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Monthly Archives: November 2008
Oban lifeboat tows fishing boat into safety this morning
Last night, 27th November 2008, a fishing boat suffering from engine failure requested assistance from Oban lifeboat.
The fishing boat had been under tow from a fellow fishing boat but the tow had repeatedly parted because conditions were poor.
Oban lifeboat launched and took the bost under tow, getting it in to harbour in Oban at 0200 this morning.
UK Government to own majority of RBS
As part of its recapitalisation programme, RBS issued a new shares offer to existing shareholders. Current shareholders in RBS have bought only 0.24% of this new share issued.
A small response had been expected because the offer price for the shares at 65.5p was 10p higher than the shares’ trading price. The UK Government will now buy up the unsold shares, as part of the bail-out agreement. It will pay about £15bn, taking a majority stake of 57.9% in the bank and will also buy £5bn of preference shares in RBS.
Based on yesterday’s (27th November 2008) closing share price, this gap between offer price and current share trading price immediately created a paper loss for the taxpayer of £2.3bn.
As For Argyll has reported earlier, the Government has set up a hands-off holding company to manage its total holdings in UK banks. Its RBS shares will be held by that company – UK Financial Investments Ltd, under the chairmanship of former finance director of Lloyds TSB, Phiip Hampton, who is also Chairman of Sainsburys. The company’s job is to maximise value for taxpayers from these national shareholdings in UK banks. Its role also – nominally anyway, distances politicians from the banks’ business decisions.
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Oban employer, Lighthouse Caledonia, closing Stornoway plant
Lighthouse Caledonia, the salmon farming company operating across Scotland, is closing its plant at Marybank outside Stornoway in the Western Isles, with the loss of 130 processing jobs.
For Argyll has reported onthis before as the weaknes of its position was known and there were strenuous efforts to save the local jobs at risk. These have failed to find a solution.
Angus MacNeil MP for the Western Isles, has said tthat he company is in a weak financial position with a lot of debt.
This must be of concern for workers at the Lighthouse Caledonia operation in Oban in Argyll, fearing for their own jobs in a situation where there is difficulty in securing business credit.
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79 year-old woman in Wester Ross raided by sniffer dogs and police who mistook tomato plants for cannabis
Yesterday an exhibition celebrating decades of Scottish pantomime announced a nationwide tour starting from Edinburgh. On the same day, seven police with sniffer dogs brought from Alness, two hours away on the east coast, burst into the croft of a 79 year-old woman in the picturesque village of Shieldaig in Wester Ross.
Oh no they didn’t! Oh yes they did!
She was growing tomato plants in pots in a south-facing bedroom window and the police were convinced that these quite different plants were actually cannabis.
Oh no they weren’t! Oh yes they were!
They impounded the family dogs – a Labrador and a Jack Russell, bringing in the sniffer dogs they had brought with them. They ransacked the house in thier search for ‘cannabis’. They handcuffed a young family member who lives next door.
Oh no they didn’t! Oh yes they did!
When they found nothing and were unable to break the disguise of the tomato plants, they left – with no apology.
Oh yes they did!
Mrs Matheson was badly frightened and like all proper highland ladies is now embarrassed about ‘what the neighbours might think’.
Council must act on new Bus War on the Campbeltown-Glasgow route
Earlier in 2008, there was a prolonged ‘Bus War’ between Stagecoach-owned Scottish Citylink and Argyll’s West Coast Motors, based in Campbeltown.
Citylink, which had contracted West Coast Motors as operators on its route between Glasgow and Campbeltown and Glasgow and Oban, attempted to force the Argyll company to accept a lower value contract when it came up for renewal. West Coast Motors refused and operated the routes itself, with Citylink then running a duplicate service and engaging in drastic fare-cutting to try to force them to back down or go out of business.
Argyll stayed faithful to its own company, seeing most Citylink buses running the routes virtually empty. In the end it was the mighty Stagecoach subsidiary that blinked first, agreeing terms acceptable to West Coast Motors and retiring from the duplicate service.
However, it seems to be payback time now, with passengers bearing the brunt of Citylink’s revenge.
A service running the length of Argyll to Glasgow – from Campbeltown on the Mull of Kintyre, up the long peninsula to Lochgilphead, across Mid Argyll and the head of the Cowal peninsula and down the west side of Loch Lomond into Glasgow – will usually require more than one bus on the main morning and evening services.
Previously the route was shadowed by a second bus on the stage between Lochgilphead and Glasgow or Inveraray and Glasgow on the days and times where operating experience could predict the need.
Now the route runs with a single bus and passengers are required to pre-book tickets – and pay a pre-booking fee – to ensure a place. Otherwise they may not be allowed to board if seats are scarce or they may be, in the aggressive language of the bus companies, ‘thrown off’ to make way for those en route with pre-booked seats.
The problem is that the arrangements for pre-booking require either an online capability, know-how and a credit card or going physically in advance to either of the main terminals or to Tourist Offices in the main towns en route.
Argyll has an ageing population who tend to form the majority of passengers using the service. Many have no computer, no online access, no know-how and many do not have a credit card.
Argyll also has a highly dispersed population with few large towns – so between Glasgow and Campbeltown many passengers need to join the bus from one of the many small villages or townships. How are they to get to a Tourist Office in their nearest larger town to book a ticket, except on a bus they may not be allowed to board?
What is happening today is that people are being left behind as a bus refuses to take them or is already full. Some are having to get off buses. In both cases there have been instances of risk to young people who, travelling alone, have been left behind or asked to leave.
The situation at the weekend only has been alleviated, because of families needing to go to Glasgow to shop in the run up to Christmas. Weekend services are now running a second bus on the relevant section of the route.
Weekday services remain an unpleasant, stressful and uncertain means of transport, with many unable to keep the appointments necessitating their journey. Some are forced to use their cars – at a time when people are being urged to make use of public transport as an energy saving strategy and at a time when the UK Government has just increased fuel duty.
According to West Coast Motors, Scottish Citylink, the lead company on the route, is in the driving seat and is refusing to run a second bus on the necessary part of the route. Some believe that the company is trying to claw back the revenue it lost in its failed attempt to force west Coast Motors off the road. Some believe it is punishing passengers from Argyll for supporting their home company in the earlier dispute.
Either way, the service is completely unacceptable and it is leaving vulnerable people open to an indefensible risk in being left behind.
Concern and anger is widespread. For Argyll has had sight of formal communications being sent from responsible local bodies to Argyll and Bute Council and to Councillors on the matter.
The Council is a major stakeholder and, to a degree, a paymaster in Argyll’s transport services. It is time to flex that muscle in the interests of its electors.
Council agrees month’s trial of more scholar flights to Coll and Colonsay
This week Argyll and Bute Council officials have agreed a four week trial period in which the number of ‘scholar’ flights will increase. These flights carry pupils from the islands of Coll and Colonsay to and from school in Oban..
At the moment, alternate weekend flights to Coll and Colonsay let pupils living on each island return home once a fortnight. During the month-long trial island pupils attending Oban High School will be able to get home every weekend.
The trial will begin on 6th December, with island flights on Saturdays and Oban return flights on Sundays.
Councillor Duncan MacIntyre, Transport Spokesperson for the Council has welcomed the trial, saying: ‘This is wonderful news. The trial will allow us to evaluate the service to see whether or not the additional flights meet the needs of the hostel residents and their parents. The flights have been a very popular transport choice for pupils and this trial and subsequent review will help us to decide the best way forward for providing the scholar service’.
Highland Airways, the operator of the air services to Coll, Tiree and Colonsay, will provide the additional flights.
Ticket-booking and scheduled timetable information are avaialble on the Highland Airways website.
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Pilot of fatal Pipe Apache crash at Glen Scammadale five times over limit
On 9th April 2007 a Pipe Apache took off in cloudy conditions from Connell Airfield, now Oban Airport. Twenty four hours later, a young local farmer found the wreckage of the plane on the slopes of Carn Dearg in Glen Scammadale near Oban. Weather and visibilty made it hard and slow for reascuers to get in to the crash site but all three on board – father, mother and daughter, an Essex family – had died from multiple injuries inflicted by the accident.
The plane was piloted by 56 year-old John Smith, a member of Maldon District Council in Essex and an accountant from Burnham-on-Crouch. His 25 year-old daughter, Jacqueline, is thought to have been beside him in the co-pilot’s seat with her mother, 55 year-old Angela, behind.
Last weeks inquest on the deaths, held at Chelmsford in Essex, found that Mr Smith had 99mcg of alcohol per 100ml of blood and his Jacqueline, his daughter, had 48mcg alcohol per 100ml of blood. The legal limit is 20mcg per 100ml of blood. This mans that Mr Smith was five times over the legal limit and hs daughter over twice the limit.
It also emerged at the inquest that Mr Smith had not been trained to fly in the conditions of the day and the plane’s altimeter had failed.
Night of Gaelic song and dance at Tobermory
The other day For Argyll was reporting on the dolphins dancing in Tobermory. On 6th December 2008 at 7.30pm in The Western Isles Hotel in the town, it will the residents themselves dancing rather than watching the dolphins.
The event is being held to celebrate the 70th anniversary of the Mull Local Mod and the 30th aniversary of the Mull Gaelic Choir.
Tickets can be reserved – before 4th December – with Mary-Jean Devon on 01688 302792.
24-hour Scottish Water strike by Unison, Unite and GMB staff
Scottish Water says that it has contingency measures in place to maintain normal services, as over 1,000 staff members go on a twenty-four hour strike today, 27th November 2008, over a pay dispute. Over 800 of the staff concerned belong to the trade union, Unison with the others represented by Unite and GMB.
Helensburgh in south Argyll has recently experienced two successive and serious bursts in the same trunk water main, leading to losses of supply in the town spanning most of a week. It is to be hoped that similar incidents do not occur over the 24-hour strike period as contingency maintenance measures might be overstretched in such circumstances.
Unison says that Scottish Water can afford more than the pay award made – which was paid in the September salaries of the 3,685 employees, backdated to April 2008 and amounting to 3% over 15 months. Scottish Water says that the award is within public sector guidelines.












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