The Sunday Post (Newcastle)

Labour’s plan to scrap private finance deals on schools and hospitals

Leader lays out vision for Scotland if he wins next Holyrood election ‘We will end firms raking off millions,’ says Leonard

- By Andrew Picken APICKEN@SUNDAYPOST.COM

Labour want to axe PFIstyle deals to build Scotland’s new schools, hospitals and colleges.

Scottish Labour leader Richard Leonard said if his party won the next Holyrood election it would stop using private finance deals that have been used to pay for hundreds of new public buildings.

Addressing his party’s conference in Dundee, Mr Leonard also said all social care contracts would be brought back in- house by councils, and the number of care homes operated by local authoritie­s would also increase.

Mr Leonard, who also wants to fully nationalis­e Scotland’s railways, said he would end private firms “raking off millions in profits” from providing public services.

He said: “The mess we have seen with the collapse of Carillion confirms that private contractor­s carrying out public contracts exposes too big a risk to our public services.

“This should never ever be allowed to happen again.

“So let me assure you that our starting point in Scottish Labour is to ensure our public services are there to serve the Scottish public not the balance sheets of financiers.

“De-privatisin­g public services and developing public ownership is a radical change.

“But it will be a Labour change and a popular change .

“At a time when the public sector is facing so many budget cuts, it is unjust that private companies through PFI and the SNP’s Non Profit Distributi­on ( NPD) and Hubco schemes are raking off millions in profits. These contracts do not provide value for money.”

When it was in power in Westminste­r and Holyrood, Labour pioneered the use of Private Finance Initiative­s ( PFI) to build schools, health centres and colleges.

The SNP introduced a variation of PFI known as NPD.

It was implemente­d by the Scottish Futures Trust quango, which pays out less in profits to the private firms financing the schemes.

Scottish Labour now wants to axe all private funding of public projects and instead use Government-issued loans, bonds and the vast investment resources of the public pension funds.

The party says it would look to re negotiate existing privately financed deals but previous efforts to do this have had limited success due to the scale of penalty clauses for ending contracts early.

Mr Leonard also unveiled plans to reform Scotland’s private rented sector with a new points- based system that would link the level of rents to average wages to ensure they are affordable and give tenants the power to challenge unfair rents.

In addition, the Scottish Labour leader pledged to “start building council houses again”, and called for local authority pension funds to be used to invest in public housing.

Scottish Conser vative chief whip Maurice Golden said: “This conference has proved Labour are at war with themselves, rendering them incapable of taking on anyone else.

“The farcical splits and amateurish divisions expose a party in crisis.

“They are too weak to stand up to the SNP, and can’t even put together a credible opposition, let alone government-in-waiting.”

 ??  ?? New Scottish Labour leader Richard Leonard addressed the party faithful at the annual conference in Dundee’s Caird Hall yesterday
New Scottish Labour leader Richard Leonard addressed the party faithful at the annual conference in Dundee’s Caird Hall yesterday
 ??  ?? Tory Maurice Golden says Labour is at war with itself
Tory Maurice Golden says Labour is at war with itself

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