The £804.5m hospital at Overdale is officially off the table because the island can no longer afford it, the Infrastructure Minister has said.
The Government has said that the project as previously envisaged, and given planning permission for, is no longer viable and will not be built.
The key features of the Our Hospital Project was to create a ‘health campus’ at Overdale, including a large 64,705m2 five-storey main block, two-storey Knowledge Centre, single-storey Mental Health Centre and five-level multi-storey carpark.
Last year, the States Assembly agreed borrowing of up to £756m to fund the £804.5m project.
But that plan has been officially scrapped, although what smaller and cheaper alternative will replace it has not yet been determined.
The Government has, however, already instructed Andium Homes to halt work on developing around 100 homes on Kensington Place, behind the current Gloucester Street site, and will be imminently taking ownership of it.
Pictured: The Government has given an official instruction to Andium Homes to stop development at Kensington Place to save the land for the potential expansion of the current Gloucester Street hospital site.
The news that the former Our Hospital Project has been shelved was made by Infrastructure Minister Tom Binet, who is leading a review to determine what hospital Jersey can now afford.
“The foundation of this review is that, as an island, we can no longer afford an £804.5m hospital. No one is at fault; it is simply down to global events.
“There was, perhaps, some slightly optimistic thinking on the funding mechanism that was put in place by the last government.
“The last project could never have been fixed at £804.5m, simply because no contractor – when you have 10% or 11% inflation – is going to sign up to pick up those costs. You are in an open-ended situation.
Pictured: The Infrastructure Minister said the £805m approved Overdale plan - for which land in the area has already been purchased - was too expensive and could not go ahead.
“The funding mechanism is broken. Having met with the finance team last week, it was plain that the last scheme relied on the Strategic Reserve achieving a 4.5% interest rate, averaged out over 40 years, and borrowing costs of 2%.
“A lot of people thought that was ambitious at the time and, in short order, it has been proved to be completely out of the picture.
“The facts are the Strategic Reserve may even lose a bit of money this year. If you lose half of one per cent, instead of making 4.5%, that is a big difference. And borrowing costs are up at least one percent, and possibly increasing by another half a percent on top of that."
He added: “It doesn’t take a genius to realise that to embark on the scheme, as passed, would be an act of folly.”
Today, the Government announced the “scope and process” behind Deputy Binet’s review.
They also revealed that negotiations were taking place to cancel the contract between site owner Andium Homes and developer Dandara to build 106 flats in Kensington Place where the now demolished Stafford and Revere hotels once stood.
This would allow the next-door current hospital to expand into the site, should the review support an extension of the Gloucester Street hospital there.
The Government said the review will:
Assess the affordability of the current project,
Consider the state of the existing hospital and associated heath and care facilities,
Consider measures currently being undertaken to improve and transform Jersey’s health service during this period,
Examine various options from “a scope, operational efficiency, cost, programme, and local economic impacts perspective, including, but not limited to all existing sites, which include Overdale site; Gloucester Street site, including adjacent sites, such as Kensington Place; opportunities for a longer-term phased development at Overdale or Gloucester Street; and the opportunity to use secondary sites to complement the delivery of health and care from a primary hospital location.”
Joining Deputy Binet on his review team is Health Minister Karen Wilson and Assistant Health Minister Rose Binet.
They will be supported by an as-yet-unnamed ‘Principal Expert Adviser’ who has “extensive experience of large-scale capital projects in health and care”.
The previous Our Hospital Interim Project Director, Richard Bannister, has now left the project, having always agreed to work until planning permission was granted.
His deputy, Jessica Hardwick, is now Acting Project Director. Ms Hardwick, who was previously a Client Project Manager in the Infrastructure Department, has worked for the Government for more than a decade.
Operational advice will be provided by Associate Managing Director of Health and Community Services, Michelle West.
Follow Express for updates...
New Infrastructure Minister sets out concerns over new hospital
FOCUS: The big questions about the future of 'Our Hospital'
TIMELINE: A decade of (in)decision
FOCUS: Third time lucky! Why the hospital got over the line this time
£800m hospital at Overdale is approved
FOCUS: Why Planning is saying NO to the £800m hospital
Gov delays borrowing for new hospital
Supporters and opponents respond to hospital green light
Grins, groans and GIFs... Social media reacts to the hospital decision
FOCUS: 10 years since we agreed a 'New Way Forward' for Health... What happened?
Comments
Comments on this story express the views of the commentator only, not Bailiwick Publishing. We are unable to guarantee the accuracy of any of those comments.