
John Swinney warned about bus maker Alexander Dennis relocation a year ago
John Swinney was warned that bus maker Alexander Dennis was thinking about moving away from Scotland nearly a year ago, according to reports.
The First Minister was told in a letter from the firm's president and chief executive in August that it was 'reconsidering' its 'entire investment', the Herald reports.
Alexander Dennis announced last week that it was closing its factories in Camelon and Larbert as part of plans to centralise its operations in England.
President and chief executive of its parent company Paul Soubry said: "We are regretfully left with the impression through recent developments that the Scottish Government has little regard for domestic bus manufacturing jobs in Scotland and we have no choice but to reconsider our entire investment in the Scottish operations of Alexander Dennis.
"In fact, in an attempt to enhance our price competitiveness we have already been forced to offshore certain fabrication functions to China.
" I would appreciate an urgent face-to-face meeting with you and key members of your Government to further discuss this critical situation."
Labour MP for Falkirk Euan Stainbank said: "It is absolutely astonishing that John Swinney was informed of the real risk to Alexander Dennis's Scottish operations close to a year ago. He appears in the interim to have done absolutely nothing to avert this.
"This is a monumental failure of SNP industrial policy. Greater Manchester bought more than five times as many buses from Alexander Dennis than the SNP did - operating under the exact same legal framework. John Swinney should be embarrassed by that."
A month after Soubry's letter, a further call between the First Minister and NFI and ADL showed that Swinney advised and asked that Scottish Enterprise 'exhaust all options to support the business'.
A Scottish Government spokesperson said: 'We are exploring all viable options throughout the consultation period to allow the firm to retain their hard-working employees and manufacturing and production facilities at Falkirk and Larbert.
'Since 2020, ADL secured orders for more zero emission buses than any other single manufacturer through the Scottish Zero Emission Bus Challenge Fund and its predecessor the Scottish Ultra Low Emission Bus Scheme.
" ADL has received £58m of Scottish Government subsidy for vehicles under these programmes. ADL have secured orders for more than 360 vehicles through Scottish Government zero emission bus funding programmes, compared to the 160 currently on order from Manchester.
'In response to correspondence in August 2024, the First Minister met with the company that same month, and Scottish Enterprise have been supporting the company with additional supportive measures.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Daily Mail
2 hours ago
- Daily Mail
Alex Salmond's allies hit back at Nicola Sturgeon's claims he leaked details of sexual misconduct saga
Allies of Alex Salmond have hit back at Nicola Sturgeon 's claims he may have leaked details of his own sexual misconduct saga. The ex-SNP leader and Alba Party founder was cleared in 2020 of 13 sexual offence charges, including attempted rape, though his lawyer conceded during the trial that his client could have been a 'better man'. The latest extract from Sturgeon's soon-to-be published memoir, Frankly, centres around how Salmond reacted to multiple allegations of sexual misconduct levelled against him in 2018 - many of which made their way into the press. In the book Sturgeon denies any responsibility for the leaks and says that she does not know who was behind them. Controversially, she also claims in her memoir that it would have been 'classic Alex' to have made the leaks himself. Her remarks have caused fury among the Scottish political elite, with Kenny MacAskill - the man who succeeded Salmond as Alba Party leader - calling Sturgeon out for her 'hypocrisy'. Meanwhile, Chris McEleny, the party's former general secretary, branded Sturgeon's speculations a 'fabrication'. MacAskill, a former SNP minister who succeeded Salmond as Alba Party leader, recently called for a public inquiry into the way sexual misconduct complaints against Salmond were handled. In the book Sturgeon denies any responsibility for the leaks and says that she does not know who was behind them - but suggested it would have been 'classic Alex' for him to have He posted on X: 'It's one thing to be supposedly candid in your autobiography. 'Quite another to block openness and transparency when in office and by those you continue to support. 'This hypocrisy is yet another reason for an inquiry into the Scottish government's actions relating to Alex Salmond.' Alex Salmond served as first minister of Scotland from 2007 but stood down in 2014 after losing the Scottish independence referendum. Sturgeon took over the top job and in 2018 allegations against Salmond began to surface, following a review of the Scottish government's 'policies and processes for addressing inappropriate conduct' in the wake of the #metoo scandal. Salmond was accused of a string of sexual offences between June 2008 and November 2014, which ranged from him stroking a civil servant's hair to trying to rape a former Scottish Government official in Bute House. However, in March 2020 he was cleared of all charges, although his lawyer Alex Prentice KC famously said: 'If in some ways the former first minister had been a better man, I wouldn't be here, you wouldn't be here, none of us would be here. 'I'm not here to suggest he always behaved well or couldn't have been a better man on occasions. That would be a waste of my time. MacAskill, a former SNP minister, called Sturgeon out for her 'hypocrisy' after claiming she 'block[ed] openness and transparency when in office' The pair were once close, but Sturgeon now says that once she realised Salmond's 'thirst for revenge' was greater than the bond between them, she knew their friendship was over 'But I'm in a court of law and I'm dealing, not with whether he could have been a better man because he certainly could have been better. 'I'm dealing with whether or not it was established he was guilty of serious, sometimes very serious, criminal charges.' Additionally a judicial review in 2019 found that the Scottish government's investigation into Salmond's alleged misconduct was unfair, unlawful and biased. As a result Salmond received £500,000 in legal expenses. Chris McEleny, the Alba Party's former general secretary, who was himself expelled following an investigation into 'gross misconduct' earlier this year, called Sturgeon's remarks a 'fabrication'. He said the investigation into Salmond was a 'stitch-up' and claimed that a number of public bodies had 'conspired to jail Salmond'. He said: 'Alex Salmond delivered an SNP government, an SNP majority and an independence referendum whereas Nicola Sturgeon delivered nothing whatsoever for the national cause. 'Nicola might think she can fabricate her own version of the truth now that Alex is no longer here but the reality is her book will end up in a bargain basket whilst Alex Salmond will reside in the pages of the Scottish history books.' The story about the investigation of sexual misconduct claims against Salmond was broken by journalist David Clegg, then political editor of the Daily Record. Speaking on BBC Scotland's The Sunday Show, Mr Clegg, who is currently editor of The Courier, called the notion that Alex Salmond had leaked the story himself 'a conspiracy theory too far'. He said: 'But I think it shows the level of suspicion and the deep rift that had formed between Alex Salmond and Nicola Sturgeon prior to his death.' Me Clegg said a document arrived at the Daily Record office with the claims against Salmond summarised - but described the idea that it came from Salmond as 'not credible'. He added: 'There is obviously some mystery and speculation about what went on seven years ago and how that happened. 'But if it was Alex Salmond who had leaked it, when I phoned him up that night to put the claims to him, he did an incredible acting job of seeming surprised and shocked. 'I have heard this from people close to Nicola Sturgeon before and it's always struck me as not credible and I would be very surprised if it was the case.' Salmond died of a heart attack in North Macedonia last October, aged 69 - but before his death he maintained there had been a 'conspiracy' between his accusers to bring him down. 'What he never did was show any contrition,' lamented Sturgeon, who added that she felt 'sick' over the allegations. In an extract published by The Sunday Times, the former First Minister added that 'ruthless' Salmond would have done anything to extricate himself from blame - even if it meant the downfall of his party. 'There was also never the merest hint of concern about the damage he did to the party he previously led. 'Indeed, it felt to me that he would have rather destroyed the SNP than see it succeed without him. 'He was prepared to traumatise, time and again, the women at the centre of it all.' Sturgeon said the notion his accusers had collaborated with one another to accuse him of misconduct was 'a fabrication, the invention of a man who wasn't prepared to reflect honestly on his own conduct'. She added: 'That he tried to distort and weaponise genuine expressions of shock, in some cases trauma, was truly disgraceful, and it strikes at the heart of why I find it so hard to forgive him.' Retired SNP politician Alex Neil said Sturgeon should issue a retraction after journalist David Clegg categorically denied that Alex Salmond had leaked the report on his own sexual misconduct accusations At the point of realising his 'thirst for revenge' was greater than the bond between them, Sturgeon said she knew their friendship was over for good and she went through a 'grieving process'. She wrote: 'For a time after we stopped speaking I would have conversations with him in my head about politics and the issues of the day. 'I had occasional, vivid dreams in which we were still on good terms. I would wake up from these feeling utterly bereft.' And even now after Salmond's passing, Sturgeon admitted his impact on her continues and she will 'never quite escape the shadow he casts, even in death'. Ms Sturgeon ruled Scottish politics for years before she walked away from Scotland's top job in March 2023 - shortly before her husband Peter Murrell was arrested in a police probe into the SNP's finances. She was arrested in June 2023 in relation to the Operation Branchform investigation into the SNP's finances. Sturgeon was subsequently released without charge pending further investigation, while Mr Murrell - formerly SNP chief executive - was eventually charged in relation to the alleged embezzlement of party funds.


The Herald Scotland
3 hours ago
- The Herald Scotland
Police officers 'at risk' with asbestos in stations
It comes as figures obtained by the Scottish Conservatives through freedom of information request, revealed that 177 police stations around the country contain the potentially harmful substance. The substance was banned in construction by 1999 but is still present in may older buildings. It can cause serious lung and respiratory conditions. But with 214 police stations across Scotland, there are just 37 that do not contain any asbestos. All 13 divisions of Police Scotland contain stations with asbestos, while three - Tayside, Edinburgh and the Lothians and Scottish Borders - include reinforced autoclaved aerated concrete (RAAC), the lightweight material used in the deadly Grenfell Tower fire in 2017. Read more: The highest number of stations with asbestos is found in Aberdeenshire and Moray where 25 buildings contain the material, followed by 23 in Greater Glasgow and 21 in Tayside. 19 buildings in the Lothians and Scottish Borders contain asbestos, as do 18 in Lanarkshire and 11 each in Edinburgh, Argyll and West Dunbartonshire and Ayrshire. Fife and Dumfries and Galloway have 10 buildings each with asbestos, Forth Valley, nine, Renfrewshire and Inverclyde, six and Highlands and Islands, three. The precise stations affected by asbestos and RAAC have not been revealed. Liam Kerr, justice spokesman for the Scottish Tories, said the "dangerous" figures must act as a wake up call for the Scottish Government. The party also warned that the Scottish Police Federation (SPF) has warned about the state of police stations in the country for years. In evidence to Holyrood's justice committee in 2019, former SPF general secretary Calum Steele described Ayr station as "probably being carved out of asbestos". He described much of the police estate across Scotland as "frankly decrepit". Read more: Mr Kerr said: 'It is utterly appalling and downright dangerous that any of Scotland's police stations should still contain asbestos. 'The fact the vast majority do across the country is deeply alarming and puts our hardworking officers and staff at great risk. 'These shocking findings are the latest example of the SNP's shameful neglect of Police Scotland. 'They have ignored warnings for years about Scotland's crumbling police estate and left officers and staff working in these buildings to face the consequences. 'This must be an urgent wake up call for the SNP justice secretary to properly fund our police estate and guarantee asbestos will be removed from all of these stations where it is safe to do so as quickly as possible.' Senior management at Police Scotland declared 29 stations were unfit for purpose in October 2023. The force is considering the feasibility of retaining some stations as part of its 10-year Estates Masterplan. It was revealed in 2023 that around 140 police stations across the country had been closed, with front desks falling from 340 in 2013 to 253 in 2023. A Scottish Government spokesperson said: 'While responsibility for manging the police estate is for Police Scotland, we support their work to address issues in police buildings and welcome their commitment to providing a safe environment for officers, staff and the public. 'We have more than tripled the policing capital budget since 2017-18 and we are investing a record £1.64 billion for policing this year. This includes £70 million of capital funding to invest in resources and estates.'


Daily Record
3 hours ago
- Daily Record
Perth and Kinross Council objection to super-sized solar farm in Coupar Angus sparks public inquiry
Councillors have voted to object to a 110MW battery and solar energy park on 105 hectares of prime agricultural land A public local inquiry has been sparked after Perth and Kinross councillors voted to object to a massive energy development on prime agricultural land. The 105-hectare plant is the latest of many renewable energy proposals for the Coupar Angus area, prompting concerns the Perthshire town - famed for its fertile land - was transforming into "Solar" Angus. On Wednesday, August 6 Perth and Kinross Council's (PKC) Planning and Placemaking Committee voted - against council officers' recommendation - to object to Stirling Battery and Solar Energy Park. Sirius EcoDev (Stirling) Ltd submitted an application to the Scottish Government's Energy Consents Unit (ECU) to develop a 110MW energy plant on land between Burrelton and Coupar Angus, 600 metres north-west of Caddam Cottage, Keithick. The planning application is being considered by the Scottish Government's ECU due to it generating over 50MW of power. The 50MW battery storage system and 60MW solar energy park would be erected on prime agricultural land the size of over 146 football pitches. At Wednesday's meeting, councillors were simply asked whether or not PKC should object to the application as a statutory consultee. PKC'S Building Standards and Development Management service manager Kristian Smith reminded councillors the National Planning Framework 4's (NPF4) policy "allows this sort of energy development proposal on prime agricultural land". He said council officers had considered the cumulative impact and deemed it as being "acceptable". However, uncertainty does still loom over the controversial nearby 91-hectare Markethill Solar Farm proposal, which drew 173 objections. It was refused by councillors in December 2023. The decision was subsequently appealed and called in by Scottish Ministers. Mr Smith said: "It's been sitting with Ministers since May of last year and we have chased multiple times to get a decision and that has not - as yet - been forthcoming. "It would have been very helpful to have had an outcome on that application over the last year and a half but, notwithstanding, we've still taken into account that proposal and feel the cumulative impacts related to the proposals that are subject to this consultation are acceptable." Conservative councillor Keith Allan said: "What is the ceiling? Where do we feel the line is where we would say, 'we can't consider that'?" He added: "Looking at the map, and the bits that have previously gone under consideration, it seems excessive. If this all goes ahead, we can change its name from Coupar Angus to Solar Angus." Liberal Democrat councillor Claire McLaren added: "The frustration is the recognition food producing land (prime agricultural land) - where there is only eight per cent in Scotland - is being overlooked within NPF4. Food supply to food retailers is an important matter and there is a cumulative impact on that." Conservative Blairgowrie and Glens councillor Bob Brawn moved to formally object to the application. He said he did not object to renewable energy developments but added: "The important thing is they have to be in the right place. And I feel that over the past few months we are slowly seeing Coupar Angus potentially becoming some form of industrialised site for solar farms and in doing so we're losing prime agricultural land. "Our own policy says prime agricultural land should be protected and it does allow it for essential infrastructure. I would argue that, at the moment, this is not essential and the cost of losing agricultural land - in this instance and what we have seen and what is already approved - is getting to the point of too much." Cllr Brawn suggested national planning policy makers perhaps did not believe "prime agricultural land would be thrown at developers like this". He said: "That wasn't the spirit of what NPF4 was about. It was about producing renewable energy in the right place at the right time. I feel we're witnessing abuse of NPF4, simply by people throwing prime agricultural land out to do this." PKC objecting will trigger a local public inquiry, which Cllr Brawn welcomes. He said: "I think a public local inquiry is deserved in this instance in this area. I think it would be a good thing for everyone whatever the outcome is. People will get their chance to speak." Cllr Ian James seconded the motion. SNP councillor Ian Harvey tabled an amendment not to object. Cllr Richard Watters seconded the amendment with the proviso "a thorough investigation is done into the cumulative impact on prime agricultural land around Coupar Angus and across Perth and Kinross". Seven councillors - four Conservatives, one Lib Dem, one Independent and local Strathmore ward SNP councillor Grant Stewart - voted to object to the Coupar Angus development. The remaining four SNP councillors voted not to object to the development. Convener SNP councillor Ian Massie thanked councillors for their votes and said: "Therefore that means the consultation goes forward with an objection from Perth and Kinross Council."