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The voice of Scotland’s vibrant voluntary sector

Published by Scottish Council for Voluntary Organisations

TFN is published by the Scottish Council for Voluntary Organisations, Mansfield Traquair Centre, 15 Mansfield Place, Edinburgh, EH3 6BB. The Scottish Council for Voluntary Organisations (SCVO) is a Scottish Charitable Incorporated Organisation. Registration number SC003558.

Charity declared bankrupt with £1m debts

This news post is almost 7 years old
 

Scandal-hit aid charity gave just 13p in every pound to charity

A controversial charity has been declared bankrupt after spending just 13p in every pound on charitable activities.

Uddingston-based Scotia Aid Sierra Leone was reported to the charity regulator in 2015 by a whistleblowing trustee who complained to authorities that directors were paying themselves huge fees at the expense of the cause they were meant to support.

Last year the Office of the Scottish Charity Regulator (OSCR) launched an inquiry into the - organisation, and placed an interim freezing the charity’s bank accounts.

It led to directors Kieran Kelly and Alan Johnston being barred from running any charity for life in January.

However, founder Dan Houston quit as chairman before the OSCR probe. According to Scotia Aid's accounts, he once paid himself £104,000 in "consultancy fees".

Now Scotland’s Accountancy in Bankrupty has served a winding up order, bankrupting Soctia Aid with debts of more than £1m.

The charity applied for bankruptcy earlier this month after running up debts of £1,107,800. Scotia Aid declared that its total assets are worth just £2,348.

In 2015 TFN told how the charity’s directors would take over empty commercial premises and lease them back to the leaseholders.

As businesses still have to pay rates on empty premises, former employees claimed Scotia Aid would go into partnership with these companies, taking over the premises for a fee significantly less than the usual local authority rates.

It meant struggling businesses who were having to pay hundreds of thousands of pounds each year in rates were only paying a fraction.

And it meant Scots Aid rceived huge amounts of cash in return.

Its annual report in 2014 showed these deals made it nearly £900,000.

Former cardinal Keith O’Brien – an ex-patron of the charity – raised concerns about Scotia Aid as far back as 2011.

The regulator opened a statutory inquiry into Scotia Aid in 2014 and published an interim report in July last year. The charity had already been subject to an investigation by South Lanarkshire Council.

The council investigation found that only 13p in every pound was being spent on charitable activities. OSCR found that payments had been made by the charity to companies connected to trustees.

It found those payments were “excessive and have not been sufficiently explained”.

A spokeswoman for OSCR said: “We can confirm that we continue to have an ongoing enquiry on Scotia Aid Sierra Leone.

“The judicial factor appointed by the court at our request continues to run the charity. We will update our report as appropriate.”

 

Comments

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maxxmacc
almost 7 years ago
13p in the pound - that's even worse than Kiltwalk's meagre 29p in the pound.Here is the piece from the Herald article: "Accounts filed covering a seven month period from December 2014 to August 2015 last year show that of £1.9 million raised by walkers, only £578,000 made its way to the charities who were meant to benefit. Fundraising and administration costs and salaries soaked up the remaining £1,338,000."Think twice before getting involved with Kiltwalk.
0 0
Peter Le Riche
almost 7 years ago
If people who worked for unethical charities in the past could talk about them without the fear of being sued. You would do a better job at examining the finances of charities and how they work. You would also save a lot of money by focusing on charities that are fit for purpose.
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