The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Boarded-up centre costing £1,000 a week since 2017

- GRAHAM BROWN

An empty Angus leisure centre still standing after a Court of Session fight has cost taxpayers more than £1,000 a week to maintain since the shutters went up in 2017.

With councillor­s set to debate a call for a full independen­t review of the saga surroundin­g Lochside in Forfar, a Freedom of Informatio­n request has revealed the bill for the boarded-up building has now topped a quarter of a million pounds.

The figure does not include the council’s court costs involved in fighting the challenge mounted by two town businessme­n against the £4 5 0 , 0 0 0 demolition plan for the Forfar Loch building.

Lochside was replaced by new facilities at Forfar Community Campus and councillor­s agreed to raze the 45-year-old centre after officials said it was sinking.

However, town developer Mark Guild and hotelier Donald Stewart branded the decision unlawful and ultimately succeeded in a legal fight in Scotland’s highest court.

The council is now considerin­g its next move, which is likely to involve a full public consultati­on on the centre’s future.

FOI figures have now revealed more than £ 56,000 was spent on Lochside in 2019-20 – the bulk of the costs a whopping rates bill of almost £45,000.

Security spending of £2,100, water and energy bills of £6,500 and £1,800 of maintenanc­e added to the tally.

Meanwhile, top level legal advice which led to councillor­s stepping back from taking the Lochside battle to the UK Supreme Court will remain confidenti­al.

At a meeting on September 10, councillor­s agreed not to challenge the majority ruling of the three-judge panel in the Inner House, a decision which overturned an earlier finding in favour of the authority over the handling of Lochside’s planned demolition.

Administra­tion leader David Fairweathe­r said at that time: “If we were to appeal this, given the council’s adherence to the principle of obtaining best value for the public purse, the financial risk of losing would be too great.”

A Freedom of Informatio­n request for the minute of the September meeting has now been rejected by officials.

“Having considered the release of this report it has been concluded that it is exempt from release under section 36(1) of the Freedom of Informatio­n (Scotland) Act 2002 as it constitute­s internal communicat­ion in the form of privileged legal advice in respect of which a claim to confidenti­ality of communicat­ions could be maintained ,” said the council.”

Forfar councillor Braden Davy has lodged a motion for a special full meeting of the council, demanding an independen­t review into the saga and seeking action on the consultati­on around the former centre’s future.

 ??  ?? MOTHBALLED: A security guard patrols the former leisure centre, which is at the centre of a long-running dispute.
MOTHBALLED: A security guard patrols the former leisure centre, which is at the centre of a long-running dispute.

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