The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Benefits headquarte­rs in Dundee receives 584 applicatio­ns for 80 jobs

Social security minister confirms that interim site for head office will be revealed next week

- GareTh mcpherson poliTical ediTor gmcpherson@thecourier.co.uk

Scotland’s new welfare headquarte­rs at Dundee has been swamped with job applicatio­ns.

Nearly 600 people have applied for 80 posts at the social security agency’s head office.

The site for the HQ has still not been confirmed, but Social Security Minister Jeane Freeman told a press briefing yesterday that the temporary location for the city centre offices will be revealed next week.

Holyrood is to take control of £3.3 billion worth of benefits from Westminste­r by 2021, including personal independen­ce payments and carer’s allowance.

The first devolved benefits are due to be distribute­d in Scotland in the summer.

“We have just closed the applicatio­n window for the first set of jobs in the headquarte­rs in Dundee,” she said.

“We have had 500-plus applicatio­ns for that and so will start moving to the next bit of the recruitmen­t exercise.

“We’ll continue in the same way as we are incrementa­lly taking responsibi­lity for each of the benefits.

“We are incrementa­lly building the agency so we will start recruiting successive tranches of staff.”

A total of 584 applicatio­ns were made for the first batch of jobs in Dundee – 80 positions to administer carer’s allowance supplement from this summer.

On the location of the offices, which must be operationa­l within weeks, she said: “We should announce in the next week or so where the interim premises will be for the Dundee headquarte­rs.

“We’ve always said that both the Dundee headquarte­rs and the Glasgow site will be centrally located and public facing.

“So they are not going to be in a business park and they’re not going to be a big shed that nobody can get into.

“As well as providing the necessary infrastruc­ture, back office functions and so on, they will be open to the general public to come in and get advice and support for any benefits they might be entitled to.”

Tensions between the two government­s on the handover have been rising, with reports emerging of UK Government sources claiming Scottish ministers have requested that parts of the transfer are pushed back.

Asked whether clashes between the two administra­tions over the new benefits system could lead to delays, Ms Freeman said: “It has always been identified by me as one of the major risks in what is the single biggest transfer of powers to the Scottish Parliament since devolution.

“This is a major task and there are risks in that. The capacity for the two government­s to match their pace and their timing is inevitably a significan­t risk area.

“There are others. IT build and infrastruc­ture is a risk area and it would be a foolish government minister that said it wasn’t.”

This is a major task and there are risks in that. JEANE FREEMAN, SOCIAL SECURITY MINISTER

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