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Empty flats 'spruced up for Royal'

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Published Date: 22 June 2006
A SCOTS council spent £2,000 on refurbishing run-down homes for a Royal visit before boarding their windows back up just minutes after Princess Anne left.
Residents in Alloa's deprived Mar Policies area were delighted when Clackmannanshire Council installed new windows in empty houses and even put in curtains.

Council street cleaners also arrived to spruce up the estate before Princess Anne was due
to arrive at a community centre. But locals were shocked when workers arrived to board up the windows again. Vicky Brown, a 20-year-old resident, said the "gleaming new" windows were uncovered for only 25 minutes while the Princess Royal looked around.

"For the first time in years, the street looked fantastic," she said. "Just five minutes after the princess left, workers came to board the windows up again."

Pensioner Edward Meldrum, 67, who lives in the Mar Policies, said: "We were delighted because the street had never looked so clean. But now it's right back to the way it was. A lot of people are very angry. The council didn't want Princess Anne to see the place the way it was, but they clearly feel it is good enough for the people who live here."

A council spokeswoman said around £2,000 was spent on six flats in the build-up to last week's visit. She added: "Princess Anne is high-profile and we would want to leave her with a good opinion of Clackmannanshire.

"The plan is to let the flats, but because they are currently lying empty they have been boarded up since the princess's visit as a precautionary measure against vandalism. The windows were always due to be installed but the work was probably brought forward for the Royal visit."



The full article contains 311 words and appears in The Scotsman newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 21 June 2006 9:18 PM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
  • Related Topics: Princess Royal
 
1

Bina,

Australia 22/06/2006 00:00:00

If that's the case why were those next on the housing list not informed by letter the same day about the available home. There would have been no need for any boarding up of the windows. I'm sure they would've had them occupied within the week.

2

Grumpy,

Edinburgh 22/06/2006 00:00:00

Aye Right. Only supports the view that royalty thinks the world smells of fresh paint, and that poverty doesn't exist. I'm quite sure that the residents of Mar Policies could have thought of many better ways to spend £2,000. But let's give Clackmannanshire the benefit of the doubt - get the refurbished flats occupied within 2 weeks and we might believe your story.

3

michael,

queensferry 22/06/2006 00:00:00

I should add, the houses in question have been lying empty and boarded up for the whole time I have been with the paper, 12 months.
It's highly unlikey they'll be occupied "within the week." The unemployment level in the area is shameful and sad.

4

michael,

queensferry 22/06/2006 00:00:00

I write for the Wee County News, in Alloa.
We broke this story on Wednesday and it has been lifted by other papers across the country.
Don't be so cynical, I can assure you this did happen. Not within 20 minutes like some papers have claimed though.
But it did all happen within the day of the visit, and our front page had the pictures to prove it.


 

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