Scottish council bosses pocketed more than £½m

Six employees at Scottish councils have made the top ten of a UK-wide “rich list”compiled by the Taxpayers’ Alliance.
Picture: TSPLPicture: TSPL
Picture: TSPL

The annual Town Hall Rich List produced by the organisation gives details of senior local government staff whose annual salary exceeds £100,000.

The list shows that the largest remuneration package in Scotland for 2011-12 was received by South Lanarkshire Council executive director Linda Hardie, who came second on the UK-wide list.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

She was paid £543,538, including employee pension contributions of £427,209.

Five employees at Glasgow City Council and its subsidiary companies make the top ten for the largest packages.

The largest pay package, excluding larger-than-usual, one-off payments for redundancy or retirement, was received by John Sharkey, group chief executive of SEC Ltd, which owns and operates the Scottish Exhibition and Conference Centre. He received £314,553.

SEC is a private company whose majority shareholder is Glasgow City Council. Of Scottish local authorities, Glasgow has the highest number of staff paid more than £100,000.

While fewer council employees in Scotland received more than £100,000 in 2011-12 compared with the previous year, those paid more than £150,000 increased from 36 in 2010-11 to 58 in 2011-12.

Those paid more than £250,000 rose from three to 12.

Matthew Sinclair, chief executive of the Taxpayers’ Alliance, said: “It is good news that the number of senior council staff making more than £100,000 a year is finally falling, although that may only be because many authorities have finished paying eye-watering redundancy bills.

“Sadly, too many local authorities are still increasing the number of highly-paid staff on their payroll, some of whom are given hundreds of thousands of pounds in compensation just to move from one public sector job to another.”

South Lanarkshire Council said Ms Hardie retired in April 2011.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

A spokeswoman said: “The figure quoted is not a salary as such. Rather, it relates to a retirement which happened more than two years ago as part of wider restructuring and an ongoing savings exercise.”

A spokesman for Glasgow City Council said: “These figures have been artificially inflated by redundancy payments that we’ve been making as part of a voluntary severance scheme which will save £55.3 million from our wage bill every year.

“When a group claiming to represent taxpayers is furious about something that will save this city £55.3m every year, it raises questions about its real agenda.”

Commenting on Mr Sharkey, a spokesman for SEC said: “The total remuneration package … in 2011 included a £47,500 bonus which was in fact distributed among the SEC staff, and a long-term incentive plan payment of £38,000 which has not been paid and will not be received until 2014.”

Conservative local government spokeswoman Margaret Mitchell MSP said such salaries should be continually reviewed to ensure they are justified.