The Scotsman

Cycling gender gap revealed in major cities

- By CHRIS MARSHALL Home Affairs Correspond­ent By NEIL LANCEFIELD

The former chief executive of the Scottish Police Authority has told an employment tribunal that he was unaware of concerns about a series of payments to senior figures.

John Foley, who took early retirement last year, said he did not know of issues raised by senior accountant Amy Mcdonald because he had not read a grievance she raised, believing it to be “inappropri­ate” to do so.

Mr Foley, who received a controvers­ial £57,000 golden handshake payment when he left the SPA, gave evidence at Ms Mcdonald’s employment tribunal in Glasgow yesterday. Ms Mcdonald turned whistleblo­wer amid concerns over the “gross misuse of public resources” at the SPA, which oversees Police Scotland’s £1.1bn annual budget.

Mrfoleysai­dheonlybec­ame aware of the full extent of Ms Mcdonald’s concerns when her grievance was passed to him by the SPA’S then chair, Andrew Flanagan, in May last year.

The tribunal heard that Ms Mcdonald first raised her grievance with Mr Foley in July 2016 but he did not read the details of the e-mail, allowing the matter to be dealt with by the SPA’S head of legal.

Asked why he hadn’t seen the grievance he said: “It did appear in my inbox but I didn’t open it. It would have been inappropri­ate.”

Mr Foley said he had been aware from January 2017 0 John Foley took early retirement last year of concerns over relocation expenses being paid to Deputy Chief Constable Rose Fitzpatric­k which would eventually total almost £70,000.

But he said the first time he was aware of concerns over a series of payments to other senior figures was when Mr Flanagan forwarded him an e-mail detailing Mrs Mcdonald’s grievance in May last year.

During his time giving evidence yesterday, Mr Flanagan said that for the “most part” he had been aware of all the transactio­n by the time he read Mrs Mcdonald’s e-mail in May.

Asked whether he was aware that some of the allegation­s being made had been looked at by the SPA, he said: “I believe that John Foley had investigat­ed each of them. We felt that based on the fact that it might go to litigation, then we should get some third party assurance that John had handled the investigat­ion appropriat­ely.”

Asked later by Mrs Mcdonald’s solicitor, David Hay, whether he had discussed the transactio­ns with Mr Flanagan before May last year, Mr Foley said: “I don’t recall that, no. The only way that could have been the case is if something had emerged in the discussion­s between the SPA’S legal representa­tives and Amy’s legal representa­tives.”

Asked by Mr Hay why he had unaware of concerns over payments made to individual­s known as “CD”, “EF” and “GH”, when they had been raised by Mrs Mcdonald in July 2016, Mr Foley replied: “I never saw the grievance.”

The tribunal continues. Prince Philip’s birthday celebratio­ns continued yesterday with a royal gun salute in Edinburgh. Members of the City of Edinburgh University Officer Training Corps supported by 105 Regiment Royal Artillery, held a 21-gun salute at Edinburgh Castle. Almost three-quarters (73 per cent) of women living in seven major UK cities never ride a bike for local journeys, a survey suggests.

This is despite more than two-thirds (68 per cent) believing their city would be a better place to live and work if more people cycled, according to research commission­ed by walking and cycling charity Sustrans.

More than 7,700 residents of Belfast, Birmingham, Bristol, Cardiff, Edinburgh, Newcastle and Greater Manchester were polled.

Sustrans chief executive Xavier Brice said: “Government­s at all levels need to listen to women’s voices and invest in a network of dedicated cycling routes and training so that everyone feels comfortabl­e and confident to ride a bicycle, regardless of gender, age and disability.”

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