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£250,000 bail-out to avert Fringe collapse

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Published Date: 12 December 2008
THE Festival Fringe is to receive an emergency bail-out of £250,000 of public money to avoid slipping into administration, The Scotsman can reveal.
Edinburgh city council, the Scottish Government and Scottish Arts Council have agreed to step in to rescue the world's biggest arts festival after it was brought to the brink of collapse by a series of box-office failures.

Fringe officials issued
an "urgent" appeal for help to resolve major cash-flow problems that have triggered the most serious crisis in its history.

The Fringe – without a director since the end of August – is believed to have made clear the scale of its financial problems within the past fortnight and warned that it faced operating illegally within weeks without a substantial cash injection.

It was previously thought the box-office debacle had cost the Fringe in the region of £200,000. However, The Scotsman has learned the actual figure was up to £1 million, with a massive financial "black hole" leaving the Fringe Society on the verge of operating illegally.

Some of the cash will be used to start moves to replace Jon Morgan, the previous Fringe director, who resigned in the wake of this year's festival, but refused to accept responsibility for the box-office failures.

Another substantial chunk of taxpayers' money may have to be found within the next few months to ensure the Fringe goes ahead as normal.

A report due to be published today by the city council will state that the bail-out has been agreed because of the event's long-running prestige and the huge importance of the Fringe to the nation's economy.

It is worth about £100 million, although in recent years the Fringe has had to survive on a grant of only about £50,000 from the council.

The £250,000 funding package is made up of a one-off grant of £65,000 from the Arts Council, a £125,000 loan from the city council and £60,000 from the government, which has agreed to stump up in advance part of a £200,000 grant it awarded the Fringe last year for a major showcase of home-grown theatre.

Councillor Steve Cardownie, the city's festivals and events champion, said: "This is the first time the Fringe has come to us with a problem of this nature. It has an outstanding reputation and has always appeared to have been run extremely well. I've no doubt that it will be running successfully again next summer and for many years to come."

Tim Hawkins, the acting general manager of the Fringe, said: "This commitment from the City of Edinburgh Council, the Scottish Arts Council and the Scottish Government recognises the Festival's importance, not just to Edinburgh, but to Scotland as a whole."

New role for festival chief

JON Morgan, the Fringe director who resigned after the box-office disaster, has landed a new arts job. The Scotsman has learned he has been appointed director of the Federation of Scottish Theatre.

During three months of chaos at the Fringe box office this summer, ticket sales were suspended several times, a crucial deadline for sending out pre-booked tickets was missed, shows were overbooked and venues had to bring in extra staff to cover. Ticket sales dived by almost 10 per cent.





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1

Snuffy Ivy,

Aberdeen 12/12/2008 03:47:36
WHAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAT?
quarter a million of a handout?
!@#$%^&*()_
2

S'me,

Edinburgh 12/12/2008 06:19:52
Not much money in the scheme of things... 50p per resident over a year...
3

Bibamus,

12/12/2008 06:58:45
To be fair I am sure that the Fringe brings in a lot of people and money to Edinburgh
4

dba,

Haymarket 12/12/2008 07:00:14
YET AGAIN, we have Councillor Cardownie, our Kultrual Czar, wittering on as to how vital the Fringe (or any other Festival for that matter) is for the good of the city!

ENOUGH ALREADY...so we, the ratepayers of Edinburgh are giving them a 'loan' of £125,000. I trust that this will be on COMMERCIAL conditions at COMMERCIAL RATES and for a strictly limited time.

BEFORE a penny is paid by ANY of the emergency funders, the FRINGE should be required to PUBLISH in the Scotsman and the Edinburgh Evening News THEIR EXACT ACCOUNTS TO DATE, with a detailed and written explanation as to (a) how they got into this mess: (b) who (Exactly) was responsible for the ticketing fisaco(c) EXACTLY what purposes the £250,000 will be used for and most importasntly of all (d) What (Exactly) assets are to be offered to the COuncil is respect of the loan.

SORRY Councillor (and 'luvvies') it's a cold, dark, recession-filled real world right now.., if you expect to receive PUBLIC funding NO MORE 'seven veils' NO MORE ifs, buts or maybes, a structured business plan, CLEAR SIGNS of dramatic cut backs...OR NOT A PENNY

Come on Scotsman, get in there, get the financial facts and PUBLISH them! (Or doesn't Johnson Press DO investigative journalism any more?)

OH YES... and in view of the fact that Councillor Cardownie feels it's SO important - HIS RESIGNATION if the loan goes wrong!
5

eric,

lothian 12/12/2008 08:01:01
So this is what they mean by special needs.
6

Guga II,

Rockall 12/12/2008 08:20:53
#4.

Maybe, but not to the average taxpayer.

7

EmbraJack,

12/12/2008 09:04:09
These 'Average taxpayers' might work in shops, pubs, hotels, restaurants, drive taxis, rent rooms or operate performance spaces. All areas that benefit from the money the Fringe brings in.
8

Nacker,

12/12/2008 09:26:48
I have noticed a trend emerging.

Perhaps Mr Ferguson should investigate if any of Councillor Cardownies "other" festival involvements are seeking similar bail out funds.

Lets see if Councillor Cardownie can give the Edinburgh ratepayers a statement confirming the overall position and not drip feed the various festival losses over a period of time.


9

Vandala,

12/12/2008 10:38:25
# Thanks for that.
10

Goggsie #,

Fife 12/12/2008 11:01:24
I'm old enough to remember when the Fringe started when it was regarded with derision by the establishment running the Edinburgh Festival and it was self funded and became very successful. This is just another example of mis-management and any cash required to bail it out ought to be refused and the programme re-organised to have an outcome which doesn't require subsidies.
11

Edinburgh business,

Edinburgh 12/12/2008 12:57:07
11- you seem to forget that the reason they need the money is not to keep them all paid and give them a christmas bonus. Its for them to pay their suppliers from the festival. This Bailout is going to help fund other businesses and stop them from going under.
12

Luke Skywalker,

12/12/2008 13:30:16
The Fringe DOES bring money to the City. This city is going to need it desparately now that the Halifax plus its sundry bits of attachments are becoming Lloyds. I approve.

Please may I ask people such as Guga and dba how many Fringe Shows they supported last year? I supported eight.
13

Bigwull,

edinburgh 12/12/2008 13:37:25
surely mater or pater could have found a mere 1/4 mill, rob from the poor to give to the rich.
14

Ju@n Kerr - the ex labour sheep,

12/12/2008 15:32:57
because theiy canny install a CMS and enough servers for an annual event they kinda know the peak demand for........
15

Ju@n Kerr - the ex labour sheep,

12/12/2008 15:41:04
#14 - for once I actually agree with you. The Fringe does bring in money too edinburgh, it is one of the few successes of it's type. I am a normal working class lad who was brought up to body swerve it and i was glad i broke with tradition.

Some of the shows are absolutely cracking but some are mince. And full of prententious talentless eejits. Burning money and filling many a landlords pocket! But hey, you gotta take the good with the bad. Gugga you should go. I saw Blackwatch at it and it was fantastic, I saw a paly a few year back about 2 brothers going fishing that was very very good. I saw a great play at the theatre worskhop about a fictitious incident potrayed by Scottish soldiers fighting for independence and the British goverment. A great play about Sinatras life story.

Absolutely fantastic. Seriously to the nay sayers. Suck it and see! goto 3 shows. Pick them carefully and go on preview night cos it's far cheaper.

As i say and everyone knows , i am just a failry straightforward guy, but I did like the festival and look forward to more. It is easy to dodge the tankers and luvvies if their not too your amusement.....
16

Ju@n Kerr - the ex labour sheep,

12/12/2008 15:42:46
It's abouttime the large hotels put thei hands in their pockets. I know they don't want to set any precidents, but were in tough times.

Time to do their duty.
17

Nìall,

Edinburgh 12/12/2008 19:07:21
So can someone explain what the Fringe, as a corporate body, actually does?

As far as I can see, they print a brochure and sell tickets, and leave venues and shows to organise themselves. They also run security/stewarding for the Royal Mile buskers.

Methinks this could be done cheaper: outsource the ticketing to an established and proven online outfit and Edinburgh's "usual suspect" music shops and box offices.

Let one of Scotland's magazine publishers organise the program.

Go on, I dare you!
18

brianmca3,

auld reekie 12/12/2008 22:37:12
yes it sounds a lot,but if this was london, money in great amounts wouldbe thrown at it
yes the fringe is full of eejits who think they are funny
but this is the oldest festival,monty python etc were all here years before tv shows
yes give them help
yes get a detailed acount of why and what they need the cash for
liebour council used to give a lot more cash to them,didnt see the hoo haa im seeing now
and finaly make it more accesable to edinburgh folk
have you ever tried to get a tatoo ticket?,no they are all snapped up by london touts,and sold for huge sums on ebay
go take a look next year
its oor city,its oor money so let us get a ticket ,not some greedy london vulcher
19

brianmca3,

auld reekie 12/12/2008 22:40:07
http://shop.ebay.co.uk/items/__edinburgh-tattoo-tickets_W0QQ_nkwZedinburghQ20tattooQ20ticketsQ20QQ_cqrZtrueQQ_nkwuscZedinburghQQ_nkwuscZtatooQQ_nkwuscZtickets

go look tickets for next year on sale now
20

Bede,

The Dark Side 12/12/2008 23:08:54
Can anyone explain how Jon Morgan, the failed Director of the Fringe, got appointed Director of the Federation of Scottish Theatre? From all reports, Lizzi Nicoll has done a fine job in that position over the past several years.

Can we expect the same disaster at FST with this "Old Boy" appointment?

 

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