Here are the business stories making the headlines in Scotland and the UK this morning.

Warning over Scots teachers

New teachers are abandoning the profession because they are not being offered secure jobs, Scotland's largest teaching union said today.

The Educational Institute of Scotland (EIS) said many newly-qualified staff were only being given short contracts.

The BBC says the union is urging the Scottish Government to increase council funding to pay for more permanent jobs.

The Scottish Government said it was "taking strong action" to protect increased teacher numbers.

In a letter to First Minister Humza Yousaf, EIS general secretary Andrea Bradley said high numbers of temporary contracts had "serious implications" for Scotland's schools.

Long wait for an independent Scotland to enter EU

Scotland would face a wait of almost a decade to rejoin the EU after independence, according to the SNP government's officials.

In an internal analysis, civil servants warned that it could take up to eight years for an independent Scotland to rejoin the bloc, while even under a "best case" scenario the process would take between three and four years.

External warnings that Scotland would be forced to join the Euro and the Schengen visa-free travel zone, which would mean passport checks for cross-border travel to England, were also highlighted.

The analysis found that well over 30 new public bodies would have to be set up to meet membership requirements, and that a formal application could not even begin until Scotland had left the UK.

The Telegraph says the documents undermine several claims put forward by SNP leaders, who have sought to claim an independent Scotland would have a quick and seamless path back into the EU.

Head of climate watchdog still has gas heating

The head of the climate watchdog behind the planned boiler ban has admitted that he still has gas heating in his own home.

More than four years after claiming he was "keen" to convert to electric heating in his flat, Chris Stark, the chief executive of the Climate Change Committee, said he still has a gas boiler.

"I wish I didn't," added Mr Stark.

The Committee on Climate Change lobbied the UK Government to bring in a ban on the installation of gas boilers in new homes from 2025, with the sale of new gas boilers banned altogether from 2035 as a result of the committee's recommendations.

The committee and Government hope that electric heat pumps can be installed instead in many homes.

Questioned by MPs about how the 2035 target could be met when heat pumps remain unaffordable for most people, Mr Stark admitted that he still had a gas boiler in his Glasgow flat.

The Telegraph says he warned that the cost of heat pumps remained too high and that it was "very difficult" to install heat pumps in existing flats like his.

FTX founder sent to prison

The founder of collapsed cryptocurrency exchange FTX has been sent to prison after his $250million (£197million) bail was revoked over alleged witness tampering.

Sam Bankman-Fried was taken into custody on Friday after a US judge found it likely that he attempted to interfere with key witnesses at least twice.

The Telegraph says it means that Mr Bankman-Fried, 31, will now be forced to await his upcoming fraud trial in October from jail.

Mr Bankman-Fried intends to appeal the decision, his lawyers told the New York court.

The disgraced FTX founder has been accused of looting money from customer deposits to run a risky trading operation at a sister cryptocurrency hedge fund, Alameda Research, which also faced huge losses.

FTX, once the world's second-largest digital coin exchange, filed for bankruptcy last November with a multibillion-dollar hole in its accounts as customers rushed to withdraw funds.

Robotaxi services in San Francisco

Two robotaxi firms have been given the green light to start charging for service throughout San Francisco.

The move marks a major expansion for the companies, which previously faced limits on when or where they could charge for rides.

Approval from regulators came despite objections from police and fire officials, activists and others.

Analysts say the decision could usher in a new era for driverless car services.

Waymo, which shares a parent company with Google and has been offering free rides in its driverless cars throughout San Francisco riders since last year, called the decision "the true beginning of our commercial operations in San Francisco".

Rival Cruise, a subsidiary of car giant General Motors - which has predicted the business could be generating $1billion (£787million) in annual revenue by 2025, described the moment as a "historic industry milestone".

says driverless car services have been slow to live up to the promises of transforming transport that accompanied the start of their development more than a decade ago.

They have been bogged down by technology glitches, safety fears and high-profile accidents.

Versace owner changes hands

The company that owns Versace is being bought by the luxury goods group Tapestry in a deal worth $8.5billion (£6.7billion).

Capri Holdings, which also owns Michael Kors and Jimmy Choo, is being taken over by Tapestry whose own brands include high-end names such as Coach.

Tapestry's boss Joanne Crevoiserat said the deal "creates a new powerful global luxury house".

Analysts said it would build a rival to compete with European fashion giants.

"It's creating a major American fashion conglomerate especially in the premium fashion space," Louise Deglise-Favre, apparel analyst at the analytics company GlobalData, told the BBC.

Trump warned

A federal judge has warned former US President Donald Trump against making "inflammatory" statements which could taint the jury pool ahead of his trial for conspiring to overturn the result of the 2020 election.

But Judge Tanya Chutkan ruled that Mr Trump can publicly share some of the non-sensitive evidence which prosecutors disclose to his legal team.

The BBC says Friday's ruling was a blow to the special counsel who had expressed concern Mr Trump might reveal secret material and intimidate witnesses.

At a 90-minute hearing in Washington DC, the judge said the historic case was proceeding as normal.

"He is a criminal defendant. He is going to have restrictions like every single other defendant," she added.

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