Sunday Mail (UK)

AN EMPTY PROMISE

Company set up by FM to help kids in care blasted over lack of progress

- John Ferguson

A taxpayer-funded firm set up by Nicola Sturgeon to help children in care splurged £ 100,000 on SNP-linked lobbyists.

The Promise Scotland is facing claims it has fai led to make “any tangible dif ference” for disadvanta­ged youngsters despite handing the huge sum to controvers­ial PR consultant­s Charlotte Street Partners.

The Promise was set up by ministers with a budget of over £1million in 2021 after an official review concluded children in care were being failed.

But its 18-strong staff, headed by £100,000-a-year chief executive Fraser McKinlay, admit they have “no regulatory powers or service delivery function”.

Much of their work to date appears to have been setting up a website which boasts a mission to ensure “care experience­d children and young people grow up loved, safe, and respected”.

Labour MSP Monica Lennon said: “There are legitimate concerns this is nothing more than an expensive talking shop through which SNP cronies are making a lot of money whi le achieving little for children in care.

“Meanwhi le, frontline services a re in c r i s i s thanks to Scottish Government cuts.

“A lmost two years after the launch of The Promise, there are big questions about what’s being done to improve the life chances of care-experience­d people.

“H ir ing consultant­s and highly paid execut ives is all very well if it’s making any tangible difference but there is a lack of progress and evidence to prove that everything that can be done is being pursued.”

Sturgeon announced The Promise following a damning report that highlighte­d the “separation, trauma, stigma and pain” in the care system that had let young people down.

Edinburgh- based Charlotte Street Partners was paid almost £100,000 despite close links to the SNP and having been embroiled in a conflict- of- interests scandal after employing Deputy Speaker of the House of Lords Ian Duncan.

Andrew Wilson – a former SNP MSP who wrote Sturgeon’s economic prospectus fo r

LINK independen­ce – founded the commun i c a t ion s a genc y in 2014. He left in recent weeks.

Meanwhi le, senior partner Kevin Pringle is a former SNP communicat­ions chief.

The Promise also paid Fraser McKinlay Consulting Ltd to do financial consultanc­y work before appointing McKinlay as boss.

Accounts show a firm called Greater Good Communicat­ion was paid for “communicat­ions support” despite being owned by Mairi Clare Rodgers, who was previously head of external affairs.

Fi McFarlane, head of public affairs at The Promise, said: “The set- up of a new organisati­on required external communicat­ions and strategy support and, following a tender process, Charlotte Street Partners were appointed. At no point did they lobby on behalf of The Promise Scotland.

“After an open and competitiv­e recruitmen­t process, with multiple candidates interviewe­d by a panel with external representa­tives, Fraser McKinlay was appointed as chief executive from September 2022.

“Mairi Clare Rodgers was head of communicat­ions until February 2022. She carried out a few days’ work on transition projects for the organisati­on immediatel­y after she left. At no point was she paid as a consultant as well as her salary.

“The Promise Scotland has an important part to play in supporting the change needed to implement the conclusion­s of the independen­t care review but it is not directly responsibl­e for the delivery of these actions.

“There are clear signs of tangible progress like the introducti­on of the Children’s Care and Justice Bill, the Whole Family Wellbeing Fund and the imminent report of the Hearings System Working Group.”

The Scottish Government said: “We are determined to lead from the front to Keep The Promise by 2030.”

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 ?? ?? CONCERNS Labour MSP Monica Lennon. Above, the Promise Scotland logo and, right, Fraser McKinlay
CONCERNS Labour MSP Monica Lennon. Above, the Promise Scotland logo and, right, Fraser McKinlay
 ?? ?? STRUGGLE Review concluded children in care were being failed
STRUGGLE Review concluded children in care were being failed
 ?? ?? Andrew Wilson. Below, Kevin Pringle
Andrew Wilson. Below, Kevin Pringle

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