Abbott questions Government's e-Health plan

 

Spend no more until we know it will work.

Opposition Leader Tony Abbott has flagged a freeze on the $466.7 million investment in e-Health records in his reply to the 2010-11 Federal Budget handed down by the Government earlier this week.

In a response eerily similar to the party's stance on the National Broadband Network, Abbott put his support behind the idea of e-Health records, just not in the funding outlay proposed by the Federal Government.

"Of course, there should be an electronic health record but hundreds of millions of dollars have already been spent to make this a reality and no more should be spent until it’s certain that we’re not throwing good money after bad," Abbott said.

The Liberals have previously made it clear that while they support the idea of high-speed broadband services in principle, they don't support the Government's plan to achieve it.

"The Coalition won’t go ahead with the National Broadband Network avoiding the creation of a $43 billion white elephant," Abbott reiterated.

"Better access to faster broadband should not mean a new nationalised telecommunications monopoly and Telstra shareholders should not have their assets subject to coerced acquisition."

A central plank in the Opposition's strategy to rein in spending was a proposed "two year recruitment freeze to reduce public servant numbers through natural attrition."

Uniformed and frontline service positions - such as Defence, police, customs and Centrelink customer service staff - would be exempt.

"There will be no redundancies but for two years 6,000 bureaucrats who retire or resign each year will not be replaced," Abbott said.

"This should deliver a modest reduction in public sector numbers without compromising essential services and save about $4 billion over the forward estimates."


Abbott questions Government's e-Health plan
"What would Tony Abbot know about health anyway? He may have been the Liberal Government Health Minister, but he also failed miserably at it. I know plenty of people in the health profession and ..."
By singo79
 
 
 
Comments: 5
Mabelode
May 14, 2010 9:19 AM
"Blocker" Abbot trashing everything and proposing nothing.
MerariSchroeder
May 14, 2010 10:50 AM
I'm agreeing with Abbot here. The government has already spent hundreds of millions of dollars on eHealth and has nothing to show for it. Who's checking that every public dollar is being spent wisely?
anonymous
May 14, 2010 11:32 AM

Your right to your opinion is respected, Mabelode, but you may have been away for the last three years and therefore not seen the reality of how taxpayer funds have been hosed against the wall in a number of ways.

Most of these projects, all described as "the biggest in history", have been spending and implementation debacles.
ITnovice
May 14, 2010 8:13 PM
Tony Abbott: 'Me too...but not with that funding' - lacks credibility. The market model for broadband does not work, as we now know after 11 years of Liberal rule and broadband decay.

You cannot cut 12,000 public service jobs without a negative effect, if you say otherwise you are a mad monk.
singo79
May 15, 2010 5:25 PM
What would Tony Abbot know about health anyway? He may have been the Liberal Government Health Minister, but he also failed miserably at it.

I know plenty of people in the health profession and not too many of them have a good word to say about Abbot, but one thing they could say for sure is that they saw a reduction in staff and service in Australia's health system whilst he was minister.

That's enough for me not to trust this person running our country. If he couldn't manage to run a portfolio how on earth does he expect to run a country?
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