1994 Strathclyde water referendum
This article is part ofa serieswithin the Politics of the United Kingdomon the |
Politics of Scotland |
---|
![]() |
In 1994, the rulingConservativeGovernment of theUnited Kingdombrought forward plans to overhaul a number of aspects of local government inScotlandas part of theLocal Government etc. (Scotland) Act 1994.Part II of the Act reorganised Scotland's water supply and sewerage services, previously the responsibility of regional councils. Threewater authoritieswere established: East of Scotland Water; West of Scotland Water; and North of Scotland Water. The main reason for this reorganisation was to prepare for theprivatisationof water services, to bring Scotland into line with the rest of the UK. The water authorities in England and Wales had beenprivatised in 1989.However, public opinion was strongly against such a move, with successive polls showing 86% - 91% of people definitely opposed.[1]
Referendum
[edit]In March 1994StrathclydeRegional Council held a postalreferendumof Strathclyde residents on whether control of water and sewerage services should be privatised. Seven out of ten voters returned papers, a total of 1.2 million people, of whom 97% voted against privatisation.[2][3][4]
NO vote | YES vote |
---|---|
1,194,667 | 33,956 |
NO: 1,194,667(97%) |
YES: 33,956(3%) | ||
▲ |
Turnout | Total votes cast |
---|---|
70% | 1,228,623 |
Aftermath
[edit]With mounting disagreement with plans the policy was dropped, and the three Scottish Water Authorities were kept in public hands. In 2002 all three were merged to createScottish Water,a publicly owned water authority of theScottish Governmentin the post-devolution era.
References
[edit]- ^The Scotsman8 March 1993
- ^"Strathclyde Water Referendum: 97% Say No".Local Government Chronicle.22 March 1994.Retrieved20 November2022.
- ^"Vote against water plan hits 97% level".The Herald.23 March 1994.Retrieved20 November2022.
- ^"Future of Scotland's water and sewerage services".Parliament of the United Kingdom.