Firm pulls out of Belfast children's hospital project
One of the joint partners in the construction of a new children's hospital within Belfast's Royal Victoria Hospital (RVH) has withdrawn from the project.
The move comes just six weeks after the multi-million pound hospital project was given the go-ahead by the Northern Ireland Executive.
BAM Ireland said it had made a "commercial decision" not to proceed with its partnership with County Down-based construction firm Graham Construction.
A BAM spokesperson said: "Graham will now proceed with the customer, and BAM's decision will not impact the delivery of the hospital."
At Thursday's health committee meeting in response to a question by Diane Dodds MLA about changes in the contractual situation around the children's hospital, the Health Minister Mike Nesbitt confirmed the contract for the hospital was with Graham Construction Limited.
Dodds had been questioning officials about who would be liable for repairs for several building issues within the Belfast Trust and whether this would impact on future capital projects.
Phillip McClay from the Department of Health said BAM "withdrew at a late stage in the discussions" and they have asked for the reasons, but it was his understanding that BAM's withdrawal was by "amicable agreement".
He told the committee that the joint venture partner Graham Construction Limited had their financial and resources capability assessed and it was awarded the contract.
"We are satisfied that they have the wherewithal and the ability to construct the children's hospital," he said.
The partnership, Graham BAM Healthcare Partnership (GBHP), has been behind some of the largest projects in the Belfast Health Trust area and said it will continue to consider future joint ventures.
GBHP is behind the new Belfast Maternity Hospital, which remains unopened, with costs estimated to have risen from £57m to around £100m, following a series of building problems and dangerous bacterial outbreaks.
It is also behind the Acute Mental Health facility at Belfast City Hospital, which the BBC previously revealed has been beset with building issues and the potential for clinically vulnerable patients having to be moved out temporarily.
The children's hospital project with the RVH has seen several delays since it was first announced back in October 2013.
Costs have risen from an initial £250m to more than two-and-a-half times that amount, with a 10-year delay.
In February, the first and deputy first ministers announced that GBHP would build the hospital.
The 10-floor state-of-the-art facility, which is a Northern Ireland Executive project, will be able to cater for up to 45,000 children per year with 155 beds, 10 theatres, and an emergency department.
BAM Ireland said it did not sign any contracts for this project with Graham or the customer.
It has been heavily criticised for its work on the new children's hospital in Dublin.
The Republic of Ireland facility has been described as the "most expensive children's hospital in the world" following major setbacks and rising costs, now estimated to be €2.24bn (£1.8bn).
Health Minister Mike Nesbitt visited the site in Dublin at the end of February and expressed confidence in BAM Ireland building the children's hospital in Belfast.
Long waiting lists for children 'a catastrophe'
Patients may be moved over repairs at mental health unit
Mistakes cannot be repeated at new hospital, says Dodds

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
15 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Kansas abortion clinic leader was ready for Missouri abortion ban, fears it won't be short-lived
Kathryn Boyd, the new CEO and president of the Wichita-based abortion clinic Trust Women, appeared on the Kansas Reflector podcast to discuss how Missouri's abortion ban might affect Kansans. (Submitted) TOPEKA — In May, as Kathryn Boyd began her new role as president and CEO of the Trust Women clinic in Wichita, one of the first conversations she had with the clinic's leaders was how to deal with a new ban in Missouri and what it might mean for Kansas. A late-May decision from a Missouri judge triggered an all-out ban on abortion in the state, but that wasn't much of a surprise to Kansas abortion providers who were preparing for the worst. The majority of abortion patients in Kansas already come from out of state, and now, Trust Women is making its physicians more available and expanding its hours to brace for an influx. 'This is a case of lawmakers who, despite what Missourians voted for, have decided that they're going to just throw that out the window and do what they want anyway,' Boyd said on the Kansas Reflector podcast. 'So I think my first reaction was like, OK, here we go again.' 'Before the ban, Missourians were able to receive abortion care in major cities, reversing years of restrictions implemented by state lawmakers. Those rulings came after voter approval of a constitutional amendment in November enshrining reproductive freedom in the state constitution. All of that was undone in a two-page ruling last month from Missouri Supreme Court Chief Justice Mary Russell, who ordered Jackson County Circuit Court Judge Jerri Zhang to vacate the December and February decisions and reevaluate the case, restoring a ban on abortions and restricting facility licensing. Health centers in Missouri provided care to people who wouldn't have to travel as far as they do now, Boyd said. Following the anger, fear and worry in the wake of the decision in Missouri, Boyd said the primary focus of Trust Women is to expand access. The clinic's message, she said, is, 'We're still here.' 'We're still providing care. We need to expand, and we need support. You know, that's really what it comes down to. And I think that that is a similar story of many, many providers throughout the country, regardless of what state they're in,' Boyd said. However, her fear is that the ban won't be short-lived. Boyd, who has worked in the field of abortion and reproductive care for years, entered the top job at Trust Women about a year after intense turmoil within the clinic. Reports of mass resignations and multiple leadership shakeups led the clinic to temporarily close its doors. Boyd, though she wasn't working at the clinic at the time, describes it as 'very, very hard' for the organization. 'Coming in after a culture shock like that can be really challenging for any leader,' Boyd said. 'Making sure that I come in with that in the back of my mind, I don't want that trauma to, like, dictate what we do going forward, but it definitely is like a side dish.' Her goal is to create a culture of transparency and collaboration, and that requires building back trust and listening, she said.

Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
Prime Healthcare cutting 100 jobs across its Illinois facilities, months after acquiring hospitals from Ascension
Prime Healthcare, which bought eight Illinois hospitals earlier this year, is eliminating more than 100 jobs, the hospital system confirmed Monday. Prime made most of the reductions Friday, and will continue cutting other jobs through July. 'As we continue to offer and create opportunities, we are also evaluating alignment with best practices and support from our national and regional teams,' Prime said in a statement. 'Through this process, there is a small number of positions that are duplicated or not aligned with the care model and service line offerings – most of them not directly providing patient care – that will be consolidated.' None of the affected jobs are union positions, according to Prime. Prime hired 13,000 workers from Ascension when it bought the hospitals from that health system, and has created nearly 1,000 new jobs since the acquisition. The job cuts represent less than 1% of the combined 14,000 employees, according to the statement. 'Importantly, these efforts will not affect the quality of care we deliver to the communities we serve and in fact will help expand best practices from across the nation,' Prime said in the statement. 'All decisions made at our Illinois facilities are guided by our mission to improve quality, strengthen care delivery, preserve access in underserved areas and ensure long-term sustainability.' The California-based Prime bought the Illinois hospitals for more than $370 million in March. Six of the hospitals sold to Prime changed from being nonprofit hospitals to for-profit hospitals as part of the sale. Hospitals that were sold include St. Mary's Hospital in Kankakee, Holy Family Medical Center in Des Plaines, Resurrection Medical Center in Chicago, St. Francis Hospital in Evanston, St. Joseph Medical Center in Joliet, St. Joseph Hospital in Elgin, Mercy Medical Center in Aurora and St. Mary of Nazareth Hospital in Chicago. The job cuts are the latest in a string of changes Prime has made since closing the deal, drawing criticism from elected officials and a nurses' union. Prime announced in April that it planned to suspend inpatient pediatric care at St. Joseph Medical Center in Joliet, saying at the time that the unit had been averaging less than one patient a day, while the need for other services such as advanced surgical, neurosurgical and spinal care had grown. The Illinois Nurses Association condemned the move arguing it would hurt the community, which only has one hospital. Also, Mercy Medical Center in Aurora lost its designation in April as a Level II trauma center. Prime also suspended obstetrical services at St. Mary's in Kankakee after the hospital's 'nearly sole obstetrics physician' retired, and because of low demand, Prime has said. Sen. Dick Durbin and Tammy Duckworth sent a letter to Prime's chairman, founder and CEO Dr. Prem Reddy, in May expressing concern about those changes and asking Prime to elaborate on the reasons behind them and its future plans for the hospitals. Prime responded to that letter last week, emphasizing its mission of turning around struggling community hospitals across the country. Prime said that before it bought the hospitals in Illinois they were losing about $200 million a year. Prime said maintaining services with low patient demand is not sustainable, nor good for the quality of care. Prime also told the senators it plans to expand behavioral health care services for seniors at its Illinois facilities. In its statement Monday, Prime said it has started fulfilling a previously stated commitment to invest $250 million across the Illinois hospitals. Prime said those affected by the job cuts are invited to apply for any of the more than 900 open positions across its Illinois facilities. The job cuts were first reported by the Herald News.

Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
Cucumbers grown in Florida linked to outbreak of salmonella. What you should know
Cucumbers grown in Florida have been linked to an outbreak of salmonella. TGD Cuts, LLC of Jessup, Maryland, recalled salsa and cucumber products because they were made with cucumbers that are possibly contaminated with salmonella. The recalled items contained cucumbers from Boynton Beach, Florida-based Bedner Growers Inc. Here's what you need to know about the latest recall. TGD Cuts, LLC of Jessup, Maryland, recalled some tub and tray products because they contained cucumbers from Bedner Growers Inc. of Florida. The cucumbers have been linked to a salmonella outbreak. TGD Cuts distributed the affected products, which included salsas, sliced cucumbers and cucumber spears, to retail and foodservice locations in Maryland, Virginia, Pennsylvania, New Jersey, and North Carolina, according to the Food and Drug Administration. Bedner Growers Inc. of Boynton Beach, voluntarily recalled cucumbers sold at Bedner's Farm Fresh Market and distributed by Fresh Start Produce Sales, Inc., the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said in a release May 19. ➤ Florida cucumber recall triggers dozens of salad, sushi recalls from Walmart, Publix, more The cucumbers were sold at three Bedner's Farm Fresh Market locations in Boynton Beach, Delray Beach, and West Palm Beach between April 29, 2025, and May 14, 2025, according to a release from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration. As of May 23, there have been 26 reported salmonella cases, the CDC said, in 15 states, including Florida. "Several people ate cucumbers on cruise ships leaving ports in Florida," the CDC said. In June 2024, Fresh Start Produce Sales Inc. recalled cucumbers from Bedner and from Thomas Produce Co. of Boca Raton that were linked to a salmonella outbreak that sickened 551 people in 34 states and the District of Columbia, including 60 people in Florida. Tomatoes distributed in three southern states — none in Florida — became the subject of a possibly deadly recall, according to the Food and Drug Administration. Williams Farms Repack LLC, based in Lodge, South Carolina, said the affected tomatoes were packaged and sold to wholesalers and distributors between April 23-28 under the name H&C Farms Label. On June 6, the CDC and FDA linked brown eggs sold in nine states — including at some Walmart stores — to an ongoing salmonella outbreak in which 79 people have been sickened and at least 21 hospitalized. "Salmonella are bacteria that make people sick," the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said. Contaminated food is the source for most of these illnesses. Children younger than 5, adults 65 and older, and people with weakened immune systems are more likely to have severe illness. Pregnant women are also at higher risk of developing an infection from it and should seek medical attention if symptoms arise. Salmonella bacteria cause "about 1.35 million infections, 26,500 hospitalizations, and 420 deaths in the United States every year," the CDC said. Freezing and drying do not kill salmonella, the FDA said. Cooking will kill bacteria, including salmonella, but you'll need to use a food thermometer to make sure the temperature gets between 145 and 165 degrees, depending on what you're cooking. Be careful of all surfaces and your hands to prevent cross-contamination. ➤ Safe food temperature chart Salmonella can make people ill with diarrhea, fever, and stomach cramps, which can last from four days up to a week. Symptoms usually begin six hours to six days after infection, the CDC said. Most cases of salmonella infections pass, but some people may need to be hospitalized. Symptoms include: Feeling dizzy when standing up Diarrhea and a fever higher than 102 degrees Diarrhea for more than 3 days that is not improving Bloody diarrhea So much vomiting that you cannot keep liquids down Signs of dehydration, such as: Not urinating much Dry mouth and throat Contributing: C.A. Bridges, USA Today Network- Florida This article originally appeared on Treasure Coast Newspapers: Food recalls: Cucumbers grown in Florida, salsa, tomatoes, eggs