Results 13,681-13,700 of 26,396 for speaker:David Cullinane
- Public Accounts Committee: Business of Committee (20 Sep 2018)
David Cullinane: There are a number of other issues that need to be examined. The third level sector was mentioned. There are issues around the departure of the head of the Higher Education Authority, HEA. There are issues around reports which we are looking for. There is a lot of work that can be done. My concern relates to next week's meeting. I am not saying it will be an unproductive meeting because...
- Public Accounts Committee: Business of Committee (20 Sep 2018)
David Cullinane: All the more reason to hold it over.
- Public Accounts Committee: Business of Committee (20 Sep 2018)
David Cullinane: Looking through the work programme, I do not see any reference to the higher education sector, which is an area that we need to come back to.
- Public Accounts Committee: Business of Committee (20 Sep 2018)
David Cullinane: I understand that. I merely make the point. The head of the Higher Education Authority, HEA, has resigned. There were some media reports on the reasons for his resignation. I will not repeat them but they are in the public domain. We were working with the HEA to drive reforms in a number of areas. If it is the case that the reforms met resistance from the Department, I want to know why...
- Public Accounts Committee: Business of Committee (20 Sep 2018)
David Cullinane: -----Waterford IT, other institutes of technology and the Department. We have acknowledged that there is an issue in this area. There was a deep dive done but there has not been an outcome, which is unacceptable. It is unfair to leave so many people in Waterford IT hanging. They deserved a product at the end of the process. The Comptroller and Auditor General was doing his report,...
- Public Accounts Committee: Business of Committee (20 Sep 2018)
David Cullinane: It is one of the best in the country. There is no difficulty with quality but there are issues and questions around governance that need to be answered. It seemed they were answered in this report but we do not have a copy of it. My point is we need to get the report and apply pressure. We also need to hear from the HEA's board as to what is happening. The media reports on this matter...
- Public Accounts Committee: Business of Committee (20 Sep 2018)
David Cullinane: Third level procurement would be another leg of that stool.
- Public Accounts Committee: Business of Committee (20 Sep 2018)
David Cullinane: Deputy Burke would be a fine ambassador.
- Public Accounts Committee: Business of Committee (20 Sep 2018)
David Cullinane: Is the report written?
- Public Accounts Committee: Business of Committee (20 Sep 2018)
David Cullinane: They are outside the door.
- Public Accounts Committee: National Asset Management Agency: Financial Statements 2016 and 2017
Comptroller and Auditor General Special Report No. 102: National Asset Management Agency Second Progress Report (20 Sep 2018) David Cullinane: Go raibh maith agat. I welcome Mr. McDonagh, Mr. Daly and the other witnesses to the meeting. I wish to focus on a number of different topics. Notwithstanding the interesting anecdotes of meetings with the troika and Ministers for Finance, I want to first get some context on the performance of NAMA. I have no doubt a lot of good work was done and a lot of good decisions, it seems, were...
- Public Accounts Committee: National Asset Management Agency: Financial Statements 2016 and 2017
Comptroller and Auditor General Special Report No. 102: National Asset Management Agency Second Progress Report (20 Sep 2018) David Cullinane: On the difference between the par value and the acquisition value, those losses would have been crystallised by the banks. Who paid for that?
- Public Accounts Committee: National Asset Management Agency: Financial Statements 2016 and 2017
Comptroller and Auditor General Special Report No. 102: National Asset Management Agency Second Progress Report (20 Sep 2018) David Cullinane: If we are talking about profit, we are talking about it in the context of the €31.8 billion and the €5.6 billion of state aid. Whatever is recovered above that figure but short of the €74 billion-----
- Public Accounts Committee: National Asset Management Agency: Financial Statements 2016 and 2017
Comptroller and Auditor General Special Report No. 102: National Asset Management Agency Second Progress Report (20 Sep 2018) David Cullinane: I wanted to put that context out there first, as I thought it important. With regard to housing, and I want to stay with the Comptroller and Auditor General, chart 7.1 gives a breakdown of how many units were completed by NAMA and delivered up to 2016. Is that correct?
- Public Accounts Committee: National Asset Management Agency: Financial Statements 2016 and 2017
Comptroller and Auditor General Special Report No. 102: National Asset Management Agency Second Progress Report (20 Sep 2018) David Cullinane: Has Mr. McDonagh the up-to-date figures for how many units were completed and delivered?
- Public Accounts Committee: National Asset Management Agency: Financial Statements 2016 and 2017
Comptroller and Auditor General Special Report No. 102: National Asset Management Agency Second Progress Report (20 Sep 2018) David Cullinane: Does Mr. McDonagh have a breakdown of what type of units they are in terms of social, affordable and private?
- Public Accounts Committee: National Asset Management Agency: Financial Statements 2016 and 2017
Comptroller and Auditor General Special Report No. 102: National Asset Management Agency Second Progress Report (20 Sep 2018) David Cullinane: Is there a percentage breakdown for the 10,500 units? To stick with the 8,000 units, is there a breakdown of how many of those were social and affordable and how many were private?
- Public Accounts Committee: National Asset Management Agency: Financial Statements 2016 and 2017
Comptroller and Auditor General Special Report No. 102: National Asset Management Agency Second Progress Report (20 Sep 2018) David Cullinane: The reason I ask is that there was very interesting commentary from Mr. McDonagh at the end of his opening contribution about the housing situation, and I will come to that shortly. To understand that and to link his contribution on the housing market and housing problem or crisis, whatever way one wants to describe it, with what NAMA did, one would need to have some sense of who owns those...
- Public Accounts Committee: National Asset Management Agency: Financial Statements 2016 and 2017
Comptroller and Auditor General Special Report No. 102: National Asset Management Agency Second Progress Report (20 Sep 2018) David Cullinane: Do we have any hard figures on that?
- Public Accounts Committee: National Asset Management Agency: Financial Statements 2016 and 2017
Comptroller and Auditor General Special Report No. 102: National Asset Management Agency Second Progress Report (20 Sep 2018) David Cullinane: Has NAMA done that analysis and Mr. McDonagh just does not have the data with him, or is it something NAMA would not have done?