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Wics
Alan Sutherland resigned over claims of lavish expenditure at the Water Industry Commission for Scotland
The Scottish government failed to properly scrutinise lavish spending at a body charged with regulating Scottish Water, according to a new report.
Holyrood's public audit committee said a lack of expenditure oversight at the Water Industry Commission for Scotland (Wics) was "simply unacceptable".
A report by the auditor general detailed how public money was spent sending a senior manager on a course at Harvard Business School in the US, Mulberry sunglasses and business-class flights to New Zealand.
A Scottish government spokesperson said steps had been taken to improve management at the commission, but acknowledged previous expenditure "was completely and utterly unacceptable".
Convener Richard Leonard told the BBC'S Good Morning Scotland programme that there had been a "flagrant misuse" of public money.
He said: "This is a body who's existence is to promote value for the customers of Scottish Water, and yet by any measure it fell well below the standards of what any public body should meet in the way it conducts its own affairs."
He added there was constant excessive expenditure on hospitality, including meals and alcohol.
He said: "In 2023 a decision was taken that there should be no limit whatsoever on the organisation's expenditure on things like alcohol. It really has been an extraordinary catalogue of misuse of public money."
'Unacceptable culture'
Mr MacRae quit in October last year, months after a letter from net zero and energy secretary Mairi McAllan criticised the way in which Mr Sutherland's resignation was handled.
But Richard Leonard said the Scottish government had been responsible for a lack of critical oversight of the commission's spending, which had allowed it to continue.
He said: "The committee is clear that there also appears to have been a serious lack of oversight from the Scottish government.
"This failure from those who are meant to be safeguarding the public purse is simply unacceptable."
He told BBC Scotland there needed to be a much more objective relationship between the Scottish government civil service and public bodies like Wics.
Wics
Donald MacRae resigned as chairman of Wics last year
The commission's role is to promote the interests of water and sewerage customers and ensure Scottish Water provides cost-effective services to ministerial objectives.
The committee's report acknowledged there had been widespread changes to the board and management since the auditor general's findings were published.
However, it urged the current board to undergo refresher training on their roles and responsibilities to ensure that the failure of responsibilities does not happen again.
Leonard said: "We have heard about significant changes within Wics and the organisation's commitment to improve the governance arrangements. These are clearly welcome.
"But we want to see concrete evidence of these changes to ensure that the unacceptable culture that was in place has truly gone."
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The Wics headquarters in Stirling
A Scottish government spokesperson said it had taken steps to improve the management of the commission.
They said a full response would be provided in due course.
"Ministers have been clear that the approach to expenditure at Wics up until December 2023 was completely and utterly unacceptable," they added.
"We have taken steps to improve our sponsorship function, completing all the management actions set out in the internal review of Wics sponsorship published last November."
Wics interim chairman Ronnie Hinds said: "With direction from our board and through the commitment of our leadership team and staff, we have taken decisive action to strengthen governance, improve financial controls and embed a culture that is firmly focused on best value.
"Everyone at Wics continues to be fully focused on regaining trust and reaffirming our role as an economic regulator that upholds the highest standards, both in our regulatory approach and in our stewardship of public resources."