The Scotsman

Six NHS hip and knee replacemen­t centres get green light in £24bn plan

● Health projects are part of major infrastruc­ture plan unveiled by minister

- By SCOTT MACNAB Political Editor scott.macnab@scotsman.com

Six new NHS elective treatment centres to carry out hip, knee and cataract replacemen­ts are among the projects given the green light in the Scottish Government’s infrastruc­ture plan for the next five years.

Plans for the centre sin Clydebank, Inverness, Livingston, Aberdeen, Tayside and Kirkcaldy were first unveiled five years ago and will now progress as part of the £24 billion programme for 2021-25, unveiled by Infrastruc­ture Secretary Michael Matheson yesterday.

He claims that more than 40,000 jobs will be protected by the programme.

The draft plans will also see a £20 million upgrade of Edinburgh’s Cancer Centre, as well as a new £10m national secure adolescent inpatient service in Irvine and the£18m replacemen­t of the St Brendan’s facility in Barra.

The plans also commit £470 m to the long-awaited replacemen­t of Barlinnie and Inverness prisons with new facilities for Glasgow and the Highlands.

Mr Matheson said: “In 2018 our National Infrastruc­ture Mission committed to boost sustainabl­e economic growth by increasing annual investment in infrastruc­ture by £1.5bn by the end of the next Parliament.

“This plan makes good on that commitment, turning our green economic recovery into reality and helping to support 45,000 jobs

“It is a national strategy driven by the needs of our villages, towns and cities and will deliver benefits to communitie­s across the country. We are living in turbulent times and it is essential that government shows leadership and provides stability and certainty. The Draft IIP provides a robust pipeline of work that will help stimulate a green recovery and offer high quality, sustainabl­e jobs in all parts of Scotland.”

There will also be almost £90 min vested in the Dunfer ml in el earning campus. There will also be about £2bn committed, in partnershi­p with councils, to improving the country’ s schools estate, after 11 new projects were unveiled last year.

More than£8bn goes for environmen­tal sustainabi­lity and the transition to net zero emissions, including £250m to support 18,000 hectares of forestry and restoring peatlands.

Almost £5bn is allocated to inclusive economic grow th, with £500m to extend full fibre broadband to businesses and households in rural areas, and £30m for the National Islands Plan.

Af ur ther£2.8bn will be invested over the five years in order to build more affordable homes, with £58m being committed to allow social homes to be adopted allowing older people to stay in them longer.

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