Scots councils spend £1 million per year on bottled water

By Alexander Lawrie

SCOTLAND’S local authorities are pouring £1 million a year down the drain buying in bottled water rather than using supplies from taps.

Council chiefs have splashed out at least that amount refreshing staff and guests with bought in water rather than using regular supplies.

And it’s part of a near £3 MILLION soft drinks bill for all their premises including water coolers, bottle water and diluting juice across their premises.

A Freedom of Information request to all of the country’s 32 council’s shows at least £2, 835,600 was spent on council buildings and official council functions for water coolers, bottled water and diluting juices over the last three years.

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A penny overdrawn leaves student £48 in the red

IAG230609penny_4(2)

By Cara Sulieman

A STUDENT has been hit with a £48 bank charge for slipping into her overdraft – by A PENNY.

Cash-strapped Julia Turner thought she had £5 left in her bank account when she bought a T-shirt but in fact was only £4.99 credit.

Going over her limit by that single penny triggered the astonishing wave of charges.

The Bank of Scotland fined her a £20 administrative fee for going over her limit plus a further £28 “unauthorised overdraft fee.”

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Thousands of letters missing at Edinburgh depot

Edinburgh Mail Centre

By Cara Sulieman

MANAGERS at a Royal Mail centre are facing disciplinary action after thousands of undelivered letters were found dumped in a trailer on the site.

Bundles of post were found stashed away in an articulated trailer parked in the grounds of the Sighthill in Edinburgh depot last September.

Although the Royal Mail won’t confirm a figure, it is thought to be around 20,000 pieces of post are involved.

It is being speculated that the post was hidden away to make it easier for the depot to hit their delivery targets, which they get paid a bonus for.

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These are not just any Christmas sweets..these are out-of-date Marks and Spencer sweets 271

By Alexander Lawrie
 
A POPULAR high street store has been criticised after it emerged bags of their Christmas sweets go out of date two weeks before the big day.
 
Marks and Spencers started stocking their shelves with Christmas goodies on October 1, and claim the Christmas sweets are designed to be “consumed soon after purchase”.
 
But shoppers and consumer campaigners have branded the store’s decision to stock the early-dated sweets as “ridiculous”.
 
Suzanne Mackie, 22, from Edinburgh, began her seasonal shopping at the Ocean Terminal shopping centre in Edinburgh last Monday, and stocked up on bags of the treats for younger members of her family.
 
But when she got home to start her wrapping she was horrified to see the bags of Christmas Jelly Babies were out of date on December 9.
 
She said: “I couldn’t believe it when I got home to find out the bags of jelly babies were going to be out of date on Christmas Day.
 
“I was going to give them to a couple of my nieces as a gift, but they could have taken ill if they had eaten them.
 
“It’s absolutely ridiculous that a quality company such as Marks and Spencers could make such a blatant mistake. It’s bad enough shops selling Christmas goods in September or October, but for those goods to go out of date before the big day comes around is ridiculous.
 
“At a push I could forgive them if it was just a day or two, but these sweets go out of date over two weeks before the 25th.”
 
Shopper’s group Consumer Focus Scotland admitted the company was selling products which could easily mislead their customers.
 
A spokesman for Consumer Focus Scotland said: “Consumer Focus Scotland believes in a fair and open relationship between consumer and company. While all sell by dates and use by dates are clearly stated on the packaging, we feel that in certain cases, retailers could give more thought to labelling that while not deliberately misleading, could be easily misconstrued by the consumer.”

But Marks and Spencers denied any wrongdoing, insisting that the jelly babies were meant as a quick impulse buy, which would be eaten long before Christmas day,

A spokesperson said: “Our Christmas Jelly babies are a seasonal version of the popular sweet designed to be an impulse-buy consumed soon after purchase.
 
“They have historically been very popular early in the season as a treat for shoppers. Stock is refreshed regularly so that nearer to Christmas the sweets will have a use by date that lasts over the festive period.”