Results 14,061-14,080 of 26,610 for speaker:David Cullinane
- Public Accounts Committee: 2016 Annual Report of the Comptroller and Auditor General and Appropriation Accounts
Chapter 23: Accounts of the National Treasury Management Agency
National Treasury Management Agency: Financial Statements 2017 (12 Jul 2018) David Cullinane: There are 35 active cases and I imagine some compensation will be paid to the women involved for non-disclosure. The outstanding cases involve the difference between the 40 and the 221 women who were not informed. Some of them may have passed away, but if those who are still alive do not take court cases, they will never be compensated for the accepted liability or failure of the HSE. Is...
- Public Accounts Committee: 2016 Annual Report of the Comptroller and Auditor General and Appropriation Accounts
Chapter 23: Accounts of the National Treasury Management Agency
National Treasury Management Agency: Financial Statements 2017 (12 Jul 2018) David Cullinane: As such, they have to take cases.
- Public Accounts Committee: 2016 Annual Report of the Comptroller and Auditor General and Appropriation Accounts
Chapter 23: Accounts of the National Treasury Management Agency
National Treasury Management Agency: Financial Statements 2017 (12 Jul 2018) David Cullinane: The Chairman cannot just come in and throw that comment in at the end. With respect, my line of questioning-----
- Public Accounts Committee: 2016 Annual Report of the Comptroller and Auditor General and Appropriation Accounts
Chapter 23: Accounts of the National Treasury Management Agency
National Treasury Management Agency: Financial Statements 2017 (12 Jul 2018) David Cullinane: Please bear with me. My line of questioning was to ask if the only option available to the women concerned was to take court cases. Everything Mr. Breen said in that regard indicated that the answer was yes, that was the only option. The redress scheme is completely different. My understanding of redress is that one looks at all of the other issues surrounding expenses and the provision...
- Public Accounts Committee: 2016 Annual Report of the Comptroller and Auditor General and Appropriation Accounts
Chapter 23: Accounts of the National Treasury Management Agency
National Treasury Management Agency: Financial Statements 2017 (12 Jul 2018) David Cullinane: There are two options.
- Public Accounts Committee: 2016 Annual Report of the Comptroller and Auditor General and Appropriation Accounts
Chapter 23: Accounts of the National Treasury Management Agency
National Treasury Management Agency: Financial Statements 2017 (12 Jul 2018) David Cullinane: There are three options. Option 1 is that we allow all of the women concerned to take cases. Option 2 is that the HSE could decide to compensate all of the women concerned, irrespective of what redress scheme is put in place. The third option is establishing a redress scheme. Perhaps Mr. Breen might answer the question. Is it possible that a redress scheme established by the Government...
- Public Accounts Committee: 2016 Annual Report of the Comptroller and Auditor General and Appropriation Accounts
Chapter 23: Accounts of the National Treasury Management Agency
National Treasury Management Agency: Financial Statements 2017 (12 Jul 2018) David Cullinane: Is it possible?
- Public Accounts Committee: 2016 Annual Report of the Comptroller and Auditor General and Appropriation Accounts
Chapter 23: Accounts of the National Treasury Management Agency
National Treasury Management Agency: Financial Statements 2017 (12 Jul 2018) David Cullinane: The question then is whether it is likely. The Chairman is saying it is.
- Public Accounts Committee: 2016 Annual Report of the Comptroller and Auditor General and Appropriation Accounts
Chapter 23: Accounts of the National Treasury Management Agency
National Treasury Management Agency: Financial Statements 2017 (12 Jul 2018) David Cullinane: However, that is the current position.
- Implications of Brexit for Irish Ports: Motion [Private Members] (11 Jul 2018)
David Cullinane: It is a lovely part of the country.
- Implications of Brexit for Irish Ports: Motion [Private Members] (11 Jul 2018)
David Cullinane: I always like to hear the Minister speak but unfortunately rules are rules. It is always entertaining to watch Fianna Fáil pretend it is an Opposition party, despite two years of the confidence and supply agreement that has seen a worsening health and housing crisis and a lining of the pockets of property speculators and outside vulture funds. Throughout all of this, Fianna Fáil...
- Implications of Brexit for Irish Ports: Motion [Private Members] (11 Jul 2018)
David Cullinane: If he was serious, then I think that he has very serious problems.
- Implications of Brexit for Irish Ports: Motion [Private Members] (11 Jul 2018)
David Cullinane: Sometimes it is necessary to sit and listen. We sat and listened to all of the Fianna Fáil contributions
- Implications of Brexit for Irish Ports: Motion [Private Members] (11 Jul 2018)
David Cullinane: It is called political debate and it is-----
- Implications of Brexit for Irish Ports: Motion [Private Members] (11 Jul 2018)
David Cullinane: It is good manners to listen as well.
- Implications of Brexit for Irish Ports: Motion [Private Members] (11 Jul 2018)
David Cullinane: Fianna Fáil wants to address our infrastructure problems-----
- Implications of Brexit for Irish Ports: Motion [Private Members] (11 Jul 2018)
David Cullinane: -----with more reports and a timely start to Ireland 2040. In other words, while talking about the problem, Fianna Fáil has put forward as a solution the outworking of the supply and confidence arrangement - the very agreement it is pretending does not exist today as it wants to be seen as an Opposition party. We are all know that Fianna Fáil and Fine Gael are two sides of the...
- Implications of Brexit for Irish Ports: Motion [Private Members] (11 Jul 2018)
David Cullinane: -----and admitting defeat and preparing for a hard border rather than telling the British Prime Minister, and indeed holding the Irish Government to account-----
- Implications of Brexit for Irish Ports: Motion [Private Members] (11 Jul 2018)
David Cullinane: The Irish people will not tolerate any hardening of the Border-----
- Implications of Brexit for Irish Ports: Motion [Private Members] (11 Jul 2018)
David Cullinane: -----and there will not be one because the Irish people will not accept it. Fianna Fáil might accept a hard border but Sinn Féin and the vast majority of people and parties-----