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The Soap Box: Nats brazen after Ministry refit blunder

Author
Barry Soper ,
Publish Date
Wed, 9 Mar 2016, 7:27am
Minister of Health Jonathan Coleman (Getty Images)
Minister of Health Jonathan Coleman (Getty Images)

The Soap Box: Nats brazen after Ministry refit blunder

Author
Barry Soper ,
Publish Date
Wed, 9 Mar 2016, 7:27am

The Beehive boys were caught with their pants down but rather than modestly covering themselves up they instead boldly brown eyed their opponents.

It would have been easy to save face, to be a little contrite, because the main players in the Health Ministry's "serious financial mismanagement," so described by Treasury, had already rolled their own heads.

The lispy Tony Ryall, a former bean counter, was the Health Minister when papers went before his Cabinet colleagues to sign off a twenty four million dollar refit for its Wellington headquarters, with an assurance there was enough money in the cash reserves to cover it.

The Director General who supplied the papers to his minister resigned the following year and his unfortunate successor Chai Chuah was appointed to the job after the election and when the refurbishment was well underway.

Yeah well, the cash reserves were eighteen million dollars short which will now be extracted from the Ministry by the building's owners, tacking it on to the rent of its swanky new offices over the next 15 years.

It was gold for Labour who'd pored through the mine of papers after getting them using the Official Information Act.

Securing a snap debate in Parliament's bear pit, a grizzly Andrew Little waved his paws at the "disgraceful" Government, accusing them of being asleep at the wheel, showing their arrogance after eight years in office and refusing to accept responsibility for anything that doesn't go their way.

With Ryall enjoying retirement, his successor Jonathan Coleman was put up as the fall guy but refused to go down for the count, instead insisting to Labour that if this is the biggest issue they can come up with then they're in real trouble. Rather than addressing the issue though, he banged on about the abysmal Labour record on health, painting the Nats as the Mother Teresas tending to the sick. He should have been shut down by the chair.

But the good doctor did eventually tell them his Ministry had made a mistake, declaring the current Director General Chai Chuah's taken responsibility for it, and has assured him it won't happy again.

Of course it's hardly the current DG's responsibility, given he wasn't around at the time.

On this one the buck will stop, not at any minister's desk where it belongs, but in the building owner's bank account.

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