Results 14,381-14,400 of 26,685 for speaker:David Cullinane
- Public Accounts Committee: Engagement with Nursing Homes Ireland (14 Jun 2018)
David Cullinane: If Mr. Daly characterises his answers to questions as "fully open" then I think we have an even bigger problem, because he is being anything but fully open. Many people appear before committees and for legal or other reasons decide not to answer questions. They are under no obligation. However, in doing that the witness does not get to say he is being fully open. Mr. Daly has been asked...
- Public Accounts Committee: Engagement with Nursing Homes Ireland (14 Jun 2018)
David Cullinane: That is my point. Mr. Daly is still free to answer questions. He is still free, if he wishes, to clarify for the public on behalf of his organisation whether or not the word "boycott" was used at that meeting.
- Public Accounts Committee: Engagement with Nursing Homes Ireland (14 Jun 2018)
David Cullinane: My point is that the document itself may be privileged, but the discussion at the meeting itself is not. The document is subject to it. The witness is quite free, if he wishes, to answer questions about what he heard or did not hear at the meeting. I am not asking him what was in a document as that is subject to privilege. I am asking him, as somebody who heads an organisation, whether or...
- Public Accounts Committee: Engagement with Nursing Homes Ireland (14 Jun 2018)
David Cullinane: Did Mr. Daly hear anybody use the word "boycott"?
- Public Accounts Committee: Engagement with Nursing Homes Ireland (14 Jun 2018)
David Cullinane: Did Mr. Daly hear anybody say it? Does he hear the question I am putting to him? If I asked him whether he used the word "boycott", then a reasonable response would be to say that he did not use the word "boycott". If I ask him whether anybody used the word "boycott", or whether he heard anybody use the word "boycott", then repeating that he did not say it is not a reasonable response. I...
- Public Accounts Committee: Engagement with Nursing Homes Ireland (14 Jun 2018)
David Cullinane: As far as the witness is concerned, he has given a response, but he has not answered the question. With respect, somebody cannot say he or she has answered a question when he or she clearly has not. I am asking for some direction from the Chair. If Mr. Daly is prepared to say that he simply cannot answer that question or he is not prepared to answer it, I will accept that. However, I will...
- Public Accounts Committee: Engagement with Nursing Homes Ireland (14 Jun 2018)
David Cullinane: I know he is.
- Public Accounts Committee: Engagement with Nursing Homes Ireland (14 Jun 2018)
David Cullinane: Absolutely not. I am not trying to force words out of somebody's mouth. I am saying that one cannot-----
- Public Accounts Committee: Engagement with Nursing Homes Ireland (14 Jun 2018)
David Cullinane: With respect to Mr. Daly, that is not what I am saying. I am saying that if a witness is asked a direct question and he does not answer it, he cannot say that he has answered the question and has been upfront. Clearly he has not been. That is the point I am making. We have established that.
- Public Accounts Committee: Engagement with Nursing Homes Ireland (14 Jun 2018)
David Cullinane: I have one final question. Mr. McEnery had a different view as to why he was at the meeting. His organisation represented 20 nursing homes. He would have been aware of the fees that they receive. He is also the chair of the Health Information and Quality Authority, HIQA, is he not?
- Public Accounts Committee: Engagement with Nursing Homes Ireland (14 Jun 2018)
David Cullinane: Is he chair of HIQA?
- Public Accounts Committee: Engagement with Nursing Homes Ireland (14 Jun 2018)
David Cullinane: He was at the time.
- Public Accounts Committee: Engagement with Nursing Homes Ireland (14 Jun 2018)
David Cullinane: I know he was not invited in his capacity-----
- Public Accounts Committee: Engagement with Nursing Homes Ireland (14 Jun 2018)
David Cullinane: Here is the problem for Mr. Daly. This was a meeting that was discussing pricing. The word "boycott" was used, or at least that is what we were told. I refer to Mr. Paul Rochford. The media reports that the threat of not taking in new admissions from the acute hospitals is a potentially very powerful lobbying tool, that as a lobbying group the biggest threat Nursing Homes Ireland, NHI,...
- Ceisteanna - Questions (Resumed): National Risk Assessment (13 Jun 2018)
David Cullinane: Deputy Micheál Martin said that.
- Ceisteanna - Questions (Resumed): National Risk Assessment (13 Jun 2018)
David Cullinane: Are Questions Nos. 1 and 2 grouped?
- Ceisteanna - Questions (Resumed): National Risk Assessment (13 Jun 2018)
David Cullinane: The recently published draft national risk assessment is a comprehensive document. We will not have time to discuss it at length but I would like to focus on one particular aspect, which rightly identifies the supply of housing as one of the most immediate domestic challenges facing the State. Sinn Féin acknowledges that there is no easy-fix solution. Unfortunately, we are dealing...
- Questions on Promised Legislation (13 Jun 2018)
David Cullinane: Did the Minister get upset?
- Questions on Promised Legislation (13 Jun 2018)
David Cullinane: The Taoiseach should show leadership and not shout across the Chamber. If he is ready, I wish to make my contribution. The programme for Government contains a commitment to build further capacity in child and adolescent mental health services, CAMHS. Yesterday, the annual report of the Ombudsman for Children was published. It showed there was a shocking shortage of staffing, and the...
- Questions on Promised Legislation (13 Jun 2018)
David Cullinane: Will the Taoiseach update the House and explain why this is the case? What additional capacity will be put into places such as the south east that needs it?