A call for Haverfordwestâs transport interchange to come under the scrutiny of full council was defeated by just one vote, but the project as a whole will see a cheaper version built, to the tune of more than ÂŁ10m.
The second stage of building Haverfordwestâs transport interchange was backed by Pembrokeshire County Councilâs Cabinet last month, with members hearing it could cost the council more to not support it.
The transport interchange, which includes an integrated bus station and construction of a new multi-storey car park, is part of a wider series of regeneration projects in the county town.
The total cost of the Welsh Government grant-supported scheme in the approved budget is ÂŁ18.881m, ÂŁ1.987m coming from Pembrokeshire County Council.
At the April Cabinet meeting, a report for members warned that if the scheme was not backed then Welsh government could withdraw its grant funding, with some ÂŁ3.376m spent on the project to date, which could be reclaimed.
After that meeting, a successful âcall-inâ for the matter to be discussed at the councilâs Services Overview and Scrutiny Committee meeting of May 7th was made by the councilâs Welsh Conservative group, led by Cllr Di Clements.
It asked for âfull and proper scrutinyâ of the decision, saying the Cabinet decision had âlittle discussion on how the âvalue engineeringâ of this project will affect the project overallâ.
At the May 7th meeting, deputy leader Cllr Paul Miller labelled the âcall-inâ politically motivated, saying: âThe council had a car park that wasnât very good, and weâre building a better one,â adding: âCabinet didnât vote for something they didnât understand, every member in that room knew what they were voting for.
âItâs going to cost a lot more not to do this project than to do it; I think this is a purely political exercise, nonsense really, if Pembrokeshire County Council canât rebuild a knackered car park in its county town centre what is going on?â
Following a successful call by Cllr Aled Thomas for some confidential details of the âvalue engineeringâ reductions in costs were made public; the cost of the overall project reduced by some ÂŁ10m-plus, from an early estimate figure of ÂŁ25m for the original scheme highlighted in the now-public documents.
The âvalue engineeringâ includes a reduction in size of the scheme, from 320 to 290 larger parking spaces, including the removal of a âgreen roofâ and other infrastructure.
âI struggle to see how you can take ÂŁ10m off a project and it fundamentally be the same project,â Cllr Thomas said.
Cllr Miller told members: âThis has been an exercise in cutting our cloth, but we think we found the right balance.â
Councillor Tony Wilcox said: âWeâre getting basically the same scheme for ÂŁ10m less, virtually like-for-like, itâs good all round; I only wish it was in Pembroke Dock.â
The issue of the changed figures drew the ire of former council leader Cllr Jamie Adams, who said: âPart of the scandal surrounding the project is the figures [over time] have been so wildly fluctuating, ÂŁ8m then ÂŁ18m, we never really had an explanation as to why that was; then up to ÂŁ25m, and now down to ÂŁ14.5m.
âThe public are rightly asking âwhat on earth is going on?â.â
He added: âWeâve had a fait accompli and such wildly conflicting reports about how much itâs going to cost; you would struggle to find 10 percent of the people Iâve spoken to say they were in support of this scheme.
âWeâre simply reflecting the views weâre being given; weâve become a bit of a laughing-stock because the costs of this have gone up and down, up and down.â
Cllr Miller finished by saying: âHere we are, half way down the road to building this car park, itâs ÂŁ1.9m to deliver, if we donât deliver weâll have to spend much more to have a gravel car park we have now.â
A call was made by Cllr Thomas for the scheme to return to full council, along with potential revisions to the scheme.
âThe issue here isnât the car park in itself, itâs the way itâs been handled; the fact is the Cabinet meeting was done and dusted in 10 minutes.â
He formally proposed: âGiven the significance of this project, the committee wish for full council to provide full scrutiny of this project at a council level before returning its recommendation to the cabinet.
âThe committee request that Cllr Miller engage with the Welsh Government as to whether it is possible for a revision to be made to this project and its funding as a result of town centres changing drastically post Covid-19, and that should also be discussed at the council meeting.â
That call was defeated by seven votes to six, the original Cabinet decision standing.
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