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Holyrood to lavish £67k on technology

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Published Date: 08 August 2006
SCOTTISH Parliament bosses are to spend nearly £67,000 upgrading seven rooms with new technology in the latest round of cash to be lavished on gizmos at the Holyrood building.
The money will be used to ensure each of the rooms has its own television and Powerpoint technology instead of having to share equipment.

But MSPs today questioned why such a large sum was having to be spent less than two years after the move to
the new £431 million parliament.

And while thousands are now being spent on new equipment and furniture for meeting rooms, a large conference room at the parliament specially designed with high-spec audio-visual equipment, has been turned into a coffee lounge for MSPs.

The latest upgrade follows revelations last year that more than £8m of taxpayers' money had been spent on equipping MSPs and staff with the latest technology, leaving some politicians with five or more computers each.

When the Holyrood building was being prepared for opening, the parliament also spent £663,000 on kitting it out with 322 wide-screen televisions for MSPs and staff, together with 60 other screens, including large plasma screens for the chamber.

Liberal Democrat MSP Donald Gorrie wondered why IT equipment was needed in the meeting rooms. He said: "These rooms are for small gatherings of six to 12 people - you can speak to each other, or is that considered old fashioned? I don't think there's any need for a lot of gizmos."



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  • Last Updated: 08 August 2006 9:56 AM
  • Source: Edinburgh Evening News
  • Location: Edinburgh
  • Related Topics: The Scottish Parliament
 
1

dally,

edinburgh 08/08/2006 17:06:17

having attended meetings in the parliaments rooms and suffered not being able to read the powerpoint slides think this investment is a good idea...

2

dyon gollins's back,

08/08/2006 17:26:38

What's lavish about installing equipment to help presentation, debate and communication? Is that not what a parliament is for? Or is Donald Gorrie too technologically challenged to be able to use it? Maybe he's got a training need - to join the 21st. century. Who are the other 'MSP's' who are questioning this anyway? He's the only one mentioned in the article. Is that not a little misleading?

3

freetalkscotland,

08/08/2006 17:57:05

Good to see comments supporting this expenditure for a change although I trust that the tiny wee rooms under the stairs leading from the garden lobby to the Chamber aren't in line for the equipment.

4

Andrew,

Edinburgh 08/08/2006 21:42:31

How many rooms are we talking about here????

67K can buy a lot of hardware, which is very cheap nowadays, I god hope that it aint all going into Microsoft's pocket for software licencing when there are free solutions avaliable out there.

5

sar,

09/08/2006 09:30:21

Every university tutorial and lecture room has powerpoint facilty, so this is the norm today. Why was this not installed at the opening of parliament, was this to keep the costs of the bilding down?


 

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