Scottish councils call for leisure and sport investment as prevention tool

Scotland's councils are calling for long-term investment in public leisure and sport, warning that short-term funding and outdated legislation are putting vital community services under serious strain.

(c) Thomas Park/Unsplash

(c) Thomas Park/Unsplash

The Convention of Scottish Local Authorities (COSLA) has published a new paper, The Future of Public Leisure and Sport – An Investment in Wellbeing, making an evidence-based case for shifting Scotland's approach from crisis response to long-term prevention.

The paper argues that councils and their leisure trusts deliver the majority of Scotland's leisure services, managing sports facilities, parks and active travel spaces that support people of all ages. Sustained investment, it contends, can reduce pressure on health and social care, improve educational outcomes and strengthen communities.

COSLA is calling for multi-year flexible funding, modernised legislation, infrastructure renewal and stronger national leadership from the next Scottish Government.

Cllr Maureen Chalmers, COSLA spokesperson for Community Wellbeing, said: ‘This white paper makes clear that public leisure, sport and everyday physical activity are not optional extras - they are essential national assets that support Scotland's health, wellbeing and resilience. Councils are proud to steward the facilities, programmes and open spaces that help people live healthier, happier and more connected lives, but these services are under real pressure.'

Cllr Paul Kelly, COSLA spokesperson for health and social care, added: ‘If Scotland is serious about shifting from crisis response to genuine prevention, we need long term investment, modern legislation and stronger national leadership. With the right partnership between Local and the new Scottish Government, we can unlock the full preventative power of leisure and sport and deliver better outcomes for every community in Scotland.'

 

Healthcare reacts to Starmer resignation

Healthcare reacts to Starmer resignation

By Lee Peart 22 June 2026

Healthcare leaders have reacted to the news of Prime Minister Keir Starmer’s resignation.

Turning neighbourhood health from policy into practice

22 June 2026

The chairs of Cheshire and Merseyside’s All Together Fairer Board and Neighbourhoods Task and Finish Group set out how the subregion’s neighbourhood approach...

Report calls for continence care rethink

By Lee Peart 18 June 2026

A new report has called for a rethink of continence care as part of NHS reforms.


Popular articles by William Eichler