The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

New LED lights fail to save £900,000

- PETER JOHN MEIKLEM

Replacing Dundee street lights with LEDs has failed to deliver the promised £900,000 a year in savings.

Local authority bosses logged an almost £1 million overspend on city developmen­t last year after expected savings from its replacemen­t light programme failed to materialis­e.

Councillor­s were told in 2017 the £4.8m scheme to fit more than 18,000 new white LED lights would reduce running costs by around £900,000, as well as cutting carbon emissions.

Councillor Richard McCready (Labour) said handling of the scheme raised questions about the “confidence” councillor­s could have in the business cases for key projects.

He said: “Officers are often not very happy about their work being questioned in committee.

“However, we see a situation here where a plan that we were told would save us money, actually hasn’t saved us money and it hasn’t worked out.

Mr McCready said the value in the LED scheme may come from the reduction in carbon emissions.

Colleagues, however, had been presented with a business case built upon the potential for cost savings.

Mr McCready said: “Can we, as councillor­s, have confidence that any business case put in front of us in the future is as robust as it can be?

“I understand there are particular issues around Covid-19 but business cases put in front of us should stand up, be robust and deliver what they say they are going to do.

“When a plan doesn’t do what it is intended to do are we meant to forget about it, walk on, and hope for the best in the future?”

The replacemen­t street lights have also been widely criticised for leaving large parts of the city poorly lit.

The overspend figures emerged as councillor­s debated the local authority’s annual accounts.

The accounts listed the 12 areas in which the council had overspent against its agreed budget and the 19 areas where it had underspent.

Overall, the council spent £4.753m less than it had planned in its 2019/2020 revenue budget.

C ity Deve lopment , however, overspent for the fourth year in a row by £2.6m.

The overspend on LED street lighting and car park security was the third highest.

The largest was £1.5m in “under-recovery of fees and charges” related to building services and just over £1m of additional spending on the Integratio­n Joint Board created by an additional demand for health and social care services.

Council chief executive David Martin said: “There is absolutely no problem whatsoever with elected members querying officers’ business plans and our best estimates sometimes, and thorough business cases in others.

“That’s why reports come to elected members for scrutiny.

“On the particular issue of the LEDs, we have, in fact, brought a report back to tackle that particular issue and elected members thoroughly debated it.”

Councillor Fraser Macp her son( Liberal Democrats) had similar concerns over the overspend.

He said: “This is almost £1 million. I wonder if we can get some reassuranc­e that this issue will be taken account of in future budgets so we don’t end up with an unrealisti­c level of expectatio­n on what can be achieved?”

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