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Search underway for fisherman after boat found aground with engine still running on Sligo beach

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MEMBERS OF THE Coast Guard are searching for a fisherman who they believe went overboard off the coast of Sligo yesterday evening.

The search went on throughout the night and has continued this morning.

Malin Head Coast Guard is coordinating the search and rescuers are focusing on the waters off Mullaghmore and into Donegal Bay. 

A member of the public alerted the Coast Guard’s coordination centre yesterday evening after finding a fishing vessel that had run aground off Cliffoney Beach, south of Mullaghmore Head. The engine was still running.  

The Sligo based Coast Guard helicopter R118 , Killybegs Coast Guard Unit, and RNLI lifeboats from Bundoran, Aranmore, Ballyglass and Sligo are continuing to search the area.

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A merchant vessel and a number of local fishing boats are taking part in the search.

Sligo Bay and Bundoran RNLI’s inshore lifeboats were requested by the Irish Coast Guard to divert from a routine training exercise shortly before 8pm.

Arranmore and Ballyglass RNLI’s all-weather lifeboats were also requested to join the multi-agency search.

 

 

 

 

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Most Scottish colleges not sustainable, says report

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Douglas FraserScotland business/economy editor

imageGetty Images A generic photo of students at computers in a classroomGetty Images

Most Scottish colleges face unsustainable losses over the next three years – and several are warning they could run out of cash by the end of this financial year, according to a new report.

The Scottish Funding Council (SFC) study, which has had access to accounts and forecasts, shows a further education sector in crisis, with 22 out of 24 colleges expected to spend more than their income this year.

“These deficits show that most colleges are not sustainable,” it says.

Meanwhile, a separate report into Scotland’s universities says they have become over-reliant on income from foreign students and they are at risk if numbers drop.

The SFC monitors and assesses the financial health of Scotland’s further education colleges and universities.

It also distributes funds for Scottish students on behalf of the Scottish government.

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Colleges remain highly dependent on the SFC grant, which accounts for more than three-quarters (77%) of their income.

This contrasts with the university sector, which was only reliant on SFC grants for 24% of its income last year, and that number is reducing.

The report says the grant from the funding council has remained relatively flat whereas other costs have soared, such as annual pay awards for staff and rising employer National Insurance contributions and pensions.

Staff costs represent the largest expense for colleges at just under 70% of total costs so this the area they focus on as they urgently try to balance their budgets.

The SFC says further cuts will have a profound impact on the college curriculum, the quality of courses, staff numbers, student numbers, morale and local communities.

An increasing number of colleges have reported that continued savings of that scale will not be achievable, it says.

Most colleges spending more than they earn

According to the funding council report, 17 of Scotland’s 24 FE colleges were in deficit last year, meaning they spend more than they earn.

The forecast for this financial year expects that number to increase to 22.

Twenty of the colleges are still expected to be in deficit in three years’ time.

Another important indicator of a college’s short-term viability is the amount of cash they have in their accounts.

Last year and the year before, the sector as a whole had a cash surplus of £130m.

That is forecast to fall to £35m at the end of this year, and then to go negative by £46m by 2028.

The report says “this reflects colleges’ weak operating position, and there is an imminent risk of several colleges becoming insolvent” by the end of this financial year.

Four colleges expect to have negative cash balances by next April, rising to 12 of them by April 2027.

imageGetty Images Generic image of a classroomGetty Images

The report offers limited information about the colleges facing the most financial difficulties.

It reports on published accounts up to 2023-24, which indicate that several of the biggest operating deficits, adjusted for exceptional costs, were in colleges that form the University of the Highlands and Islands.

Perth had an operating deficit of £1.8m, Shetland College was at £1.5m and Moray College was above £1m, with Orkney not far behind.

The Scottish Funding Council says colleges are responding to the pressures with restructuring plans, but have to find money for voluntary redundancies from their own, limited resources.

It says they are cutting teaching time and increasing class sizes, as well as cutting courses with low demand and trying to win more training income from employers.

It says that, on current forecasts, 667 full-time jobs, or their part-time equivalent, will have been cut over four years from 2024, which is one in 15 college staff.

What do Scotland’s colleges say?

Gavin Donoghue, the chief executive of Colleges Scotland, said they had been warning about the chronic underfunding of colleges for years but this report made especially grim reading.

“Colleges have already had investment in them reduced by 17% in real terms since 21/22,” he said.

“They’ve taken difficult and often unpalatable decisions to reduce their staff headcount and reduce the amount of students that they teach and are now looking at decisions like closure of campuses and courses.

“There is no single silver bullet that an individual college can take, its clearly a systemic problem that requires sustainable Scottish government funding.”

Universities ‘over-reliant on foreign students’

Meanwhile, a separate SFC report on Scottish universities said they were over-reliant on foreign students as a source of income.

It said universities get more money from teaching overseas students than they do in funding for Scottish students but there is an increasing risk that they may not be able to maintain the numbers who come from abroad.

The report says competition from other countries, UK visa and immigration policy and geopolitical changes could easily impact their ability to attract foreign students.

The SFC report on universities also says:

  • Eleven of Scotland’s 18 universities are expecting to spend more more than they earn this year
  • This is expected to lead to a total deficit of £12.9m this year
  • The deficit is mainly due to low growth in tuition fees, reduced other income and increased staff costs due to pay inflation.
  • The forecast for 2026 shows universities returning to surplus and just seven running a deficit
  • However, improvement is mainly driven by three universities, and due to more optimistic forecasts for tuition fees and research income – offset by smaller increases in staff costs

The SFC report says international tuition fee income is now essential for universities to remain financially sustainable and it supports other areas such as research which is often loss-making.

However, the report warns that foreign income is an area of significant fluctuation and risk, especially when it is heavily weighted to a single country.

China remains the country with the most foreign students in Scotland, followed by India, the United States, Nigeria and Pakistan.

Nigeria saw a massive rise in student numbers post-Covid but has since dropped back.

imageGetty Images Female graduands make their way through the streets of St Andrews and into a graduation ceremony at the University of St AndrewsGetty Images

Earlier this year, a report into the financial crisis at Dundee University said it had continued with increased spending despite a large drop in foreign student fee income.

The university needed a £40m government bailout after it almost collapsed financially.

The SFC report excluded Dundee because it has not yet finalised its accounts.

It is an extreme example but other Scottish universities are also under financial strain.

Edinburgh University’s principal has called for a “radical re-wiring” to respond to the funding challenge.

On Thursday, Glasgow University principal Anton Muscatelli called for a review of the funding and warned against “stumbling from year to year”.

His statement came as analysis seen by the BBC suggested Scottish government finance for universities and further education colleges has been squeezed in real terms in the past six years by about a fifth, due to the effect of inflation.

The study by David Bell, a professor of economics at Stirling University and expert in public finance, also used publicly available data to show that the fees universities receive for Scottish students fall far short of what they estimate are the costs of educating them.

For instance, in modern languages, the £7,421 annual funding per student is half of what they say is required.

In dentistry, the Scottish government last year paid £19,580 per student.

This is reckoned to be at least £9,000 short of the cost to universities.

Claire McPherson, the director of Universities Scotland, which represents Scotland’s higher education institutions, said the report sets out the “starkest set of financial figures we have ever seen for Scotland’s universities”.

Ms McPherson’s said the report sounds “loud and clear” the financial warnings but there were important things that it does not say.

“It doesn’t mention job losses, which is the painful reality in many institutions,” she said.

“It also doesn’t reference a decade-long decline in public funding as the major contributing factor to the level of financial exposure institutions face and the hard choices they are forced to take.”

She said it was absolutely vital that Scotland makes a move to put its universities on a sustainable financial footing for the long-term.

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Liverpool’s Leoni out for ‘about a year’ with ACL injury

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Liverpool defender Giovanni Leoni is out for “about a year” after tearing his anterior cruciate ligament, manager Arne Slot says.

The 18-year-old sustained the injury on his debut against Southampton in the Carabao Cup third round on Tuesday.

Leoni joined the Reds in August from Parma for a fee of £26m plus add-ons.

“He is not in a good place because he tore his ACL which means he will be out around a year,” said Slot.

“Being so young and coming to a new country and playing so well in your first game, it’s very hard to take the positives.

“There is never a positive side but you try to look at that, and that is he is still so young and he has so many years still go to after he recovers from a terrible injury.”

More to follow.

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Trump announces new tariffs on drugs, trucks and kitchen cabinets

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US President Donald Trump has announced a new wave of tariffs, including a 100% levy on branded or patented drug imports from 1 October unless a company is building a factory in the US.

Washington will also impose a 25% import tax on all heavy-duty trucks and 50% levies on kitchen and bathroom cabinets, the US president said as he unveiled the industry-focused measures.

“The reason for this is the large scale ‘FLOODING’ of these products into the United States by other outside Countries,” Trump wrote on his Truth Social platform on Thursday, citing the need to protect US manufacturers.

The announcements come despite calls from US businesses for the White House to not impose further tariffs.

The new tariffs could impact major producers of branded pharmaceuticals – including the UK, Ireland, Germany, Switzerland and Japan.

On Friday, Ireland’s Trade Minister, Simon Harris, said that a recent EU agreement with the US which meant any tariffs on pharmaceuticals would be capped at 15% remains the case after Trump’s announcement.

“I want to stress that the EU and US joint statement issued on 21 August made absolutely clear that any new tariffs announced by the US on pharmaceuticals would be capped at 15% for pharma products being exported by the EU,” he said.

The UK exported more than $6bn (£4.5bn) worth of pharmaceutical products to the US last year, according to the United Nations.

A UK government spokesperson said: “We know this will be concerning for industry, which is why we’ve been actively engaging with the US and will continue to do so over the coming days.”

Jane Sydenham, investment director at Rathbones, said speculation over tariffs for pharmaceuticals meant the sector had endured a “rollercoaster ride” over the past few months.

“The pharmaceutical sector in terms of share prices has been under pressure for quite some time both in the UK and the United States and Europe so nobody likes uncertainty and that’s been keeping a cloud over the sector for a while,” she told the BBC Radio 4’s Today programme.

However, Neil Shearing, chief economist at Capital Economics, said the tariff announcements were “not quite as big a move as it appears at first sight”.

This was due to the exemptions available to generic drugs and to those firms building factories in the US.

“Many of the world’s largest pharmaceutical companies either already have some production in the US or have announced plans to build production in the near future,” he said.

The tariffs on heavy trucks would protect US manufacturers from “unfair outside competition” and that the duties would help lift American companies such as Peterbilt and Mack Trucks, Trump said.

These firms “will be protected from the onslaught of outside interruptions”, he wrote.

The new levies on kitchen and bathroom cabinets, as well as some other furniture, were in response to high levels of imports, which hurt local manufacturers, the president said.

He added that the US would start charging a 30% tariff on upholstered furniture from next week.

The new duties came as Trump expands his tariff policies, which have been a key feature of his second term in the White House.

Trump’s sweeping tariffs on more than 90 countries came into effect in early August, as part of his policies aimed at boosting jobs and manufacturing in the US, among other political goals.

He previously imposed sector-specific tariffs on steel, copper, aluminium, cars and vehicle components.

Earlier this year, the US Chamber of Commerce urged the White House to not introduce new tariffs, arguing that many parts used in truck production are sourced “overwhelmingly” from countries like Mexico, Canada, Germany, Finland and Japan.

The organisation added that these countries are “allies or close partners of the United States posing no threat to US national security.”

Mexico and Canada are among the biggest suppliers of parts for medium and heavy-duty trucks, accounting for more than half of total US imports in the sector last year, said the chamber.

It warned that it was “impractical” to expect many of these parts to be sourced domestically, resulting in higher costs for the industry.

The new tariffs favour domestic producers but are “terrible” for consumers as prices are likely to rise, said trade expert Deborah Elms from research firm Hinrich Foundation.

The levies would cover more products at higher rates than Trump’s reciprocal tariffs, which were aimed at correcting trade imbalances with other countries.

These industry-specific import taxes could serve as a back-up plan to secure revenues as Trump’s sweeping duties on global trading partners are being challenged in court, said Ms Elms.

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