EDINBURGH’S tram project lurched along rudderless and a senior councillor was “implored” not to raise concerns in public about the botched development, an inquiry has heard.

Edinburgh Trams Inquiry: Former chief executive believed he could have got a better deal for taxpayers over controversial project

Former deputy council leader and SNP group chief Steve Cardownie told the Edinburgh Tram Inquiry before Lord Hardie he was put under pressure by coalition partners the Lib Dems and later Labour not to raise public concerns over the trams while disputes were ongoing, saying he was “implored” to show a united front.

The Herald: Former deputy council leader SNP councillor Steve Cardownie leaving the Edinburgh Trams Inquiry. Picture by Michael Boyd.

Above: Former deputy council leader Steve Cardownie at the inquiry. Picture by Michael Boyd.

Edinburgh Trams: Case for £165m Newhaven extension backed by councillors

He said "spin" was put on the truth from Tie - Edinburgh City Council's arms-length firm set up to deliver the project - that disputes were being “won” when they were only being settled for a reduced agreement on the original contract bargaining price.

Edinburgh Trams Inquiry: Former chief executive believed he could have got a better deal for taxpayers over controversial project

The Herald: Edinburgh Tram Inquiry: Chief admits he didn't know who was in charge

He said in the earlier stages of the tram fiasco "Tie had to report more often that would have been expected because of the delays, the disputes and the budget, and in fact the design of the tram".

Edinburgh Trams: Case for £165m Newhaven extension backed by councillors

He said: "I don’t think councillors were aware of exactly what these disputes meant in terms of money.

Edinburgh Trams Inquiry: Former chief executive believed he could have got a better deal for taxpayers over controversial project

"There was a whole number of disputes that we were told we were winning but there was a kind of spin put on how do you determine winning.

The Herald:

Edinburgh Trams: Case for £165m Newhaven extension backed by councillors

He continued: "So councillors I think were more interested at that time in the political fall-out with the public than they were about the money because it had not breached the budget by that time and we were still told that (there was) a contingency fund - we were told that any matters could be dealt with through the contingency fund."

Edinburgh Trams Inquiry: Former chief executive believed he could have got a better deal for taxpayers over controversial project

The former Labour and then SNP councillor who stepped down at the last election also said: "We were implored by our partners in the administration to put up a united front when it came to the disputes, that the consortium (of contractors) would attempt to use any weakness or division."

Edinburgh Trams: Case for £165m Newhaven extension backed by councillors

The Herald: Lord Hardie will chair the inquiry into the trams    Picture: Gordon Terris

Lord Hardie, pictured above, asked Mr Cardownie when "implored by your partners in the administration to put up a united front when it came to the question of disputes, can I just clarify which partners are you talking about, because you were in coalition with the Liberal Democrats and in coalition with Labour?"

Edinburgh Trams Inquiry: Former chief executive believed he could have got a better deal for taxpayers over controversial project

Mr Cardownie said: “Well both actually but originally the Liberal Democrats.

Edinburgh Trams: Case for £165m Newhaven extension backed by councillors

“We were implored by, in particular I remember, Gordon Mackenzie, councillor Mackenzie, speaking to me on several occasions saying ‘we’ve got this information but please don’t take it any further’ we’ve got to show that we are united.

Edinburgh Trams Inquiry: Former chief executive believed he could have got a better deal for taxpayers over controversial project

"If Bilfinger Berger (a contractor) think that we are weak in any place they might not concede their case and they might continue to get more money out of these disputes."

Edinburgh Trams: Case for £165m Newhaven extension backed by councillors

The Herald:

Former Tie chief executive Michael Howell told week four of the public hearings stage of the inquiry that he had clashed with Neil Renilson, then chief executive of Lothian Buses.

Edinburgh Trams Inquiry: Former chief executive believed he could have got a better deal for taxpayers over controversial project

Mr Howell said: “I couldn’t imagine anything more important than having a close and friendly and personal and trusting relationship with the chief executive of Lothian Buses – who was Neil Renilson at the time – and that proved I’m sad to say impossible.

Edinburgh Trams: Case for £165m Newhaven extension backed by councillors

“It was clear very early on that for whatever reason Neil wanted to be in charge of everything to do with the tram even though he wasn’t a civil engineer and he didn’t really know anything about building a tram system.

The Herald:

Edinburgh Trams Inquiry: Former chief executive believed he could have got a better deal for taxpayers over controversial project

"And it was something that created a lot of energy and tension and the Tie board, and me and my colleagues, because of various filibusters from the director of Lothian Buses."

Edinburgh Trams: Case for £165m Newhaven extension backed by councillors

He added that "one of the issues that preoccupied Neil Renilson was that a very substantial proportion" of his fares would be moving across to the tram.

Edinburgh Trams Inquiry: Former chief executive believed he could have got a better deal for taxpayers over controversial project

Asked by Jonathan Lake, inquiry senior counsel, that while there was "the Tram project board (a Tie sub-committee) and they’ve got the Tie board and they’ve got the TEL board, who was in charge of the project?", Mr Howell said: "That’s a very good question and I would at the time would have liked to have asked that particularly of Tom Aitchison (then council chief executive) because I think he should have helped us to figure it out."

Edinburgh Trams: Case for £165m Newhaven extension backed by councillors

Mr Lake asked: "To put it mildly, even in the role that you held within Tie, it's not clear to you who was in charge of the project?"

Edinburgh Trams Inquiry: Former chief executive believed he could have got a better deal for taxpayers over controversial project

Mr Howell answered: "At that moment it wasn’t ... "

Mr Howell left Tie after four years in 2006.

The inquiry continues.