Finance
Wendy Alexander 'was asked to leave' Dundee uni role claim over finance questions
PAFormer MSP Wendy Alexander claims she was asked to leave her senior post at Dundee University after asking “uncomfortable” questions about the institution’s finances, MSPs have been told.
Alexander was the university’s vice principal international for almost a decade but retired last year rather than accept what she said was the offer of a “package and trips.”
She said “cakeism, profligacy and hubris at the very top” led to “a failure to reign in expenditure” and that she “chose not to be bought off”.
She said former principal Prof Iain Gillespie, who was heavily criticised in a recent damning report into the university’s finances, “made clear” he wanted her to leave last October.
University of DundeeAlexander’s comments were made in a statement submitted to Holyrood’s education committee.
Gillespie resigned with immediate effect in December after telling staff the previous month that job losses were “inevitable”.
He is expected to give evidence in person at the committee on Thursday.
The university currently faces a £35m deficit and has said it must cut 300 jobs through a voluntary redundancy scheme.
The independent report, published last week, said university bosses and its governing body failed multiple times to identify the worsening crisis and continued to overspend instead of taking action.
In her statement, former Labour MSP Alexander said: “I personally, was progressively frozen out of meetings, my objectives changed, data withheld and when I challenged the absence/adequacy of financial information in Sept (20)24, I was then asked to leave.
“I declined the offer of overseas trips at the university’s expense to be followed by a generous settlement payment.
“Quite simply, it seemed unethical and morally wrong.”
Alexander, who now sits as a baroness at the House of Lords, said she felt “punished for speaking out” and that the university “failed to fix the roof when the sun shone”.
She said international fee income had quadrupled over eight years to 2023, but the university was “barely breaking even”.
She said that international income plateaued in 2023/24 and fell the following year.
Alexander said there was a “misguided” shift away from a “laser-like focus on international student recruitment to a new globalisation strategy”.
She added that the university “deprioritised international student recruitment when it mattered most” and left the university “poorly equipped to deal with the downturn”.
The education committee is currently hearing evidence from the university’s former director of finance Peter Fotheringham, former chief operating officer Dr Jim McGeorge, and former chair of court Amanda Millar.
Alexander submitted her evidence rather than appearing in person due to a prior family event abroad.
It was announced on Tuesday that the 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.
The university received £22m from the Scottish Funding Council in February as part of funding to support universities facing financial challenges.
Finance
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