This was stated on Monday evening by the Council of the Association for the Palliation of Children in a press release. They point to state aid cuts as the reason for the closure.
– I have dedicated my whole life to this project, but the government cut makes it impossible to carry it out seriously. We have employed skilled and committed professionals, who will care for dying and seriously ill children, says FFB general secretary Natasha Pedersen.
– This is a very vulnerable group. It is impossible to run a children’s home with searchable project funds. It requires predictability and political signals that we can trust.
Andreas Hus was to become Norway’s first children’s hospice, but it was then closed before it could be opened.
About a week ago it arrived there are several warnings about Andreas Hus’s use of money.
Criticized for spending money
Friday 14 October published Fædrelandsvennen a coincidence what the 90 million went to, with a title that tells, among other things, of the manager’s one million salary.
Saturday 15 October followed NRK with a full article, in which it is questioned, among other things, that the association spent money on a designer sofa for NOK 80,000, a sound system for a million, PR consultants and a commercial on TV 2.
On Sunday, the Directorate of Health announced that it will investigate the use of the money, writes NRK.