://www.consultancy.uk/news/18243/lidl-cancels-sap-introduction-having-sunk-500-million-into-ithttps://economictimes.indiatimes.com/news/economy/infrastructure/462-infrastructure-projects-show-cost-overruns-worth-rs-4-36-lakh-crore/articleshow/82351970.cms This kind of stuff happens all over the world, public and private.
PhilOssophy wrote: » Who brings their sick child to hospital on public transport? I dunno, maybe somebody with a child who can travel on public transport, who might need to be able to move around over the 2-3 hours, who likes to leave their house and know that and know they'd be at their appointment on time rather than leaving 2 hours earlier and and playing M7/M50 roulette as to whether they are sitting back to Naas or Lucan? Not saying everybody would do it, or is in a position to do it, but the very least people deserve is the option to do it. Also - there are people who don't have a car, don't like driving, etc - are you seriously saying that these didn't need to be considered?
PhilOssophy wrote: » jmayo, I think we are such a distance apart there's no point arguing. If you think having a hospital located adjacent to a train station which serves a significant portion of the population of the country, as well as linked by a tram to the 2 other major transport hubs, as well as located within the capital city is a bad idea, I wish you a good day.
salmocab wrote: » To be fair he doesn’t think it’s a bad idea because of those reasons.
PhilOssophy wrote: » I stopped reading in detail when I read "rural Mayo" and scanned through the rest of the rambling, ranting nonsense. I think you'll also find that I never said anybody with kids will bring their kids by public transport. What I said is that people deserve the option and an alternative. And having had a family member who was dragging a kid out of bed at 5am and spending lots of time on our motorway network driving a kid to Crumlin, I know their attitude was "if only there was a train service to this place, where I could consider if I could take a train". Also - there are parents of children who don't have a car with kids with these conditions. They deserve access to this hospital as well.