‘INCREASE III Fund offers £88,049 to two Argyll GRAB Trust community waste projects

The INCREASE III Fund, alongside the Climate Challenge Fund, exists to enable communities to make environmental changes at local level. Today it has announced that two projects in Argyll and Bute have been offered a total of £88,049 to deal with waste at community level. With these awards, the fund has supported successful applications to a total of £4.7 million.

The two  GRAB Trust projects which have been offered this support are a furniture reuse project in Lorn and Oban and the promotion of the use of real nappies in the Argyll and Bute area.

Environment Secretary Richard Lochhead says: ‘The latest round of successful projects shows that the community sector is continuing to play a significant role in dealing with waste in a sensible and imaginative way.

‘A number of today’s successful applications epitomise the spirit which we want to see from Scotland’s communities in making this country a cleaner, greener place. Everyone must play their part in reducing waste, and only by all working together in this way will we be able to achieve a Zero Waste Scotland’.

The INCREASE III Fund has a total of £7.2 million to spend over three years. With today’s announcement taking its spend to date to £4.7 milion, this leaves it with £2.8 million. Its support for community recycling has four strands: grants for waste prevention; enterprise (recycling); small grants (under £5000) and capacity building.

‘INCREASE III’ (Investment in Community Recycling and Social Enterprise) funding is distributed through the Waste & Resources Action Programme (WRAP) Scotland. This is funded by the Scottish Government to undertake a range of programmes to help individuals, businesses and local authorities reduce waste and recycle more, making better use of resources and helping to tackle climate change.

A commitment to recycle is one of the Scottish Government’s 10 Greener pledges and its key targets on municipal waste are:

  • to stop the growth in municipal waste by 2010
  • to achieve 40 per cent recycling/composting of municipal waste by 2010; 50 per cent by 2013; 60 per cent by 2020 and 70 per cent by 2025
  • no more than 25 per cent should be treated by energy from waste by 2025
  • no more than 5 per cent should be landfilled by 2025

It’s good to see Argyll’s work in this field recognsied and supported as it has been today.

Peter Peacock moves that the Duke of Sutherland should share the proceeds of the £50m Titian sale with Scotland

Peter PeacockWho says the Peacock is a flightless bird? With one flap of his wings, Highlands and Islands MSP and former Education Minister Peter Peacock has soared skywards and taken us with him in a light-hearted but challenging flight of fancy.

He has tabled a motion at the Scottish Parliament suggesting that the Duke of Sutherland might consider making a donation to Scotland from the £50 million proceeds of his recent sale to the nation of the Titian painting, Diana and Actaeon.

Mr Peacock’s suggestion gives a lift to the current gloomy political scene. He admits it is mischievous and of course it is – on two counts. It neatly draws attention to the Himalayan profit made by the Duke on the deal – the biggest hit coming from the easement of the tax he would have had to pay on the sale of the painting in the open retail market, in addition to its top whack price.

Ist Duke of SutherlandBut, with equal mischief, Mr Peacock touches on what he hopes may be at least a trace of historical guilt. He has wondered aloud if such a donation might go some way to clearing the name of the Sutherlands, tainted by the memory of the Highland Clearances. The name ‘Sutherland’ is all but synonomous with the clearances because they were initiatied with great vigour and commitment by the first Duke of Sutherland whose in-your-face-statue bestrides Ben Bhraggie, above the town of Golspie and near the family seat at Dunrobin Castle.

The one thing we can be sure of is that disbursement from the Sutherland coffers will not be forthcoming. These guys can chuckle to show an intentionally  disarming sense of humour but loosening the purse strings is not something they see as funny.

But hey, Peter Peacock has given us all a grin at a time whe we could do with it. And perhaps his action floats the notion that any future sale shoud enshrine the notion of the Irish custom of the ‘luck penny’ returned to the buyer by the vendor.

The photographs above are of Peter Peacock, top and of a contemporatry painting of the First Duke of Sutherland, George Leveson-Gower. The first is reproduced here with permissiosn and the second is in the public domain.

RBS restructuring may lose 20,000 jobs as Brown prepares to print money and insure toxic debt

Stephen Hester, the new CEO of the Royal Bank of Scotland is dividing the bank into two main elements – today’s core business which is profitable and will carry on; and a peripheral cluster of ‘assets’ which will be sold as soon as buyers can be found. These ‘assets’ are the £300 billion debts – mostly toxic – acquired during the disastrous investment banking adventures that have brought the bank low.

Hester needs to show his shareholders that the heart of the RBS can succeed. Splitting the structure in this way means that he can point to one and try progressively to dispose of the other.

The identification of assets to be put up in a fire sale will inevitably mean job losses and industry experts are predicting that these may run to 20,000.

This news comes as Gordon Brown announces a plan to spend £500 billion in insuring the so-called toxic debt acquired by UK banks while at the same time pumping £15 billion, much of it new money, into the mortgage market by 2011 via Northern Rock. This is being done in an attempt to reverse the movement of the economy towards a settled recession.

Experts predixct that this move will itself create a twin track mortgage market, even within Northern Rock itself. Current mortage holders will continue to face repossession while new mortgagees will see much more favourable terms under the proposed injection of ‘new Government money’.

The national debt is now at a frightening level. Last week it was independently estimated by the Office of National Statistics at £2 trillion, when the value of the banks’ toxic debts are included.

Brown’s latest gamble – in insuring these debts and in going for what is called ‘quantitative easing’ – or printing money, as it is less ambiguously known to most of us – is also frightening. It may be too little too late.

On the one hand the UK is borrowing on an unimaginable scale and one which will bring real and widespread pain in the repaying.

On the other hand, Brown’s response pattern from the start of the collapse of the banking system has been to do as little as possible and to leave that until he had no alternative.

This means that none of the moves to date – however much they have cost us – have achieved the necessary stabilisation of the economy. From the reluctant, progressive upgrading of the bank guarantees to savers onwards, each move has been too small, too late and too indecisive. In effect, it has largely been wasted money.

Since early last Autumn when the financial industry began to unravel, there has been an argument that Brown’s best strategy was to make an early, large and bold move. But that is not his character.

The real nightmare is that the current massive debt will be our long term burden without achieving anything significant. It has been accumulated progressively, in fire-fighting dribs and drabs, each of which has vanished without impact.

However mad it seems, printing money might work in hands other than Brown’s but, with his track record throughout this crisis, hope that he might get this right would fly in the face of the evidence.

Brown has also set his face openly against a course recommended by many experts – dividing banking into two functions: the normal high-street retail banking and the high risk investment banking sector. The decision to carry on with the current twin-function banks will leave the taxpayer, now the owner of so much of the UK’s banking stock, liable for the risk-taking sector which could otherwise be hived off as purely private sector ventures.

Financial crisis at Mid Argyll Swimming pool

It is understood that the Mid Argyll swimming Pool at Lochgilphead is currently experiencing serious financial difficulties. The
situation is of real concern both to the public who use it and to staff who work there.

Councillor Douglas Philand, who represents Mid Argyll and who is Depute Spokesperson on the Arts, Culture, Leisure and Sport for Argyll and Bute Council is discussing the situation with council officers.

These discussions are ongoing but we will report on the evolving situation as soon as there is more news.

Consultation meeting on Scottish Ferries Review, Argyll Hotel, Inveraray

There is to be a consultation on the Scottish Ferries Review in Inveraray’s Argyll Hotel from 4.00pm – 7.00pm on Wednesday 25th March.

This review is being carried out by the Scottish Government as part of its consideration of enhancements to ferry services across all Scottish routes. The review will consider current provision of ferry services alongside identifying improvements to be made to meet future needs.

The review reflects the Government’s commitment, expressed in the 2006 National Transport Strategy (NTS), to ‘develop a long-term strategy for lifeline services to 2025′. The NTS committed the Government to carry out ‘a detailed appraisal of routes’. The appraisal is to be used to determine whether a better system could be developed to deliver new and faster connections serving isolated communities. It will also assist in the reviewing of fare structures as part of the affordability of public transport.

Everyone interested is invited and is welcome to come along to the drop-in event in Inveraray on 25th March, meet members of the review team, find out more about the review and add your views to the pool of information being put together.

Information on the Review is on the Scottish Government website.

NHS Highland introduce ‘surgical pause’ so that if you’re in theatre for a tonsilectomy they won’t take your leg off

Those undergoing surgery under the auspices of HNS Highland should be able to let some of the nightmares recede a little now. The health authority has introduced the ‘surgical pause’  – a practical and basic check list to be gone through by theatre staff before the Surgeon holds out his hand and says: ‘Scalpel’.

It’s a ‘doors to manual’ approach – ‘I say it, you do it/check it’ routine:

  • Who is this patient?
  • Is this the patient we’re expecting?
  • What is the operation scheduled for this patient?
  • Are there any medical issues or allergies we need to be aware of?
  • Are we going to need blood and have we got enough of it?

This will come as a relief to some said to have secreted on their person a little card with their name and operation on it to hand to theatre staff before they got the needle.

The ‘surgical pause’ pre-operative routine is  now in use at Oban’s Lorn and the Isles Hospital, Fort William’s Belford Hospital, Wick’s Caithness General Hospital and Raigmore Hospital in Inverness.

Raigmore Hospital’s theatre manager, Gavin Hookway (do they hire them for their names?), has said that he has been impressed by how the staff had taken up ‘the challenge’ of introducing the system.

All we can say is that if theatre staff regard doing this sort of  basic check as ‘a challenge’, it’s no wonder the NHS has some unfortunate case histories where ingrown toenails resulted in post-operative amputees.

Big Diary Date: Bruce MacGregor and Friends in Concert in Campbeltown – after afternoon workshops

Bruce MacGregor Blazin FiddlesThe Kintyre Fiddlers, the Kintyre Music and Arts Tuition Group and the Kintyre Cultural Forum together present Bruce MacGregor from Blazin Fiddles in concert with some of his friends at the Kirk Street Hall in Campbeltown at 8.00pm on 26th March – doors open at 7.30pm.

Tickets cost £6 and are available either at AP Taylors in Main Street, Campbeltown or at the Volunteer Centre in Longrow in Campbeltown.

Bruce has also worked as a producer and presenter for BBC Radio Scotland – and never say musicians lack stamina. Bruce’s fiddle will be blazin in concert after an afternoon spent taking workshops with fiddlers in Kintyre.

  • 4.30pm Intermediate
  • 5.30pm Experienced

For more information or to book a place on one of Bruce’s workshops, email: kmatg@hotmail.co.uk or jigevents@hotmail.co.uk – or phone 01586 552034.

Monthly Mid Argyll Arts Association open piano night

The Mid Argyll Arts Association holds an Open Piano Night every month – an imaginative and exciting initiative. This month’s session is on Friday 27th February from 7.30pm to (approximately) 9.00pm in Ardrishaig Public Hall.

Pianists of all abilities and all ages come together to play the beautiful Yamaha Grand Piano there. While there is no pressure to play, it’s a valuable experience to bring one or two pieces along and play them in a relaxed and friendly atmosphere, with advice from experienced pianists on hand if you want it.

Admission is free and there are always refreshments available during the evening, so if you are a pianist – or just enjoy listening to piano music – do come along to next Friday’s MAAA Piano Forum.  Everyone is very welcome.

For further information, contact John Holt by email at:  holtlochgair@aol.com

Council’s Economy PPG has already carried out the Minister’s recommended actions on the Kintyre grid upgrade issue

HunterstonHere is yet more evidence of the on-the-ball operations of the current Argyll and Bute Council. Recently we saw the encouragingly collective acceptance of responsibility that produced this year’s agreed budget allocations. Today – Saturday 21st February – Councillors have responded immediately to Energy Minister, Jim Mather’s, recommended actions on the issue of the crucial Hunterston to Carradale subsea link being omitted from the  National Planning Framework document.

It was the watchfulness of the Council’s Economy Policy and Performance Group (PPG) that initially spotted the omission and led to the Leader, Dick Walsh’s letter to the First Minister, seeking reassurances on the matter.

The Economy PPG, with Councillor Ron Simon as Chair, has also already ensured that the Convener of the Local Government and Communities Committee has been made fully aware of the Council’s concern at this omission.

Councillor Simon says: ‘I hope this offers some reassurance that the Council are fully on top of the matter and will continue to press at all levels in the best interests of the economic and environmental future of Argyll and Bute’.

Councillors are waiting keenly for contact from officials for the talks to progress the Hunterston subsea cable issue.

The photograph above is of the Hunterston power station from which the subsea cable would run to Carradale in Kintyre. It is reproduced here under the Creative Commons licvcence.

HMS Vanguard moved from Coulport to Faslane under cover of darkness and with heavy escort

At 3.00am on Friday (20th February) HMS Vanguard was moved, under cover of darkness, from the explosive-handling pierhead at Coulport on Loch Long into the nearby naval base at Faslane on the Gare Loch. The entire operation is thought to have taken around seven hours.

Vanguard was filmed by peace activitists as she came into the submarine base at Faslane with a heavy escort convoy of tugs, Royal Marine inflatables, Military Police boats and overhead helicopters.

The British nuclear submarine, carrying armed Trident missiles at the time, was involved in the now notorious collision on 3rd February with an equally armed French Navy nuclear submarine, Le Triomphant ,somewhere in the Atlantic. She was seen but not photographed coming into the Clyde on 14th February to unload her missiles at Coulport – and described then as bearing clear visual evidence of hull damage in dents and scrapes.

The ships’s move into Faslane in the hours of darkness is likely to be interpreted as an attempt by the MOD to disguise from the public the extent of the damage she has suffered.

For Argyll has already compared the widely varying return times to port of the two submarine’s involved and asked if this disparity can be interpreted by anyone as other than evidence that Vanguagrd was badly damaged and had to come home at very low speeds. She took over ten days to get back to Coulport from wherever the collssion occurred. Le Triomphant took three days to get back to her home port of Ile Longue near Brest in Britany.

So far, although our reports have received heavy viewing traffic, no one has come up with any other intrerpetation. It is hard to identify a possible location for the collision which would allow two relatively undamaged submarines, travellling at approximately the same speeds to return to these two ports in their respective known times.

All that the MOD has said of Vanguard’s post-collision condition is that the incident created ‘no compromise to nuclear safety’.