Lochgilphead primary pupil’s internet exposure of poor school meals goes viral

They say an image speaks a thousand words. Continue reading

Major environmental groups seriously compromised by wind developers’ cash

One of the most genuinely shocking developments in the disputed push for wind generated energy Continue reading

94% YES vote for Bute Community Forest at Rhubodach

(Updated below) The Isle of Bute voted today on the proposed community buy out Continue reading

Mail on Sunday reveals Hutton ordered David Kelly’s medical records closed for 70 years

Today’s Mail on Sunday carries one of the most staggering and inexplicable revelations Continue reading

Daily Mail says Arduaine Garden to close in three weeks

The Daily Mail has said that Argyll’s Arduaine Garden, to be closed by the National Trust for Scotland (NTS) as part of a cost cutting exercise affecting 11 NTS properties, is to close in three weeks.

Repeated efforts by For Argyll and other  news media to get some indication from NTS of the plans for the future of the garden and for the timescale of its closure have met only with the response that nothing can be said until there is something to say.

For Argyll then published some authoritative locally sourced information that Arduaine was to close in seven weeks and would not be allowed, as had been anticipated, to see out the coming season first.

The Daily Mail’s article is  notable for giving no accreditation of its source for the quoted closure date of three weeks and the rest of the piece is recycled material on the garden drawn from other publications.

While this casts doubt on the authenticity of the three-weeks-to-closure announcement, it may add weight to the general perception in Argyll that Arduaine’s accessibility to the public may have a short time to run.

There has been widespread anxiety and anger in Argyll over the management of this decision by the NTS. This has been manifest in emails to For Argyll and in letters to local and national papers.

For Argyll has suggested a community buy out. A resident of the Isle of Seil, Sheila Downie, in a letter to The Herald, has suggested that Arduaine could be re-opened on a care-and-maintenance basis under the current head gardener, Maurice Wilkins, covered by visitor revenues. Ms Downie sees this being done under the Scotland’s Garden Scheme.

More signs of trouble at Johnston Press, owners of The Buteman

Johnston Press, owner of The Buteman and currently dealing with straightened financial circumstances by organising an asset sale of some of its Irish titles, has another disruption on its hands. It has just seen Mike Gibson, editor of its Scottish flagship title, The Scotsman, resign with immedate effect. It is understood that he has already gone back to Portsmouth where his family still stay.

He follows Les Snowden, Editor of another of the Group’s Scottish titles, Scotland on Sunday, who is moving to become Sports Editor at the Daily Mail.

Johnston Press bought The Scotsman from the Barclay Brothers wo years ago, paying £161million for it. In the company’s current circumstances it has been rumoured that it might not keep The Scotsman but its plans now seem to be focused on cost-cutting.

Mr Gibson has been its editor since 2006. His resignation arrives in the context of a a restructuring of the editorial team and processes. This may involve estabishing a single team to design and sub-edit all of the Johnston Press’s Edinburgh-based titles – which include the Edinburgh Evening News and Scotland on Sunday. The Scottish division of the National Union of Journalists (NUJ) has said that these plans will involve no more than a few redundancies, all of which will be voluntary.

Mr Gibson seems to have been unhappy with the current restructuring plans, which include the possible appointment of a single Editor-in-Chief. The inside track for this post is thought to be held by John McLellan, who edits the Edinburgh Evening News. The departure of the editors of the two other major Edinburgh-based titles leaves that situation clear.

John McLellan has now been appointed to edit The Scotsman, the paper’s 10th editor in 15 years. An announcement is expected on Tuesday about the future of the three titles and this is expected to to focus on a merged editorial team to produce them.