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8:30am Wednesday 10th March 2010 in
BURNLEY Council has been accused of ‘gambling with taxpayers’ money’ after it spent £500,000 to buy four homes on the site of a proposed super school which did not go ahead.
All the houses in Melrose Avenue and Kinross Street were then sold for a total of £149,000 when Lancashire County Council decided to build the new Hameldon Community College on the former St Hilda's site off Coal Clough Lane.
Council leader Gordon Birtwistle, who represents the Coal Clough and Deerplay ward, said the county council had 'dropped us in it big style'.
But Mark Townsend, who was chairman of the Audit Committee at the time the houses were bought, said the council had been gambling with taxpapers' money.
He said: "This is a prime example of this council taking unacceptable risks with public money.
"The council believed that if the county council decided not to locate the new college at Melrose Avenue, which was always the likely outcome, it did not matter because they had secured property assets and they would only go up in value.
“They are no better than the bankers at that time and were gambling with taxpayers money."
The county council requested the borough council to buy the properties in mid-2007 using Elevate funding to stop money being taken out of the county council's schools budget.
Coun Birtwistle had said he had been 'extremely hopeful' County Hall would reimburse the borough after it opted for the former St Hilda's site, leaving the council with four redundant properties.
But it is understood no money will be paid back as contracts were never signed saying a school would be built on the area surrounding Melrose Avenue.
Coun Birtwistle said: “We bought these properties in a deal with the county council to enable the start of work on the new Hameldon College site.
“We were in advanced negotiations with them, and they knew very well that we were buying the properties, then at the last minute they decided to change the location of the school.
“We believed that we could trust them but they proved to be untrustworthy on this occasion.”
The homes have since been sold to borough housing landlord Calico, which owns the majority of properties in the area.
The £350,000 loss on the properties emerged following questioning by the Conservatives at a scrutiny committee meeting.
Mike Hart, Lancashire County Council's director for capital investment and resources for children and young people, said: "We reached agreement over this issue with Burnley Borough Council in 2008.
"At the time, all three parties involved – ourselves, Burnley Borough Council and Calico Housing – were aware of the inherent risks of the project and no guarantees were ever given that the project would progress beyond the feasibility stage."
Burnley Council chief executive Steve Rumbelow said: "The over cost of acquiring these homes included home loss and disturbance payments and those clearly are not recoverable when the properties are sold.
“These properties were purchased two years ago and have already been dealt with as part of the council’s accounts.”
The controversy comes after the council bought the Derby pub, on the M65 roundabout at junction 10, for £290,000 but then decided to pull it down.
Comments(11)
Mikeee47
says...
11:15am Wed 10 Mar 10
vintageclaret
says...
12:02pm Wed 10 Mar 10
Mikeee47 wrote:Sorry to burst your bubble Mikeee47 but as we have seen over this past year that in local and national govt. there is no such thing as a tight budget. Everything is kept loose so they can dip their fingers into the pot for whatever madcap scheme they can come up with to justify their jobs/positions. They spout all the time that "It is not their money which is why they are careful with it" That is the exact reason why they waste it. If all were held truly accountable (i.e. pay for their mistakes) this wouldn't be happening. Honesty in politics and honest open accountability should and must be seen before this town of ours goes further down the plughole. Furtehrmore, it is time that we had councillors, M.Ps. who live in the real world not some hallucinatory place where they are completely cocooned against hardship. Fine example is not only this appalling waste but how MPS have just voted themselves a pay increase. My heart Bleeds for them (I think not)
4 homes for £500000 who the fcuk valued these homes at £125000 each, they're no where near that value, Someone at town hall has to be accountable for this **** up yet as usual we the tax payer, (Yes us) have to foot the bill, How much more money are this useless council going to waste on half thought up projects, For a council to be working on a tight budget they can't half waste money.
Darren Reynolds
says...
12:48pm Wed 10 Mar 10
Markr
says...
1:27pm Wed 10 Mar 10
bankhall
says...
3:21pm Wed 10 Mar 10
RAyzer
says...
3:58pm Wed 10 Mar 10
RAyzer
says...
4:00pm Wed 10 Mar 10
akon
says...
4:05pm Wed 10 Mar 10
willybob
says...
4:43pm Wed 10 Mar 10
willybob
says...
5:24pm Wed 10 Mar 10
willybob wrote:missed out the word "teeth"
good god. £500,000 for 4 houses on the harger clough estate. has this council lost its marbles or what. i am sick to the back of this useless lot wasting our hard-earned money. everyone get voting BNP
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Captain Kickoff says...
10:54am Wed 10 Mar 10
Then you've got Rumbellow telling us “These properties were purchased two years ago and have already been dealt with as part of the council’s accounts.”
"dealt with"? Covered up more like! How come it's taken you so long to tell us? Is that why we had those huge Council Tax rises last year to cover it? No wonder they were record rises!