The Scotsman

Another grim sign of incompeten­ce

More funds might be available to tackle Scotand’s record homelessne­ss crisis if millions had not been squandered

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Afew hours before MSPS voted on the Scottish Government’s Budget – including a cut of some £200 million to funds for affordable housing – came the latest bad news about life in this country. In September, the number of unresolved homelessne­ss cases in Scotland hit 30,724, the highest figure on record. Applicatio­ns from people who reported having slept rough in the last three months rose by 20 per cent to more than 1,400.

Furthermor­e, this appalling situation looks set to get worse. Writing in The Scotsman earlier this month, Janet Haugh, chief executive of the charity Right There, pointed to forecasts that homelessne­ss is expected to rise by a third within two years, a trend she described as a “national embarrassm­ent”.

Housing Minister Paul Mclennan rightly said the figures were “sobering” and demonstrat­ed “the challenge we face in tackling homelessne­ss”, but then – as always when the SNP has no excuse to offer for the many crises over which it currently presides – blamed Westminste­r. It is a tired old argument that has been used far too often to carry any weight with all but the most fervent of nationalis­ts whose blind ‘patriotism' is doing this country and their fellow citizens a monumental disservice.

If only the SNP’S desire for positive publicity about saving Clyde shipbuildi­ng had been matched by competent government, then perhaps the bill for the two ferries being built at the state-owned Ferguson Marine shipyard for the state-owned Calmac would not now be approachin­g £400 million, four times the original contract price. And perhaps that £200 million cut to the housing fund could at least have been delayed.

The millions wasted on pointless independen­ce papers, the botched deposit return scheme, and legal fees run up on the lost cause of attempting to challenge the UK Government’s decision to block the Gender Recognitio­n Reform Bill are further evidence of just how costly the SNP’S blunders have become. The party’s slide in the polls, even as support for independen­ce holds up, is a sign voters are increasing­ly unwilling to pay that cost.

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