Edinburgh Evening News

Tenants of South Bridge Resource Centre object to Fringe lease

-

Edinburgh Fringe will turn an old school into a new multi-million pound “hub” after the council agreed a lease for the city centre building.

The Old Town’s South Bridge Resource Centre will be repurposed as a “year-round Fringe community hub” for artists, using £7 million awarded by the UK Government. The former school – which comes with a “considerab­le repair bill” – will undergo a major refurbishm­ent.

But groups who use the centre have hit back at the move, saying their needs have not been considered and accusing the council of “tokenistic” engagement with them over relocation to another space in the city.

The Centre currently accommodat­es over 1100 learners spanning 85 classes. These include literacy and numeracy support, deaf learning, ESOL and a range of classes including singing, pottery, art, languages and computer groups.

It has been let to the Edinburgh Festival Fringe Society (EFFS) on a 99-year lease for £1 a year on the basis that EFFS spend millions on the building, following a decision at the Council’s Finance and Resources Committee.

Announcing the signing of the lease the council said alternativ­e locations have already been found for most groups. But a group representi­ng adult learners said they still don't know where they will be going.

A spokespers­on for the adult learners forum said: "We feel very strongly that our position as learners and regular users of the Centre has not been considered. It is on many bus routes, has suitable parking and is central. Council officers have very little idea of the nature and breadth of the learning that goes on in the building and consequent­ly no real idea what constitute­s a “suitable“alternativ­e provision."

In a report on the proposals last April it said a “considerab­le amount of work” was still required before a long lease can be signed, including the council relocating adult education services "without any detriment to the service."

But the adult learners forum said this has not been done and that no decision should have been taken at the committee meeting to approve the lease.

They added: "We are baffled as to how council officers can have identified locations which are ‘suitable’ if they have not taken the time to find out what the learners need from those locations. Any engagement that has been undertaken has been instigated by the adult learners themselves. Any council activity has been very last minute and tokenistic.

"It would seem that, yet again, the council is more inclined to accommodat­e the needs of visitors to the city than those of Edinburgh people who they are employed and elected to serve."

Councillor Val Walker, Culture and Communitie­s Convener for the City of Edinburgh Council, said the decision means the Edinburgh Festival Fringe Society now has a substantia­l city centre location for their exciting plans for a new hub as well as a Fringe Festival home.

 ?? ?? Adult learners who use the centre have hit back at the council over the lease of the South Bridge Resource Centre
Adult learners who use the centre have hit back at the council over the lease of the South Bridge Resource Centre

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom