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Game on in the battle to keep Sportscotland



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Published Date: 04 January 2008
Government plans to axe sport body must be stopped, says Mike Pringle.
LAST year was a great one for Scotland's sportsmen and women. Glasgow secured the Commonwealth Games; our football team twice defeated the mighty France and came agonisingly close to qualification.

Andy Murray continued to climb the world tennis
rankings and Kelly Wood led her curling team to silver in the European Championships, while David Murdoch led his team to gold. The list goes on and on.

Given these fantastic results and the exciting events we have to look forward, one could be forgiven for thinking that Scotland's national agency for sport, Sportscotland, was being praised for its achievements. However, this is not the case.

Instead Sportscotland finds itself in limbo, facing an uncertain future, threatened by government plans to abolish it.

Sportscotland, previously the Scottish Sports Council, has more than 30 years' experience of co-ordinating sports investment between government and charity funding contributions. This integrated approach has proven very successful, enabling the agency to invest in a wide range of projects from national sports governing bodies to local initiatives.

This is not an integrated approach that can be achieved by government. The Lottery Fund is one of Sportscotland's biggest contributors and by law the administration of its funding must be run by an independent body.

If Sportscotland is axed, we risk being left with a bureaucratic time-bomb – a group of unnecessary institutions with no overall plan or overarching structure.

In my own constituency of Edinburgh South, local Liberal Democrat councillor Conor Snowden and I are leading a campaign to ensure that plans for a new multi-sport pavilion at Inch Park stay on track.

The development will provide a home to five sports clubs and has the potential to provide thousands of residents with direct access to sport. Community projects like this are vital to Scotland's future.

Much of the funding for this project is already in place, but the development team plan to apply to Sportscotland to make up the shortfall and have already made it through stage one of the process.

The plans have taken a long time to get to this stage having been beset by planning problems under the previous Labour city administration. The last thing this project or indeed others like it need to encounter is yet more unnecessary bureaucracy.

It is time for the SNP to stick up for Scottish sport in our communities.

Recently, Liberal Democrats led a debate calling on the Scottish Government to abandon its plans to abolish Sportscotland and MSPs voted overwhelmingly to retain it.

Mike Pringle is the Liberal Democrat MSP for Edinburgh South



The full article contains 448 words and appears in Edinburgh Evening News newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 04 January 2008 9:00 AM
  • Source: Edinburgh Evening News
  • Location: Edinburgh
 
1

connaughtboy,

stonehaven 04/01/2008 10:04:35
not sure why this is "game on". This is another quango and if the Government wants to get rid of it then that's exactly what will happen. This is not some sort of wrestling match.
2

Mr H 2u,

Embra 04/01/2008 12:05:22
Stuff and nonsense. Name one thing that SS did for any of the examples named in the article. I'm reasonably sure that the Scotchland footie team and Andy Murray are well paid professional sports people, not in need of civil servants.
3

Eve,

Scotland 04/01/2008 12:06:16
#1 connaughtboy: Who knows!!! I thought it sounded a wee bit X rated by the headline!!! Thankfully it's no.
4

Andrew Allan,

04/01/2008 18:09:23
I wrote to Sportscotland a number of years ago with ideas I though would increase the ability of our lads and lassies to take on others abroad, only to receive letters back saying they couldn't afford to carry out the changes. Strange think though each of the ideas I put forward were taken up in england within months, something tells me that there are people working within the organization who are there to benefit english sporting interests.
5

A Better Way,

Edinburgh 05/01/2008 03:45:49
One just has to look at Scottish Snooker, who are going through a rebuilding process thanks to those that put in an extraordinary amount of free time to organise a very credable organisation that is bringing through some very promising juniors.

They have applied for assistance to the public body and are told that there is no money available. Amateur sports being told there is no money for development seems to be the battle cry from a quango that pays very good salaries to the huge staff Sports Scotland has. The money isnt getting to the coal face, where the hard work is being done in spite of this organisation.

Surely the question isnt whether we get rid of this shower of balloons, it should be when.

Of course this LibDum is fighting to keep one of the quangos his Party established with the London Controlled Labour Party. We all know how many things this shower have blown millions on. Lets give the SNP Scottish Government the chance to bring in a system where the funding made available is transferred through to those that need it, before its syphoned of to LibDum/Labour pet projects of their inner circle that has excluded Scots who were not part of the brown envelope brigade.

 

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