Western Mail

Request for cancer centre judicial review dismissed

- ALEX SEABROOK Local democracy reporter alex.seabrook@reachplc.com

AJUDGE has thrown out a request for a judicial review into the new Velindre Cancer Centre in Cardiff.

Campaigner­s had asked the High Court to review the Welsh Government’s decision in March to approve the outline business case for the planned hospital.

They claimed there were several legal issues with that decision, including problems with the environmen­tal impact and arguments regarding the clinical model.

But on September 21 a judge dismissed the applicatio­n for a judicial review, and ordered the claimant and Save the Northern Meadows campaigner Catherine Lewis to pay £46,182.

In applying for the review, Ms Lewis said the Welsh Government failed to properly consider building the cancer centre at the University Hospital of Wales (UHW), and would be in breach of a legal duty to maintain and enhance biodiversi­ty by building at the Northern Meadows.

But the judge, Sir Ross Cranston, dismissed these claims, saying the Nuffield Trust report into Velindre, published last November, took into account a range of views on co-locating a new hospital at UHW, and said ecology was a planning matter and not part of the business case.

The judge ordered Ms Lewis to pay £10,328.50 in legal costs to the Welsh Government and £35,853.60 to Velindre University NHS Trust.

Ms Lewis, a cancer patient at Velindre, said these costs were excessive and claimed she felt bullied.

She said: “I am still unable to work to full capacity due to the debilitati­ng effects of cancer treatment and like many other self-employed people during these difficult times, I rely on working tax credit and assistance with housing costs. I feel like I am being bullied and intimidate­d by Velindre and the Welsh Government to drop the case, by scaring me with this ridiculous­ly high level of costs they are trying to claim from me, at this very early stage in the case.”

The judgment for fees to be paid was made by the court, not the Welsh Government or Velindre.

Her lawyers have now appealed against the refusal. Save the Northern Meadows had previously raised more than £23,000 through crowdfundi­ng to apply for the judicial review.

Enabling works to prepare the site for constructi­on are expected to begin in the next few weeks, with building work on the hospital itself scheduled to begin in March 2023. The new Velindre Cancer Centre is due to open in summer 2025.

Earlier this month a leaked letter revealed that an advisory board of cancer experts warned against building the new Velindre hospital at the Northern Meadows. The letter argued building a standalone site would be worse for patients and research compared to building the new hospital next to a large general hospital like UHW.

But the Nuffield report, a major inquiry held last year into the plans, said building at UHW could delay the new cancer hospital for several years, while the need for the new hospital is urgent.

A Welsh Government spokesman said: “We are unable to comment on ongoing cases.”

A Velindre spokesman said: “We are committed to delivering excellent non-surgical tertiary cancer services for the population of south-east Wales. It would be inappropri­ate to comment on a live legal case”.

 ?? ?? An artist’s impression of the new Velindre Cancer Centre in Whitchurch, Cardiff
An artist’s impression of the new Velindre Cancer Centre in Whitchurch, Cardiff

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