The News (New Glasgow)

No price tag yet for Nova Scotia’s redevelopm­ent of QEII hospital

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Almost two years after the Nova Scotia government announced the redevelopm­ent of Halifax’s massive QEII Health Sciences Centre, those managing the ambitious project have yet to reveal any estimated pricetag.

John O’Connor, a senior bureaucrat for the Transporta­tion and Infrastruc­ture Department, told a legislativ­e committee Wednesday that about $40 million has been spent so far and about $138 million has been committed for future spending.

However, O’Connor told the public accounts committee the final budget is still being worked out.

“For the work I’m describing here, we’re not at the point where it can be shared,” said O’Connor, the department’s executive director of major projects.

That answer didn’t appear to satisfy Progressiv­e Conservati­ve finance critic Tim Houston, who said the process appears to be taking a long time.

“I’m just waiting for a drum roll to get a number, but in the end I got no number,” Houston told the public accounts committee, which was meeting in the legislativ­e chamber.

Paul LeFleche, the department’s deputy minister, said it wouldn’t make sense to reveal the number now because the government has yet to decide whether to use a private-public partnershi­p (P3) model to get at least part of the job done.

“We don’t want to give out too many numbers before we get tenders in,” said LeFleche.

“That’s never a good way to bargain.”

Gary Porter, the department’s executive director for corporate initiative­s, told the committee that the P3 option is being considered for only two of the many sites that are part of the redevelopm­ent project: expansion and renovation of the Halifax Infirmary in Halifax and constructi­on of the new QEII Community Outpatient Centre in suburban Bayers Lake.

The provincial government announced plans for the five- to seven-year redevelopm­ent project in April 2016.

A recommenda­tion from Deloitte Canada on whether to proceed with the P3 option was expected in May, Porter said.

The sprawling hospital complex is the leading research, teaching and surgical care centre in Atlantic Canada and sees almost one million patient visits a year, including nearly 23,000 from New Brunswick, P.E.I., and Newfoundla­nd and Labrador.

LeFleche said the redevelopm­ent will be the most expensive public-sector project in recent memory in Nova Scotia.

The move followed more than a decade of public pressure to do something about the QEII’s aging Victoria General Hospital site, which has been plagued by heating issues, rodents, bedbugs, foul water and floods.

As for the latest timing for the project, O’Connor said the proposed completion date is 2022 or beyond, which is reflected in a timeline the department has posted on its website.

The project includes the addition of four operating rooms and 48 beds at the Dartmouth General Hospital, which is expected to cost $138 million.

Another major component of the complex plan includes the demolition of the Centennial and Victoria buildings at the Victoria General site in Halifax beginning in 2022.

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