{"url":"https://www.ayradvertiser.com/news/25970313.south-ayrshire-council-staff-wont-get-world-cup-holiday/","title":"South Ayrshire Council rejects World Cup staff holiday","domain":"ayradvertiser.com","imageUrl":"https://images.pexels.com/photos/32266774/pexels-photo-32266774.jpeg?auto=compress&cs=tinysrgb&h=650&w=940","pexelsSearchTerm":"Scottish council meeting","category":"Sports","language":"en","slug":"8606be6f","id":"8606be6f-63ca-4e45-a03f-ab7717470eb9","description":"Council Rejects Holiday: South Ayrshire Council voted against giving staff an extra bank holiday for Scotland's World Cup match.","summary":"## TL;DR\n- **Council Rejects Holiday:** South Ayrshire Council voted against giving staff an extra bank holiday for Scotland's World Cup match.\n- **£105,508 Cost:** The additional holiday on June 15 would cost the council approximately £105,508 amid a £9.8m budget gap.\n- **Financial Pressures Cited:** Leaders prioritized budget constraints over staff celebration, rejecting use of reserves.\n\n## The story at a glance\nSouth Ayrshire Council voted on March 26 not to grant staff a bank holiday on June 15 for Scotland's World Cup opener against Haiti. First Minister John Swinney designated the day nationally, approved by King Charles, but the council cited high costs. This follows Scotland's participation in the 2026 tournament, with the match set for 2am UK time in Boston.\n\n## Key points\n- National bank holiday set for June 15 to mark Scotland's first group stage match against Haiti on June 14.\n- Only public sector employees in Scottish Government areas are assured the day off; councils can choose.\n- Chief executive recommended against it due to £105,508 cost and £9.8m budget gap for 2026/2027.\n- Councillors debated and voted to reject the holiday on March 26.\n- Amendment by Councillor Philip Saxton proposed using reserves for the staff day off.\n- Council leader Brian Connolly opposed, seeing no link between staff work and the World Cup.\n\n## Details and context\nThe council faces significant financial pressures, with service redesign and savings under consideration due to the budget gap. Implementing the holiday was deemed prohibitive in this context, as stated in a report to councillors.\n\nScotland's match kicks off at 2am UK time, explaining the Sunday timing for the holiday. The national designation applies mainly to directly controlled public sector areas, leaving local authorities like South Ayrshire to decide independently.\n\nAn amendment to fund it from reserves was tabled but did not pass, highlighting debate over celebrating staff versus fiscal responsibility.\n\n## Key quotes\n- Councillor Philip Saxton: \"This is a day off to celebrate success. It is seldom we get the opportunity to thank staff for their work.\"\n- Council leader Brian Connolly: \"I don't see the connection between how well our staff are working to the World Cup. I see absolutely no justification for the public holiday.\"\n\n## Why it matters\nLocal councils balance national events against tight budgets, affecting how public holidays reach frontline workers. Staff in South Ayrshire miss the day off, facing normal work amid £9.8m shortfalls and service cuts. Watch council budget votes for 2026/2027, as further savings could impact jobs and services.","hashtags":["#scotland","#world","#cup","#local","#government","#finance"],"sources":[{"url":"https://www.ayradvertiser.com/news/25970313.south-ayrshire-council-staff-wont-get-world-cup-holiday/","title":"Original article"}],"viewCount":4,"publishedAt":"2026-04-20T09:47:20.446Z","createdAt":"2026-04-20T09:47:20.446Z","articlePublishedAt":"2026-03-27T12:24:00.000Z"}