SCVO announces Scottish Charity Awards 2021 finalists

People’s Choice voting is now open

After a record-breaking number of applications, the 47 finalists for the 2021 #ScotCharityAwards have been announced!

The vote is now live for the People’s Choice Award, so take a look at the shortlist below and vote for your favourite finalist now!

The categories this year are:

  • Campaign of the Year
  • Charity of the Year
  • Climate Conscious
  • Community Action
  • Digital Citizens
  • Employee of the Year
  • Pioneering Project
  • Trustee of the Year
  • Volunteer of the Year

Members of the public can have their say by voting for their favourite overall entry in the People’s Choice Award – voting closes at 5pm on 27 August. 

You only have ONE vote, so choose your favourite carefully!

See all 47 below:

#KeepTalking – RSABI

RSABI provides practical, emotional and financial support to people in Scottish agriculture. Working in agriculture can be isolating, especially during the pandemic. Our helpline calls were increasing so we needed to do something to help keep people connected. RSA…

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Campaign of the Year

Aberlour Urgent Assistance Fund – Aberlour Children’s Charity

Aberlour’s Urgent Assistance Fund campaign shone a light on the financial cost of Covid-19 to children and families in Scotland and provided essentials like food, heating, clothing and beds to children who would otherwise have gone without. The campaign launched i…

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Campaign of the Year

Alistair Brown – Bridge Community Project

Alistair is a volunteer within the Bridge Community Project’s Financial Wellbeing Service, where he provides hope to vulnerable members of the West Lothian community who are experiencing financial and personal challenges. His approach focuses on developing positiv…

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Volunteer of the Year

Andrew Robertson, CBE – Carers Trust Scotland

Andrew’s influence, guidance and support has helped the trust secure an incredible amount of funding in the last 12 months alone. He liaised with key experts in Covid-19, which was instrumental in the charity securing funding for its recently launched research on…

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Volunteer of the Year

Anne’s Law – Care Home Relatives Scotland

The team has worked tirelessly with the Scottish Government, Parliament and Infection Prevention and Control specialists to improve guidance and enable meaningful contact with care home residents cut off from their loved ones due to Covid-19 restrictions.

Campaign of the Year

Bob MacKenzie – CACE (Cumbernauld Action on Care of the Elderly)

Bob joined Cumbernauld Action on Care of the Elderly after becoming a service user, he then registered as a volunteer because he wanted to support others who felt isolated. Bob became a Befriender to someone who was bedridden after suffering a stroke, providing…

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Volunteer of the Year

Cassiltoun Housing Association

The team has redesigned hundreds of events and workshops to take them online, coordinated a Castlemilk-wide emergency response and created a Wellbeing Community Chest. It has improved services with a digital transformation strategy, formed a digital lending librar…

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Charity of the Year

Chris Grant – AbilityNet

During the toughest of years for so many, Chris focused on ensuring AbilityNet’s older and disabled clients remain – or become part of – the digital world at a time when it’s become more crucial than ever. Thanks to him over 1,000 older and disabled people have no…

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Employee of the Year

Click and Deliver Naloxone – Scottish Families Affected by Alcohol and Drugs

Over the last ten years, nearly 10,000 families in Scotland lost a loved one through drug-related death. Naloxone is a life-saving medication that reverses opioid overdose, providing vital time to call an ambulance. The team at Scottish Families recognised the nee…

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Pioneering Project

Create:Inclusion – Macrobert Arts Centre

The team at Macrobert Arts Centre believes the arts should be for everyone and recognised that there was a clear need to make performances more inclusive for the Deaf community. Creative Scotland’s Create:Inclusion programme resourced this innovative project to de…

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Pioneering Project

Cumbernauld Resilience

Cumbernauld Resilience was established in March 2020 as a community-based response to the effects of the Covid 19 pandemic. It united people from all over Cumbernauld from a diverse demographic to reach out and help their neighbours. The team has over 120 voluntee…

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Community Action

Douglas Sewell – Chest Heart and Stroke Scotland

Douglas is more than a volunteer for Chest Heart and Stroke Scotland (CHSS) – he is a life-changer. He does everything he can to help fellow stroke survivors in their recovery. When the pandemic hit, Douglas was first in line to suggest creative ways for stroke su…

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Volunteer of the Year

Edinburgh Children’s Hospital Charity (ECHC)

Covid-19 has been a rollercoaster for everyone; no less for children and families in hospital and those privileged to support them. Innovation and dedication from supporters, partners, staff and volunteers saw support for children shielding at home, in wards and w…

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Charity of the Year

Emergency Food Provision – COVID 19 – Cyrenians

In response to the pandemic and in partnership with Natwest, last year Cyrenians launched a full-scale food production service; cooking and delivering more than 5,000 freezer-friendly, healthy and delicious ready meals every week to local people who were unable to…

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Pioneering Project

Fiona Davis – Fringe Society

The Fringe is widely recognised as one of the greatest celebrations of arts and culture on the planet. It is a worldwide brand that speaks to the values of being open, welcoming, inclusive, pioneering, international, experimental and innovative. Pursuing a vision…

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Trustee of the Year

Fiona Mitchell – Harlawhill Day Care Centre

As the manager of Harlawhill Day Centre, Fiona supports the elderly community of Prestonpans every day. When lockdown struck in 2020 she put an immediate outreach plan in place to keep all the centre’s clients socially connected, and tirelessly organised free meal…

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Employee of the Year

Get Help or Get Caught – Stop It Now! Scotland

Child Sexual Abuse impacts one in six children in Scotland and targeting offenders is one of the most important ways of tackling abuse before it happens. As a result of the ‘Get Help or Get Caught’ campaign over 79,000 people visited the team’s website and 185 peo…

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Campaign of the Year

Glasgow Afghan United – Covid Response Project

GAU is proudly embedded in the communities it serves and is fully responsive to the needs of those they work with. When lockdown hit the team acted quickly and decisively with a new food delivery service that has helped hundreds of people. They also delivered onli…

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Community Action

Glasgow’s Golden Generation

In 2020 Glasgow’s Golden Generation was awarded funding to get older adults online. However, most service users had never used technology before so GGG bought tablet computers and developed a bespoke app with videos, Covid updates, puzzles and befriending video ca…

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Digital Citizens

Julia Grindley – Edinburgh School Uniform Bank

Edinburgh School Uniform Bank is a volunteer-run charity, which is a safety net for struggling families and a vital resource for education and health professionals – and when pandemic restrictions were put in place Julia knew she had to keep the service open. Desp…

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Trustee of the Year

Lead Scotland

Lead’s aim is to provide accessible digital skills and cyber safety training to disabled people, unpaid carers, practitioners and people experiencing barriers to learning. With a small team of five staff, they supported 989 people to improve their digital skills a…

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Digital Citizens

Lilias Dunlop – Cosgrove Care

Lilias’ particular focus over the past four years has been to fundamentally change how Cosgrove Care approaches fundraising, and to improve the environments in which people live, and the charity operates within. She has spent many hours researching grants and has…

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Trustee of the Year

Linda Walker – Wheatley Care

Linda wants the team she works with to be recognised for the outcomes they accomplished. Valuing the team and working together is essential to achieving the best possible outcomes for the most vulnerable in our communities. Linda believes she has become an effecti…

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Employee of the Year

Long Covid Care Now – Chest Heart and Stroke Scotland

Long Covid Care Now continues to raise awareness and push for better care – ensuring that people with Long Covid are not the forgotten victims of the pandemic. Thanks to the campaign’s activities public awareness is high, the Scottish Government has committed fund…

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Campaign of the Year

Lorraine Jarvie – MOOD

Our application aims to highlight the hard work and achievements of our manager, Lorraine Jarvie. Lorraine has brought a wealth of experience and a new level of excellence and professionalism to MOOD ensuring its services are delivered to the highest standards. Lo…

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Employee of the Year

Making Sense of Energy Saving – Forth Valley Sensory Centre

The project helped people cut their energy bills, despite the pandemic, but also secured new heating systems, warmer home payments and even new windows for a number of deaf and blind people who were struggling to heat their homes and pay their bills. On top of thi…

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Climate Conscious

Nicola Bell – Carers Trust Scotland

Nicola has achieved a huge amount in the last 12 months. Working with young carers, she set up #Supermarkets4Change, campaigning to raise awareness of unpaid carers with supermarkets to include young carers in the protected hours set aside for vulnerable people to…

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Employee of the Year

One Parent Families Scotland – Edinburgh

COVID-19 brought the impacts of digital exclusion for single parent families into sharp focus. Not only did One Parent Families Scotland (OPFS) respond with a gifting campaign that distributed over 100 new laptops, tablets and mifi connections over the period, but…

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Digital Citizens

PEEKACHEW – PEEK Possibilities for Each and Every Kid

The PEEK team has continued to support Glasgow communities throughout lockdown – reaching out, offering a helping hand, a shoulder to lean on and a listening ear. Through their PEEKACHEW mobile food truck, the team delivered the equivalent of 353,891 healthy meals…

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Pioneering Project

Pamela Noble – Kyle & Lochalsh Community Trust (KLCT)

Pam Noble was a trustee of Kyle and Lochalsh Community Trust from 2017 until 2021 and its chair from 2018. The projects developed under Pam’s leadership have established strong foundations for a sustainable future supported by extensive community consultation. The…

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Trustee of the Year

People Know How

People Know How believe in the inextricable link between social and digital isolation and the pandemic has only reinforced that view. Over the last year the team has provided devices, digital skills and connectivity to thousands of people across Edinburgh and East…

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Digital Citizens

Pride & Pixels – LGBT Youth Scotland

LGBT Youth Scotland worked alongside LGBTI young people and a taskforce from JP Morgan to create a digital community called ‘Pride and Pixels’, which combined a community Discord space and a Moodle learning hub to create a digital space for young people where they…

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Pioneering Project

R:evolve Recycle – LEAP

R:evolve Recycle is a unique project managed by LEAP, a charity that works to enhance the lives of older people across Scotland through volunteering, learning, socialising and befriending. R:evolve’s goal is to reduce clothing consumption, cutdown carbon emissions…

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Climate Conscious

Recovery Enterprises Scotland CIC

The team, made up mainly of volunteers, give their time, and have their own lived experiences – and therefore are totally accepted and trusted by the most vulnerable.  RES is about shared trust. It has reached a diverse range of the community, crossing numerous ag…

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Community Action

Robert Smith – Linkes (SCIO)

Robert is the co-founder and driving force of Linkes community project (2006), serving as chairperson to promote integration, empowerment and social inclusion. In response to the pandemic, he was visionary and determined, quickly building alliances to set-up a foo…

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Trustee of the Year

Rosie Sinclair – Edinburgh Tool Library

The Edinburgh Tool Library (ETL) got involved with the Edinburgh Mask Makers (EMM) collective, set up and coordinated by nominee Rosie Sinclair, during the first lockdown in 2020. Rosie, together with three other coordinators, Dhouha Mastouri, Martha Mattos Coelho…

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Volunteer of the Year

Save Your Outdoor Centres Campaign

The aim of the ‘Save Your Outdoor Centres’ campaign was to secure funding from the Scottish Government to ensure that Scotland’s Residential Outdoor Education Centres did not close. Not only did the campaign succeed in getting £2 million of funding, it brought tog…

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Campaign of the Year

Scottish Society for the Prevention of Cruelty of Animals (Scottish SPCA)

The team delivered critical services to support people and animals during the coronavirus pandemic. They pioneered an emergency foster scheme during lockdown getting over 260 animals into loving homes, launched their first ever online rehoming service to allow peo…

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Charity of the Year

Scran Academy SCIO

SCRAN coordinated a coalition of charities that produced, packaged and delivered nearly 150,000 meals during the first lockdown, supporting over 1,000 people per week at its height. None of it possible without the 220 local people  who gave tens-of-thousands of ho…

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Charity of the Year

Shawn Nicholas Fernandez – Central and West Integration Network

Shawn wants to be a role model for both BAME and disadvantaged communities. He has successfully made an impact in communities across Glasgow by delivering Cyber-crime Prevention Awareness Workshops and also creating a space through a community gardening pr…

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Volunteer of the Year

The Flourishing Well

During the pandemic The Flourishing Well received many referrals to help support traumatised people. The team had to adapt really quickly to the online platform – after receiving their first round of funding in July 2020, by December they had hosted 352 one-to-one…

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Community Action

The Louise Project

The Louise Project is a place where all are welcome and where people are safe to be vulnerable. We support families experiencing poverty to transform their own lives and to be active participants in the transformation of their community. We work in a relational an…

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Pioneering Project

The Space

In April 2020 The Space launched its Digital Inclusion Service so families could learn about the internet, how to use their devices, and attend online activities. The team enabled 41 families to become digitally active and 20 more restarted their education online…

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Digital Citizens

TripleTapTech

TripleTapTech aims to provide advice, help, support and training to anyone with a visual impairment in accessing and using technology. This includes teaching basic and advanced skills used to successfully access and prosper in the digital world. The team aims to p…

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Community Action

WHALE Arts

WHALE Arts has constantly adapted activities in response to the needs of the community over the last year and a half, with online classes, free weekly community meals on a take-away basis, delivering food, making and delivering art packs and sending wellbeing pack…

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Charity of the Year

West Lothian Foodbank SCIO

The Covid-19 pandemic has increased food insecurity across Scotland through shielding, furlough, unemployment, rise of domestic abuse and withdrawing of some support services for vulnerable people. West Lothian Foodbank created a food network with partners and vol…

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Charity of the Year

Young Leaders Development Programme – 2050 Climate Group

With over 70 volunteers, five staff, and a network of 550+ Young Leaders, 2050 Climate Group equips young people with leadership skills to challenge the climate crisis. 2050 Climate Group was born from a need to empower, equip and enable young leaders from across…

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Climate Conscious

https://buff.ly/3safmVq

Save Leith Walk setback as report recommends Drum proposals

The community campaign working to save historic sandstone buildings on Leith Walk is calling on councillors to represent the wishes of the community and vote against the demolition and proposed development when they meet next week. Continue reading Save Leith Walk setback as report recommends Drum proposals

Charity Sikh Sanjog and Punjabi Junction Café set to be part of Drum’s new Leith Walk development

 

One of Edinburgh’s most well-known social enterprise businesses has pledged to be part of new development proposals set to transform a significant section of Leith Walk. Continue reading Charity Sikh Sanjog and Punjabi Junction Café set to be part of Drum’s new Leith Walk development

Fight or flight: Johnstone congratulates community campaigns

Airport to end trial two months early following community pressure

edinburgh airport

Alison Johnstone has today congratulated local communities on their campaign success after the Edinburgh Airport announced it will close its controversial flight path trial two months earlier than originally planned.

Alison Johnstone, MSP for Lothian and Scottish Green Party candidate for Edinburgh Central, said: “I’d like to congratulate the community on their success in reducing the length of the reckless flight trial by two months. This is entirely due to sheer determination and their well organised and effective campaign.

“October will still feel like a long month for the community who have had to suffer negative health impacts and disruptive noise caused by the trial, but I am please the airport have recognised the need to listen and act. And end to this stressful situation is now in sight.

“The past few weeks have demonstrated how powerful Scotland’s communities can be, and lessons regarding the need for meaningful consultation have been learned. I look forward to working with constituents and the airport in the months ahead to ensure that the health and well-being of residents is central in all future proposals.”

Over one million passengers travelled through Edinburgh Airport last month, making it the busiest August on record for the airport and its fourth million plus passenger month in a row. A total of 1,158,794 people arrived and departed Edinburgh Airport in August, an increase of 8.7% on August 2014.

Communities: care for your war memorials

War Memorial Clean Ups
 DSCN1167Scotland has an estimated 6,000 war memorials. Many of these are treasured but sadly others are neglected and vandalised or left to suffer the effects of ageing and weathering. 

With a war memorial in nearly every community, its preservation and upkeep is an integral part of having respect for an area.

In preparation for Remembrance Sunday 2014, Clean Up Scotland is encouraging volunteers to organise Clean Up events in the green spaces and streets surrounding their local war memorial.

See our War Memorial Clean Ups Information Pack for guidance on how to organise a Clean Up event in your area, and how to report on the general condition of the local war memorial through War Memorials Trust. The pack also include information on funding, and case studies to inspire you.

DSCF4497Please email us at info@cleanupscotland.com to tell us more about your event, and send us photographs of your hard work.

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Eleven month lifeline for Leith Waterworld

Councillors today voted to further explore the feasibility of reopening Leith Waterworld. Campaign group Splashback will now have council support during an 11-month development phase to establish whether the facility can be operated within the parameters of a finalised business plan.

The continuation of the bid beyond this phase is dependent on the community group securing the necessary capital funding to invest in the facility and, further, on their business plan meeting with the approval of an independent third party.

The council will release a maximum of £100,000 to help fund the feasibility study and a dedicated Councillor/ Officer Working-Group will be set up to support Splashback in developing their bid. A report on the results of the study will be considered by councillors once the development phase ends, following which a decision on the facility’s future will be taken.

Councillor Richard Lewis, Culture and Leisure Convener, said: “I want to acknowledge the considerable time and effort that Splashback have committed to their bid thus far. While there remains a tremendous amount of work to be done in the months ahead, we want to give the community the best possible chance of success by providing the necessary funding and support toward taking their proposals to the next phase. We owe it to the people of Edinburgh to do everything we can to preserve this valuable community asset.”

On 20 September, councillors had granted Splashback additional time, plus dedicated support from council officers, to present a more robust business case, and today’s decision has given the campaign group renewed hope that the facility can now be saved.

However Johnny Gailey, a founder member of the campaign, says the council decision is only a reprieve and there’s a lot of hard work to be done. “What’s been voted on today is a reprieve if you like – the council could be much more pro-active about exploring all the options, so we do feel this is an achievement but it’s not a result”, he said. “This is not our preferred option – our first choice was always that the pool should remain in public ownership. That’s been denied, and so we’ve been forced to think about second choices. We now have to put a call out to people in the wider community, and also to other third sector partners to help us with a bid. That call out will also be to Edinburgh Leisure and to the city council – they are part of the community too, and they need to be part of this process.”

Green Councillor for Leith Chas Booth supported the Splashback campaign and he is delighted with the council decision. He said: “I am delighted that the Council has seen the wisdom of backing community ownership of this much-loved asset and has seen the social, health and economic benefits of re-opening the pool. We now have a period of almost a year to finalise the business case and get children and other pool users back in the water.”

waterworld

D Day for Leith Waterworld

waterworld

Councillors will decide today (31 January) whether to back a community bid to operate Leith Waterworld.

An officer report, which will be considered at today’s council meeting, concludes that the revised business case submitted by campaign group, Splashback, is not commercially viable and does not offer best value to the Council, and recommends that the property be remarketed for sale. However campaigners believe that their plans do stack up and that Leith Waterdworld could be reopened as early as October this year.

Councillors agreed on 20 September to offer an extension to the campaigners and to provide dedicated assistance from the Council’s Economic Development unit to enable them to prepare a more robust business case.

The revised submission features two options: the first would be to operate the venue using its existing facilities; the second would add a large soft play feature in the glass entrance atrium and create a new café.

Both options would still require a significant ongoing subsidy from the Council, for which no budget currently exists, and neither would generate the funds required to help pay for the recently completed refurbishment of the Royal Commonwealth Pool.

The process had previously been postponed for six months to allow Splashback to come forward with alternative proposals for the pool, which has been closed since January 2012. This followed a decision taken in 2005 to put the property up for sale.

Splashback, the community group set up to save Leith Waterworld, believes their figures stack up. They claim:

“Through running the facility as a community led iniatitive, we believe we can
  • provide a fun and enjoyable leisure destination for over 150,000 users per annum
  • reduce the subsidy required from Council for the pool to well under the Scottish average for pools – £260,000
  • In fact through increased soft play and additional revenue streams, we can bring the subsidy right down to circa £20,000 by year 3
  • In doing so we would bring potentially approx 60 jobs to the Leith area through direct employment and supply chains
  • and generate an additional £460,000 for the local Leith economy.
  • These benefits are in addition to the potential saving to public spending through increased wellbeing in the area.

We will be asking the Council on 31st January for an agreement in principle, to allow us to progress with more detailed planning and fundraising.  At the end of six months, we would take the shared decision with the Council whether to progress to reopening, which is currently rescheduled for October 2013.”

Splashback conclude: “With the massive success of the Olympics and the Paralympics last year and the
Commonwealth Games next year, there is much talk, at the moment, of ‘legacy’. There appears to be a growing awareness and understanding that yes whilst these elite events can provide an amazing spectacle, more than that participation and sport can make a real difference at community level. Dundee Council are
currently building a new leisure pool at the cost of £31m, as are Perth at the cost of £15m.  Edinburgh has had no leisure pool for over a year.  We hope that the Council after reading our business plan, share with us, the desire to rectify that and reopen Leith Waterworld.”

Cllr Richard Lewis, Culture and Leisure Convener, said: “I said previously that I would be delighted if an affordable and achievable community bid came forward and I acknowledge the time and effort that Splashback have invested in this. We gave the group the opportunity to bring back a more robust bid and it is now up to us as councillors to consider the arguments and reach a decision in the best interests of the city.”

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