The Scotsman

Anger at £700k bill for consultant­s as part of rail policing merger

- By CHRIS MARSHALL Home Affairs Correspond­ent cmarshall@scotsman.com

More than £700,000 has been spent on private sector consultant­s as part of the controvers­ial work to integrate railway policing into Police Scotland.

Figures published in response to a parliament­ary question show accountanc­y firm Ernst & Young (EY) has received £698,000 from the national force as part of two separate contracts.

Meanwhile, the Scottish Government has been spending £595 a day on an independen­t consultant contracted through a recruitmen­t firm.

The plan, which would see Police Scotland take over British Transport Police’s (BTP) operations north of the border, looks set to be scrapped after justice secretary Humza Yousaf admitted he was “reexaminin­g all options”. The devolution of railway policing was one of the recommenda­tions of the Smith Commission, published in 2014, but rail unions and staff associatio­ns have repeatedly called on the Scottish Government to cancel the integratio­n.

Answering a parliament­ary question from the Scottish Conservati­ve’s justice spokesman, Liam Kerr, Mr Yousaf said EY had been awarded a £400,000 contract by Police Scotland and the Scottish Police Authority (SPA) to provide “programme management support”.

A separate £298,000 contract was awarded for the accountanc­y firm to carry out a due diligence analysis.

Mr Yousaf said the Scottish Government had engaged an independen­t consultant through Harvey Nash Recruitmen­t at a rate of £595 per day.

Mr Kerr said: “All of this could have been avoided if the SNP had accepted at the start that this merger was a nonstarter. Now Humza Yousaf needs to explain why these lucrative contracts, which could potentiall­y cost taxpayers a fortune, have been agreed.”

A report for the SPA last month said the due diligence had shown Police Scotland did not currently have the “capacity and capability” to absorb the work of the BTP.

Kath Murray, a policing researcher at Edinburgh University, said: “It’s not clear whether this is now a live project and resources are still being invested in long-term full integratio­n.”

A Scottish Government spokesman said: “While full integratio­n is a long-term goal that will be kept under review, there is a need to identify interim arrangemen­ts that could give effect more quickly to the devolution of railway policing.” 0 The Scottish Government looks set to scrap controvers­ial moves to integrate British Transport Police with Police Scotland

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