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Executive to agree plan to buy lame duck PFI college

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Published Date: 16 December 2006
THE Scottish Executive is set to approve a £25 million buy-out of a troubled college, raising further questions over the suitability of private finance deals.
Funding officials have recommended that West Lothian College should be brought into public ownership because it cannot meet the payments on its Private Finance Initiative (PFI) contract.

The college became only the second in the UK to be built un
der a PFI deal five years ago, but has failed to attract the amount of students it had hoped.

Last year, a report by the Scottish Parliament's audit committee warned that the college faced an £11 million budget shortfall as it tried to meet its payments over the next 20 years.

Nicol Stephen, the lifelong learning minister, yesterday said he was concerned that the PFI contract "may not represent best value to the public purse".

The Scottish Funding Council will consider the college's future when it meets next month, but is expected to recommend that the college be brought into public ownership. Ministers have pledged to abide by any decision the council makes.

Opposition parties said the problems faced by West Lothian College proved that PFI, and its successor the Public Private Partnership (PPP), were bad value for the taxpayer.

Fiona Hyslop, the SNP's education spokeswoman, said: "Who in their right mind would plan to use PFI to deliver vital projects like the new Forth crossing or better schools and hospitals when time and time again it is proved to be inefficient, costly and fundamentally flawed?"

The West Lothian PFI project cost £17.8 million.



The full article contains 283 words and appears in The Scotsman newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 15 December 2006 9:28 PM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
 
1

Wisnaeme,

Sent to Coventry, 16/12/2006 01:53:49

Another reason for "ITS TIME". Why are this "best value" Scottish Executive hell bent on a policy already proven to be ill advised in pratice? Because Brown jobbie in Westminster says so and its a case of follow mein party leadership or else sanctions will be applied.To think we thought that Scottish Labour was against independence on a matter of principle.What bluidy principles? For a London based Labour party to impose such a future fiscal burden on the Scottish nation by perceived policy diktat to a party branch is reason enough for a parting of the ways in the name of fiscal 'prudence' for the Scottish nation.

2

Hospitalphoenix,

16/12/2006 14:22:29

How about buying back the Royal Infirmary too?

That's a load of money down the drain and its PFI costs are set to rise and rise whilst services are set to be cut back more and more, and patient care will suffer more and more.


 

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