Revealed: Scottish Government’s secret meetings on RAAC
Scottish Liberal Democrats have today revealed that a series of meeting about the use of a dangerous concrete used in public sector construction for decades took place between Scottish Government officials and the Scottish Funding Council, the non-departmental public body charged with funding Scotland's further and higher education institutions, but that no minutes were taken or formal papers produced.
In response to a freedom of information request from the Scottish Liberal Democrats, the Scottish Government confirmed that there were four meetings between ministers, officials and the Scottish Funding Council at which RAAC was discussed. These took place on 3 March 2023, 26 April 2023, 15 June 2023 and 5 July 2023.
However at the 3 March meeting, no minutes were taken and no documentation could be provided. For the 15 June meeting, no documentation exists beyond brief emails from civil servants arranging it and at the 5 July meeting no formal agenda or minutes were taken and no papers were tabled at the meeting.
Mr Cole-Hamilton said:
“If the Scottish Government want to win over parents sceptical about the safety of the college and universities in which their kids are learning, this is not the way to do it. Their calls for public bodies to take a common script approach suggest they were more concerned about public relations than public safety.
“This was clearly a big enough issue to draw the attention of a phalanx of senior civil servants, yet it took research by Scottish Liberal Democrats to reveal last week more than two dozen college and university buildings where RAAC is in place.
“Secretive and unminuted meetings suggest that civil servants already knew that this was a big problem back in the spring, yet ministers wasted the whole summer without kickstarting a national programme to remove this dangerous concrete.
“A concrete beam in Dunblane previously deemed safe has since collapsed. Not only do we need a national fund to remove RAAC from our public buildings, we need total transparency about how the Scottish Government arrived at its present position that these buildings are somehow safe for students to learn in.”