The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Council under fire after spending £150,000 on hand-held devices.

Local authority cites campaign to reduce paper waste

- JAMIE BUCHAN jabuchan@thecourier.co.uk

A public spending watchdog has criticised Perth and Kinross Council for buying nearly £150,000 of iPads, smartphone­s and other “top end” tablets as part of a campaign to reduce paper waste.

The local authority has bought nearly 600 handheld devices and laptops in the last 18 months.

Managers hope using digital technology will reduce spending on paper print-outs, as well as helping elected members and staff work remotely.

Of the £146,048 total, just over £31,500 went on tablets and computers for councillor­s.

The outlay has been described as “totally unacceptab­le” by the Taxpayers Alliance, a national low-tax pressure group.

Among the new machines are 20 Apple iPads and 142 Microsoft Surface Pro computers.

A total of 230 Samsung Galaxy J5 phones – last year’s model – were bought for £23,407.

Last year, the council spent £67,662 on photocopyi­ng, printing and internal memos.

The total amount of confidenti­al material shredded last year came to around 31 tonnes, while 33,161 reams of paper was used up.

As part of the authority’s Transforma­tion 2020 programme, officers identified significan­t savings can be made by reducing the volume of paper used across department­s.

A spokesman said: “The council is investing in mobile technology such as smartphone­s and tablets to aid mobile working for elected members and staff.

“This gives users the functional­ity to be able to work remotely, reducing transport time and costs, and reducing the requiremen­t for paper print-outs.”

For the Taxpayers Alliance, campaign manager James Price said: “It’s just completely baffling that a local council thinks that it is appropriat­e to spend more than £140,000 on top-end tablets for staff. This sort of spending is completely inappropri­ate in the wider context of overspendi­ng in Scotland.”

He added: “The amount spent on these fancy tablets cannot be repeated again, especially with council tax going up across the country.”

The amount spent on these fancy tablets cannot be repeated again, especially with council tax going up across the country. JAMES PRICE

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