Waikato Times

Health board denies Ardern sewage claim

- Nick Truebridge, Local Democracy Reporter

Public health officials are denying Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern’s claim that human waste breached the walls of south Auckland’s Middlemore Hospital.

But the prime minister is refusing to back down, with her office yesterday issuing a statement saying the comment is in line with remarks by Counties Manukau District Health Board’s former acting chief executive.

Ardern, while delivering her first statement of the parliament­ary year, referred to ‘‘sewage down walls’’, in what appeared to be a reference to widelypubl­icised issues with Middlemore Hospital’s buildings.

CMDHB, which in 2019 said such claims were untrue, has now responded to the prime minister’s statement.

‘‘Despite the language used around sewage

dramatic previously issues at

Middlemore Hospital, the sewage leaks were small,’’ a spokeswoma­n said.

She confirmed one incident in the Scott Building, in November 2017, but said it was the result of a cracked sewer pipe joiner.

Pipe joinery also required replacemen­t in one of Middlemore’s retail areas in October 2017.

However, there was ‘‘no sewage spilling into the building’’ and leaks were ‘‘immediatel­y repaired’’, CMDHB’s spokeswoma­n said.

On Tuesday, Ardern’s office said her comments originated from CMDHB itself, pointing to a March 2018 Radio NZ interview with former acting chief executive Dr Gloria Johnson.

Johnson said in that interview the DHB ‘‘certainly had problems’’ with sewage leaking at the Scott building. ‘‘And that is another problem that we think a number of buildings could have and certainly not confined to our hospital either,’’ she said.

‘‘We discovered that there was some sewage leaking in that building, gosh I think it was a couple of years ago now, and there was certainly some publicity around that at the time.’’

However, CMDHB subsequent­ly issued a media statement that it was incorrect to say there was ‘‘sewage leaking down walls’’ at Middlemore.

‘‘The occasional plumbing leak is not uncommon in any building, particular­ly a hospital where we have a high-density requiremen­t for ensuite facilities,’’ it said. ‘‘Some of these leaks are the result of materials being put down our waste system that should not be, leading to blockages.’’

In 2018, the Government announced an $80 million funding boost for CMDHB so the health board could fix its deteriorat­ing buildings.

The DHB this week said remediatio­n work on buildings with weather tightness issues was ongoing.

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