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Dundee University to receive further £40m support Dundee University to receive further £40m support
(about 1 hour later)
The university has a £35m deficit and is expected to lose about 300 staffThe university has a £35m deficit and is expected to lose about 300 staff
Dundee University will receive an extra £40m from the Scottish government as the institution continues to tackle its financial crisis.Dundee University will receive an extra £40m from the Scottish government as the institution continues to tackle its financial crisis.
Education Secretary Jenny Gilruth said the decision would place specific conditions on the funding which will be paid over two academic years.Education Secretary Jenny Gilruth said the decision would place specific conditions on the funding which will be paid over two academic years.
Gilruth said the money was "not rewarding failure" but responding to an "unprecedented and unique situation".Gilruth said the money was "not rewarding failure" but responding to an "unprecedented and unique situation".
The university currently faces a £35m deficit and was the subject of a damning independent report last week into its financial situation.The university currently faces a £35m deficit and was the subject of a damning independent report last week into its financial situation.
The award is unprecedented as it will be allocated by the Scottish Funding Council on the order of ministers. The university's new interim principal described the additional funding as "invaluable".
Gilruth told MSPs: "This funding is subject to further due diligence prior to any expenditure spending." Education Secretary Jenny Gilruth said the new funding was a response to a "unique and unprecedented situation"
The university is shedding 300 roles through a voluntary programme - after initially forecasting that about 700 jobs would go. The award is unprecedented as it will be allocated by the Scottish Funding Council (SFC) on the order of ministers.
The Scottish government has the power under the Further and Higher Education (Scotland) Act 2005 to direct the SFC to target a direct settlement to the university and to place specific conditions on the funding.
This is the first time these powers have been used.
Gilruth said: "Scotland's universities are independent and autonomous institutions.
"In normal circumstances, decisions on the allocation of funding to individual institutions are the responsibility of the SFC.
"However, this is a unique and unprecedented set of circumstances, which requires a unique and unprecedented response."
She added that the funding would only be released once a "sustainable long-term recovery plan" was in place from the university and was subject to further due diligence "prior to any expenditure spending".
Interim principal Prof Shane O'Neill stood down last week following a damning independent report into the university's finances
The university received £22m from the SFC in February as part of funding to support universities facing financial challenges.
Dundee University is shedding 300 roles through a voluntary programme - after initially forecasting that about 700 jobs would go.
Last week's report, which was led by Prof Pamela Gillies, said university bosses and its governing body failed multiple times to identify the worsening crisis and continued to overspend instead of taking action.
Interim principal Prof Shane O'Neill resigned immediately following the publication of the report.
Prof O'Neill took over as interim principal in December but he was previously deputy vice chancellor.
He was identified in the report - along with former principal Prof Iain Gillespie, the chief operating officer, and the director of finance - as one of the university leaders who "did not cultivate a culture of openness and challenge at all levels".
Both men are expected to give evidence to Holyrood's education committee on Thursday.
Prof Iain Gillespie resigned as Dundee University principal in December last year
Prof Nigel Seaton, who was announced as the university's interim principal on Friday, said the institution was "extremely grateful" to the Scottish government and SFC.
He said: "This is invaluable in helping us reach a more sustainable position and will provide welcome reassurance to staff, students and our wider stakeholders.
"We will continue to engage with the funding council on a full recovery plan, and in pushing forward with our ongoing work to strengthen our management and governance."
The professor added that the university did "not take lightly" the responsibilities which came with "this level of additional public support".
He said: "We have to be better as an institution than we have been and I, and my colleagues, are absolutely determined that we will be."