Categories
Australian News

AUSTRALIAN ACT REPORT: Legislation Passes Allowing Move Forward With Plans to Take Over Calvary Public Hospital

@acenewsservices

This is our daily post that is shared across Twitter & Telegram and published first on here with Kindness & Love XX on peace-truth.com/

#AceNewsRoom in Kindness & Wisdom provides News & Views @acenewsservices

Ace Press News From Cutting Room Floor: Published: May.31: 2023:

#AceNewsDesk – The ACT Legislative Assembly has passed a controversial bill giving the government the power to take over Calvary Public Hospital in as little as 33 days.

A sign that says Calvary Hospital on a sunny day.
The legislation allowing the ACT government to take over the Catholic-owned public hospital passed this afternoon.(ABC News: Mark Moore)none

Earlier this month, the government announced its plan to acquire the land and assets at the Bruce site and transfer staff to Canberra Health Services.

The government has promised to build and run a new hospital at the existing Calvary site. It said it would allocate more than $1 billion for the proposed facility, which could be under construction in 2025.

The takeover is set to happen on July 3, but a threatened legal challenge by Calvary could derail the government’s timeline.

‘An attack on faith’: Opposition

Composite Canberra Liberals MLA Jeremy Hanson and Health Minister Rachel Stephen Smith
Canberra Liberals MLA Jeremy Hanson (left) has accused Chief Minister Andrew Barr and Health Minister Rachel Stephen-Smith (right) of mounting “an attack on faith”.(ABC News)none

In debate ahead of the legislation passing, the Canberra Liberals’ acting leader Jeremy Hanson was scathing of the government and, in particular, Chief Minister Andrew Barr.

“It is impossible not to conclude that there is an element that involves an attack on faith,” Mr Hanson said.

“Whether Mr Barr denies it or not, that is how the people of many faiths are feeling.”

He added that a petition against the compulsory acquisition of Calvary had received more than 32,000 signatures, saying: “those voices should not be ignored”.

Mr Barr did not directly address Mr Hanson’s accusations, but said the “decision wasn’t taken lightly or made hastily”.An artist’s impression of the ACT government’s proposed new hospital in Bruce.(Supplied: ACT government)none

The Chief Minister told the Assembly the acquisition was “imperative” to support a “rapidly growing” city.

“By 2060, the population in the north side of Canberra is projected to grow by at least another 200,000 people,” he said.

Adding that “the ACT Health directorate suggests that by 2041, we will need more than double the current capacity provided at the 1970s-built Calvary Public Hospital”.

The bill was passed on Wednesday afternoon with support from the ACT Greens, which partner with ACT Labor in government. 

Legal challenge looms

The bill’s passing was the trigger Calvary Health Care — a subsidiary of Catholic-run Little Company of Mary — had been awaiting before commencing any legal proceedings against the government.

On Tuesday, Calvary Health Care chief executive Martin Bowles said the company saw no alternative but to take legal action after a series of unproductive meetings with government officials.

“We believe that it is an invalid piece of legislation … and we will challenge that in the courts,” he said.The ACT government has embarked on a takeover of Calvary Public Hospital in Bruce.(ABC News: Mark Moore)none

But Health Minister Rachel Stephen-Smith said she was confident the legislation could withstand any legal challenge.

“We’re confident that we’re on very strong legal ground here and so I would hope that any legal challenge will be resolved quickly,” she said.

“What I would really encourage Little Company of Mary and Calvary to consider is the disruption that this will create or the uncertainty that this will create for Canberrans.”

But Mr Bowles instead argued it was the government that had failed to consider staff and patients.

“Maybe [Ms Stephen-Smith] should have thought about staff and patients before she made this pre-dawn raid, [giving] people no notice,” he said.

“We’re supposed to transition in a matter of weeks. It’s unbelievable.”

Federal Opposition leader Peter Dutton has also waded into the debate, calling on Prime Minister Anthony Albanese to intervene and override the law.

“The Commonwealth government can and should intervene to override the ACT government and make clear that it will not stand for this outrageous, hostile takeover,” Mr Dutton said. 

But federal Health Minister Mark Butler said the stoush was a matter between Calvary Health Care and the territory government.

However, he added that he did not believe the ACT government’s decision had anything to do with the hospital being Catholic-owned.

“This here in the ACT, as I understand it, is an operational decision by the ACT government. I’ve not had any request for involvement, and I’ll leave it with those two parties,” he said.

FEATURED ABC HEALTH NEWS REPORT
Editor says …Sterling Publishing & Media Service Agency is not responsible for the content of external site or from any reports, posts or links, and can also be found here on Telegram: https://t.me/acenewsdaily  and thanks for following as always appreciate every like, reblog or retweet and comment thank you 
@acenewsservices