City's emergency cash reserves back up to £2m
Published Date:
06 September 2008
THE city council's emergency cash reserves have been replenished to just short of £2 million, it emerged today.
The fund, normally kept just above £10m, is used if the city faces a disaster, such as floods, major fire or terrorist attack. It can also be used in unforeseen financial emergencies.
However, an audit last year revealed that the sum had fallen to under £400,000.
The problem arose after council departments went massively into the red, though councillors had already plundered reserves to meet massive equal pay claims, to refund pensioners wrongly charged for help preparing meals, and to help foot the bill for demolishing 200 homes around Gilmerton because of collapsed or unstable limestone mines.
Labour councillors in the last administration also raided the fund to help keep council tax bills low.
The council's director of finance, Donald McGougan, said: "A modest contribution has been made to start to rebuild the unallocated general fund reserve."
The Lib Dem/SNP administration has vowed to add £5m to the fund this year.
The full article contains 179 words and appears in Edinburgh Evening News newspaper.
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Last Updated:
06 September 2008 9:55 AM
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Source:
Edinburgh Evening News
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Location:
Edinburgh
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Related Topics:
Edinburgh Council