Scotland minority government has agreed to review the structure
and operations of Scottish Water but only within a remit which would
keep the utility within the public sector.
Scottish Water currently receives £182 million a year from the
Government's budget and there has been persistent speculation in the
parliament's corridors that Finance Minister John Swinney would welcome
a change which would enable it to be moved from the public books
despite the SNP pledge in last year's election to make no change.
However,
after a Scottish Conservatives initiated debate on February 21st ,in
which they proposed a thoroughgoing review assessing all potential
models for change, the SNP and Labour combined to successfully
substitute for that a commitment with no specific time-frame to keep
under review the structure and operations of Scottish Water and the
regulatory arrangements and alternative public sector models.
Conservatives
Finance spokesman Derek Brownlee said: "We think that mutualisation on
the model of Welsh Water which works well and benefits the taxpayer
would be a sensible approach to take in Scotland."
But
Infrastructure Minister Stewart Stevenson said: "mutualisation is a
chimera. Whilst we should keep the structure and financing of all
public services under review that does not mean taking irrevocable
steps towards the sands of mutualisation."
Source : New Civil Engineer (NCE)