Is-soffit ta' Sant

Published: November 1, 2008 at 12:07am

Dear God in heaven, the man couldn’t even get his suspended ceiling right. And then he didn’t realise it was wrong – too busy taking CET to the disgruntled citizen, on his Cittadinmobil. It was left up to his successor to notice. Oh, and incidentally, what was he doing spending Lm15,600 on a false ceiling for his ruddy office as soon as he moved in, after four years of telling us how his predecessor wasted money? Ah, but this was the prime minister who famously drove his own car while one of his little colleagues got a salary as driver to the PM all the same. You have to hand it to these folks: they know a gravy-train when they see one. Glenn Bedingfield’s already hopped on the gravy-train to Brussels and an MEP seat. Let’s hope his restaurant’s creditors get paid. He won’t be able to tell them he hasn’t got the money. Oh sorry! The restaurant is operated by a limited liability company.

The Times, Friday, 31st October 2008

Judge orders firm to pay €21,000 in damages to PM’s Office
An interior furnishings company has been ordered to pay €21,000 in damages to the Office of the Prime Minister after a court established they had done a poor job when they installed a timber suspended ceiling.

In 1997, the company, Fithome Ltd, installed the ceiling at a cost of €36,347 (at the time there was a Labour Administration) but (following a change of government) the OPM insisted that it was not installed according to tender specifications because a sub-frame had not been fitted, making it dangerous.

A court-appointed architect, who had examined the works, said that remedial work would cost €6,990. However, a government architect put the cost at €43,864, pointing out that the court architect had not taken into consideration the fact that rooms would have to be cleared and staff relocated in order to do the work.

Mr Justice Gino Camilleri ruled that there were no grounds to annul the contract awarded to Fithome Ltd but he ordered the company to pay €21,000 damages to the OPM.

The judge commented that the sum of €6,990 mentioned in connection with remedial work was too low, especially as prices had gone up since the tender was awarded in the late 1990s.




3 Comments Comment

  1. Amanda Mallia says:

    I’ll bet that there are a few people thinking that it’s a pity it didn’t fall down when Labour were in power, ridding us of a few of them in one go.

    [Daphne – I’d thought of that, actually, but then concluded that we wouldn’t have joined the European Union because there’d have been no fight down in Bormla.]

  2. Amanda Mallia says:

    Daphne – “Let’s hope his restaurant’s creditors get paid. He won’t be able to tell them he hasn’t got the money. Oh sorry! The restaurant is operated by a limited liability company.”

    This might be considered a precedent to such a case:

    http://www.timesofmalta.com/articles/view/20081031/local/price-club-directors-ordered-to-pay-almost-euro-900-000

  3. Meerkat :) says:

    At least the soffit lasted more than Sant’s government. Tee hee.

Leave a Comment