Otago Daily Times

Project savings, design and floor plans related

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YOUR frontpage story (ODT 29.5.23) advises that redesign of the inpatients block of the new Dunedin hospital will not be finished until September 2024. It also reported concern that the gross floor area is not yet available. These two facts are of course related: the final floor area will be settled when design is further advanced.

However, an interim estimate of gross floor area is to hand, totalling just over 91,000sq m. This includes the outpatient building, the inpatient building, the dairy building, the Bow Lane farm of emergency generators and similar equipment, and the bridge over St Andrew St.

By comparison, the equivalent area in the detailed business case of March 2021 is fractional­ly under 91,000sq m. For practical purposes the two areas are therefore identical.

There are two main difference­s in the allocation of area between the detailed business case and the new design.

One is that the dairy building of about 2100sq m will now accommodat­e some of the collaborat­ive workspace that was originally housed in the inpatient building. The other is that some of the functions of the now discontinu­ed ancillary building in Bow Lane have been relocated into the inpatients building.

Savings have come predominan­tly from nonclinica­l design efficienci­es, which have been detailed publicly on several occasions. There is a time delay of about 10 months.

Pete Hodgson Chairman, Local Advisory

Committee

Financial management

TWO words can describe the management of Otago University: incompeten­t and arrogant.

The chief financial officer is quoted as saying “… the decision was made that we would not include this detail (the $37.4 million funding hole and $25 million savings target in the budget document) while we worked through how the $25 million in savings would be achieved.” (ODT 25.5.23)

Some detail: says it all really. A university is its people. Treating them as dispensabl­e can only lead to decline. The time to consult the people is when the problem is identified; then they can be involved in exploring the components of the problem and actions towards a solution. Why does the university find this so hard?

John Chetwin Kakanui

Election issues

AS we enter the election campaign, the rhetoric of the opposition parties continues to be toxic negativity. MP Erica Stanford stated after the Kantar poll (26.5.23) that ‘‘people want an aspiration­al government and are sick of being told what to do’’ and took aim at the campaign by Consumer NZ, Warmer Kiwi Homes and the Electricit­y Authority to provide easy tips to help people keep their homes warm and healthy this winter and save money.

Mrs Stanford, I can assure you, I haven’t been told what to do by this government. I have been aware of advice on all sorts of things but I consider that is their job. Mrs

Stanford seems unaware that the National government ran a similar campaign in 2009 when Energy and Resources Minister Gerry Brownlee announced a highprofil­e TV campaign to increase energy efficiency in people’s homes.

We have had a very aspiration­al government over the last two terms and I hope they can continue their work. As for David Seymour’s ridiculous comment that ‘‘we can end Labour’s reign of woke terror’’ I wonder what planet he is on.

Lou Scott Kenmure [Abridged] ...................................

BIBLE READING: Dear children; keep yourselves from idols. — 1 John 5:21.

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