THE Chief Executive of Fermanagh and Omagh District Council expects to be “held to account” by members in the event of future project shortfalls.

Alison McCullagh made the remarks on potential underspends and emphasised while there have been issues in the past, arrangements are now in place to avoid their recurrence.

Independent Councillor Donal O’Cofaigh referenced planned expenditure of just under £77m on various projects in 2021/22, of which more than £58m is council-funded.

He said: “The estimates assume we won’t spend £11m in time. Previous projects show a 16 per cent shortfall, occurring primarily ... in our own projects.”

He enquired how the Council could be certain £58m would go on projects, leaving a £20m underspend, and sparking questions around capacity to deliver.

The Director of Corporate Service and Governance, Celine McCartan, advised: “The new Council was established in 2015 with some projects in train. There have been delays, but it still remains our aspiration to significantly enhance our facilities and services.”

On the non-delivery of some Council-funded projects, Sinn Fein’s Councillor Thomas O’Reilly enquired if there is sufficient personnel for preparation and delivery, and: “Why are we consistently throwing up this underspend?”

Ms. McCullagh said there a number of reasons for under-delivery, including the previous splitting of the commissioning and delivery role.

She continued: “We have now brought those together. In addition, our planning has been poor … also the scale of expenditure on a number of Council-owned facilities, particularly in leisure and heritage, will be much greater than projects undertaken, to date.”

She added: “Members are right to highlight their concerns, and if previous performance is an indicator, we would again be underdelivering. But we have put the appropriate arrangements in place to ensure the capital plan will be delivered.”

Councillor Sheamus Greene, Sinn Fein, enquired: “If it turns out the same things happen and there’s an underspend, who takes the fall? Is it the councillors who agreed it? Apart from councillors losing their seats, what are the consequences?”

Ms. McCullagh responded by pointing to the “elected members and front-facing dimension”, but stressed plans for performance management. “It’s also something I’m sure members will be holding me to account [for] personally.”