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Tuesday, 24th November 2009 Change Date

Sports vision hit by a £30m funding black hole

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Published Date:
17 August 2007
CONTROVERSIAL plans to replace Meadowbank Stadium with a major new arena face being drastically scaled down because of a £30 million funding black hole.
The long-awaited report into the future of Meadowbank today revealed the scale of the funding gap facing the council if it presses ahead with its plans for a major new sports stadium and refurbishing of the Commonwealth Pool.

Even the sale of mos
t of the Meadowbank site for housing would leave funding for the two projects £30m short, if the council presses ahead with its full-scale plans.

The cash crisis is expected to lead to a drastic scaling down of the planned new arena, with Meadowbank now seen as a more likely site for the facility than Sighthill.

That would almost certainly spell the end of hopes the new arena could be used as a pop concert venue and possibly even as a home for professional rugby.

Terry Christie, the former Meadowbank Thistle football manager and Musselburgh Grammar School headteacher, headed up an independent working group - including council officials and sports group representatives - which today published the results of its investigations.

They have rejected pleas by campaigners to refurbish the existing stadium, advising the council to press ahead with a total sell-off of Meadowbank if it cannot raise the money for major new facilities on the site.

Mr Christie described any attempt to refurbish the existing facilities at the athletics stadium as "short-term and short-sighted".

He said: "Edinburgh would be left with second-rate facilities for a capital city and it would essentially be a waste of taxpayers' money.

"The best option would be to create brand new facilities on the existing site at Meadowbank, as it is by far the best location.

"There are major funding problems with this option, but that also applies to going ahead with the Sighthill development. Basically, the funding that has been made available for national and regional sports facilities is totally inadequate."

Council leader Jenny Dawe said the authority was likely to pursue a "compromise" option which involved creating the best possible sporting facilities on the existing Meadowbank site.

This idea, which would involve relocating the running track and indoor sports complex to the eastern part of Meadowbank, has the backing of deputy council leader Steve Cardownie, of the SNP.

The majority of the Meadowbank site would still be sold to housing developers to help fund the new facility and the refurbishment of the Commonwealth Pool. It is thought the council may be prepared to gamble on losing the £7m in funding that has been pledged by sportccotland for the proposed Sighthill project.

Councillor Dawe said: "It is obvious that we need to do a lot more work before we can take any kind of final decision.

We are obviously going to have to go back to sportscotland to see if funding would be available for a development at Meadowbank."

Bill Walker of the Save Meadowbank Campaign, said: "The original plan was overly ambitious and needs scaled back."


Community groups join up to oppose stadium demolition


COMMUNITY councils have voiced their opposition to replacing Meadowbank Stadium with a housing estate.

The five community councils from north and east Edinburgh, which are represented on the Meadowbank working group, have called for plans to demolish the stadium to be scrapped.

In a joint statement, Craigentinny/Meadowbank, Trinity, Portobello, Northfield/Willowbrae and Leith Links community councils

said: "We are committed to the retention of the athletics track and associated sports facilities at Meadowbank.

"The council failed to seek the views of community councils, local sporting organisations and the wider public. Their proposals, with the emphasis on national standard facilities, do not reflect the most urgent sporting needs of communities."

A public meeting was taking place tonight at the stadium at 7pm.



Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 17 August 2007 8:52 AM
  • Source: Edinburgh Evening News
  • Location: Edinburgh
  • Related Topics: Meadowbank
 
1

Jock's blog,

17/08/2007 11:38:24

“This report does not reflect the view of our campaign, or indeed the view of the working group itself. It is a personal report by the chairman,” said Save Meadowbank spokesman Bill Walker. “It was also produced with undue haste in order to be heard at this month’s council meeting. The working group was given inadequate time to fully consider and comment on the report prior to publication.

“We all agreed that Meadowbank is the preferred site for the council’s main dry sports arena. But the majority of the group did not agree with key conclusions and recommendations. In particular the chairman’s view on refurbishment was shared by only 5 of the group. 12 disagreed with him. We were surprised to discover that a council-convened committee can deliver a report that reflects such a minority view.

“We were pleased to find that a majority of councillors on the working group favoured refurbishment. This example of cross-party support should be applauded. We want to work with these parties to deliver sports facilities that are modern, fit for purpose and affordable.

http://savemeadowbank.org

2

Jim Henry,

Edinburgh 17/08/2007 11:44:26

Meadowbank could quite easily facilitate a speedway track inside the running track and a greyhound track outside the running track. These are two potential sources of revenue, amongst others, not considered by those looking at the future of this potentially superb facility.
Flogging the stadium is a soft option and is not sustainable.
An alternative site is needed but will that, in turn will be flogged off when cash is in short supply?
There are plenty of sites, including green belt land, which could be used for housing but there is only one Meadowbank.

3

Colin G,

Edinburgh 17/08/2007 11:51:05

No need for 'world class' facilities. Maintain Meadowbank for the day to day users.

4

Yetholm Hibee,

17/08/2007 12:37:40

Why do the developers have to mave the best bit!!!!

Why can't the flats be built on the east side of Meadowbank next to the railway line.

Bloody cheek!

SAVE the WHOLE of MEADOWBANK for SPORT & RECREATION.

Make it a Centre of Excellence for Football.
Make it a Centre of Excellence for Gymnastics.
Make it a Centre of Excellence for Basketball.

Etc. etc.

The place is busy with 'runners' in the evenings.

The place is busy with lots of 'kids' doing Gymnastics in the evenings & weekends.

Don't let anybody say Meadowbank is unused or unneccessary. The place is busy & is very well used by the community & by outsiders.

Don't believe all the negative rubbish about Meadowbank.

SAVE MEADOWBANK.

5

Andrew Kent,

Edinburgh 17/08/2007 13:09:09

Scrap the tram, save meadowbank, invest in eduction!

6

Andrew Kent,

Edinburgh 17/08/2007 13:09:43

Oh and the South Suburban!

7

The_Doctor,

On the line 17/08/2007 13:25:38

There are so many Black Holes appearing in Edinburgh all of a sudden.

Solution to city's funding problems: Hold a big astronomy convention.

8

Kevin Connor,

Meadowbank 17/08/2007 13:50:31

Save Meadowbank Public Meeting is tonight at 7pm in Meadowbank.

Come and let our councillors know what you think.

www.savemeadowbank.org

9

AaronL,

Hillside 17/08/2007 15:20:49

The public meeting IS taking place tonight at 7pm, Meadowbank, Hall 2.

There is an accidentally-on-purpose typo at the end of that article.

And I am also reading that the school my kids go to is going to be closed down. It is the best school in the area. Now we're going to have to send our kids half way across the city. What is happening here? Has madness and insanity finally landed on Edinburgh?

www.savemeadowbank.org

10

Top Floor,

17/08/2007 15:49:43

Save Everything

and

Do Nothing

is always the cry, easy arguments to make and avoid difficult decisions.

Be careful what you wish for.

11

The Judge,

Outside Looking In 17/08/2007 16:20:39

You* lot wanted a tramline so you can hardly complain when there's no money for anything else.

*The pro tramline lobby keep telling me the recent council elections were a referendum on the trams and the pro tramline parties won the election.

12

Road Raga,

"support the trams team 2" 17/08/2007 16:39:56

#13 why is it that when a transport scheme is proposed, there are always the chants of 'spend it on hospitals' or 'spend it on education' etc.
Transport is one of the most important issues affecting peoples every day lives, and yet is completely neglected, that is why our roads are crumbling, bridges falling down, public transport 2nd rate compared to Europe.

You may be interested to know that only £18m is spent in Edinburgh each year on roads and transport, compared to well over £200m on eduction, and over £200m on social work. Transport has one of the SMALLEST budgets of the Council.
You only get what you pay for

13

thomas,

midlothian 17/08/2007 18:30:37

one of the real problems is financial management of edinburghs resources.
westminster downloaded its responsibility to edinburgh as the capital city.
when royal functions are carried out, edinburgh picks up the tab.
no monies were added to the budget to take account of this.alex salmond needs to tell gordon brown that the s.n.p. run scotland, not the numpties of his persuasion who cow-towed at every opportunity.
if gordon brown accepts westminsters responsibilty to scotland via the capital, they he will arrange redress for the issue.

14

Party Goer,

Edinburgh 17/08/2007 19:22:34

Medowbank should be refurbished, the stadium at Sighthill should be built. In addition, a top class velodrome is a must.
The Spartans are currently building a community football academy and more of these types of facility should be a priority.
The standard of facility in the whole of Scotland is a disgrace in comparison to places like Holland and Denmark.
In Germany there are climbing walls and swimming pools in libraries and shopping centres, and thats what we need here.
Only then will the population en masse take part in physical recreation and only then will Scotland consistantly produce world class athletes in sport.

15

Oilcan,

18/08/2007 09:58:36

#17 - It's not too confusing really.

Jim Lowrie gave an unguarded personal opinion based on common sense. The figures didn't add up and there was very strong opposition to the proposals, which won his party quite a few votes in the local elections.

Jenny Dawe, as high chief big heid yin, has been getting intensely lobbied by public officials determined to railroad through these proposals at all costs. Previously, they would have sucked up to Ewan Aitken, but not any longer of course. "It's the only way", "state-of-the-art 21st Century international arena", "we've evaluated all the other options", etc, etc whispered in her ear by everyone being more smooth and oily than Sir Humphrey Appleby himself. All within the lovely confines of the City Chambers, where the real world can be a bit of a nuisance sometimes and you needn't worry about what the public actually want or what you can really afford. Hence her earlier statement (quite possibly twisted by the EEN, who have wholeheartedly been working with their Council chums on only repeating the official spin regarding Edinburgh's "Sports Vision" (copyright Council Cliche Department) and have managed to completely ignore inconvenient matters like the truth).

Now, presumably because Terry Christie is an ex-Head Master, someone has finally pointed out in an official report that the public official gurus (nay, visionaries) sums do not add up. Quite frankly, they would fail foundation arithmetic and the amount of red pen Mr Christie had to put on their work was embarrassing. Also, apparently, there doesn't seem to be much support for the proposals from these people called the general public, community councils, sporting individuals and clubs or councillors - who apparently are supposed to represent their consituents when the Council is making important decisions. Have you ever heard of such a thing?! This must all be quite a shock for the public officials, who of co

16

AaronL,

Hillside 18/08/2007 13:37:50

Errors in this article:

3rd paragraph:
"Even the sale of most of the Meadowbank site for housing would leave funding for the two projects £30m short..."

Actually that should read, Even the sale of the WHOLE Meadowbank site for housing...
Source - councils own figures.

7th paragraph:
"They [the working group] have rejected pleas by campaigners to refurbish the existing stadium,"

Actually the majority of the working group supports refurbishment of Meadowbank. The working group chair, Terry Christie, has ignored this majority view.
Source - working group report referred to at the public meeting 17th August.

Paragraphs 8 to 11:
Quotes Terry Christie but ignores the working group majority. This was highlighted many times in the public meeting. I'm surprised that the Evening News missed this, or is it because they walked out half way through the meeting and missed the report from community and city councillors saying they had been ignored and that Terry had fixed the report to his minority view.
Source - public meeting 17th August.

Additional:
Beware the accuracy of any quote from Jenny Dawe. Jenny has already sent in 3 official complaints to Evening News articles (which I don't recall EN publishing). Can someone post a link if they did. I thought they had a legal obligation to publicise official complaints to misquotes.

www.savemeadowbank.org

17

AaronL,

Hillside 18/08/2007 13:42:25

The source for Additional: at the end is correspondence between Jenny Dawe and the Save Meadowbank Campaign.

18

heatherp,

Happy glen 18/08/2007 15:40:27

NO sale of any part of the land, replace, refurbish, renovate upgrade and enhance the current site. It is what the people want

19

heatherp,

Happy glen 18/08/2007 15:42:26

Moscow

I have seen the comments from Jenny Dawe and her letter to the evening news, she is continually misquoted by the evening news....Iam not a Lib Dem either.

Beware the council fuidging the whole thing by selling off the best land and putting something smaller on the site...hmm isn;t that what they originally planned in the original document.
NO SALE OF ANY PART OF MEADOWBANK


 

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