Results 3,061-3,080 of 19,173 for speaker:Shane Ross
- Public Accounts Committee: National Transport Authority - Financial Statement 2011 (24 Jan 2013)
Shane Ross: What is Mr. Murphy's view on the consistent failure of CIE to produce its accounts on time?
- Public Accounts Committee: National Transport Authority - Financial Statement 2011 (24 Jan 2013)
Shane Ross: CIE can do what it likes outside the remit of the National Transport Authority and it will be given €265 million. Is that the case? What is Mr. Murphy's view of the CIE accounts? Despite the pantomime that has been the company's accounts this year and every other year, the NTA is giving it €265 million? Why does it not refuse to give this money until CIE puts its accounts in...
- Public Accounts Committee: National Transport Authority - Financial Statement 2011 (24 Jan 2013)
Shane Ross: Why not given that the National Transport Authority is giving the company €265 million?
- Public Accounts Committee: National Transport Authority - Financial Statement 2011 (24 Jan 2013)
Shane Ross: Does the National Transport Authority have any role in advising the Department on this matter?
- Public Accounts Committee: National Transport Authority - Financial Statement 2011 (24 Jan 2013)
Shane Ross: The National Transport Authority gives out money for the services regardless of CIE's behaviour elsewhere and the state of its accounts.
- Public Accounts Committee: National Transport Authority - Financial Statement 2011 (24 Jan 2013)
Shane Ross: Those requirements must be limited and the bar must be set very low. Is the Leap card fully integrated yet?
- Public Accounts Committee: National Transport Authority - Financial Statement 2011 (24 Jan 2013)
Shane Ross: Is it?
- Public Accounts Committee: National Transport Authority - Financial Statement 2011 (24 Jan 2013)
Shane Ross: How much did the system cost? It took approximately ten years to implement. Is that the case?
- Public Accounts Committee: National Transport Authority - Financial Statement 2011 (24 Jan 2013)
Shane Ross: It cost €55 million for a card.
- Public Accounts Committee: National Transport Authority - Financial Statement 2011 (24 Jan 2013)
Shane Ross: What does "back office development" mean?
- Public Accounts Committee: National Transport Authority - Financial Statement 2011 (24 Jan 2013)
Shane Ross: It cost €55 million over ten years to produce the Leap card.
- Public Accounts Committee: National Transport Authority - Financial Statement 2011 (24 Jan 2013)
Shane Ross: What does Mr. Murphy think of that?
- Public Accounts Committee: National Transport Authority - Financial Statement 2011 (24 Jan 2013)
Shane Ross: It took ten years to produce the Leap card.
- Public Accounts Committee: National Transport Authority - Financial Statement 2011 (24 Jan 2013)
Shane Ross: What is Mr. Murphy's view on the timeframe?
- Public Accounts Committee: National Transport Authority - Financial Statement 2011 (24 Jan 2013)
Shane Ross: Why did it collapse?
- Public Accounts Committee: National Transport Authority - Financial Statement 2011 (24 Jan 2013)
Shane Ross: How much was wasted in that period?
- Public Accounts Committee: National Transport Authority - Financial Statement 2011 (24 Jan 2013)
Shane Ross: This is a project where there was massive waste.
- Public Accounts Committee: National Transport Authority - Financial Statement 2011 (24 Jan 2013)
Shane Ross: Mr. Murphy may call it a delay but I would describe it as massive waste.
- Public Accounts Committee: National Transport Authority - Financial Statement 2011 (24 Jan 2013)
Shane Ross: I will stop now. I cannot understand how the National Transport Authority can operate in this extraordinary vacuum in which it gives vast sums of money to a company that cannot even produce proper accounts. Mr. Murphy indicated the arrangement is satisfactory, although the company in question cannot produce proper accounts, wastes money willy-nilly on Leap cards which took ten years to...
- Public Accounts Committee: National Transport Authority - Financial Statement 2011 (24 Jan 2013)
Shane Ross: Eight people are paid over €100,000. Are there any people who are paid over €150,000, besides Mr. Murphy?