Loch Awe tragedy produces commonsense conclusions

Kilchurn castle Copyright Sue Anderson, Island Focus

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Jobs safeguarded at Lighthouse Caledonia

As For Argyll reported a few days ago after the Lighthouse Caledonia EGM on 3rd March, that meeting agreed and approved all of the proposals put forward to safeguard the company’s stabilisation.

Some of the media have tried to rain on the parade of the survival of a major Argyll and Scottish employer which had been under threat. The complaint is that that profits are going to Norway. Do they complain about Iberdrola, Spanish owner of Scottish Power? And do they compain about Ferrovial, Spanish owner of BAA, operator of Edinburgh and Glasgow airports – and still, without penalty, defying the Competition Commission’s order to sell one of the two.

The problem with what is called ‘the liberalisation of the market’ is that anyone anywhere can own pretty well anything in the UK. The downside is that we are potentially and constantly prey to interests other than our own – which is of particular concern in the area of utilities. The positive side of the coin is that the sort of investment Britain lost the stomach for a long time ago will be made by external business interests in return for what profits they can make.

And a key point of great current significance is that the jobs and the salaries stay in Argyll and elsewhere in Scotland.

Jim Mather, Argyll’s  MSP and Enterprise Minister, has put the matter in perspective in his welcoming of  the news that an inward investment deal worth £17m has made the future of Lighthouse Caledonia – the country’s third largest salmon producer -  much brighter and means that more than 200 jobs will be secure. He says: ‘I am very pleased to learn that after restructuring and a share issue worth around £17m that the future of lighthouse Caledonian appears secure.

‘Last year Lighthouse Caledonian suffered a serious shortfall in liquidity and there were fears that the company might have to go into receivership.

‘Northern Link, a global private equity investor in aquaculture and marine related companies, with interests around the world including Norway, Peru and Russia, has taken a controlling interest in Lighthouse Caledonia ASA. Northern Link will work closely with the present company management and the many local  communities where business is based to sustain and support the existing structure of the company and safeguard the remaining workforce which exceeds 200.

‘The company has its headquarters in Paisley, its processing plant at Cairndow at the head of Loch Fyne, and fish farming operations at more than 40 sites spread across the West Coast of Scotland and in the Western Isles.

‘The company provides important employment at many locations where work is scarce and where job losses would have had a severely disproportionate effect. I am delighted to learn of the a successful turnaround and hope and trust that the company will known prosper’.

Lloyds TSB schedule for funding surgeries in or near Argyll

Lloyds TSB Foundation for Scotland is holding a series of surgeries throughout Scotland for local recognised charities.  The surgery is an opportunity for you to have a one-to-one session with one of LLoyds TSB’s Assessors and to discuss how to go about putting together an application to the Foundation.

For Argyll has extracted from the Scotland-wide schedule the dates and towns scheduled for surgeries in or near Argyll. If you would like to attend one of the these and to clarify the specific venues, please phone 0870 902 1201 to arrange an appointment.

  • GLASGOW NORTH 16th March
  • OBAN 8th April
  • DUMBARTON 27th April
  • FORT WILLIAM 13th May
  • PAISLEY 29th June
  • ISLAY 13th July
  • CLYDEBANK 10th August
  • GLASGOW NORTH 7th September
  • GREENOCK 29th September
  • LOCHGILPHEAD 27th October

Academic honour for Jolomo, Argyll’s best known contemporary artist

The University of the West of Scotland is to confer an honorary doctorate on John Lowrie Morrison – aka Jolomo, the eminent landscape colourist and philanthropist from Tayvallich in Argyll.

The ceremony will take place at the University’s main campus in Paisley, on Thursday 20th November; and For Argyll will later publish the Eulogy which will be delivered before Jolomo receives his doctorate.

This will be a very popular and very well deserved honour for an internationally recognised, talented and unassuming man who does so much to help his church, his community and many good causes; and who contributes annually to the development of young Scottish artists through his personal Trust and Award schemes.

Teenager airlifted from Scarba after ravine plunge

An RAF helicopter from HMS Gannet at Prestwick airlifted a thirteen year-old Yorkshire boy from Argyll’s Isle of Scarba to Paisley’s Royal Alexandra Hospital, with Coastguards from Oban and Appin also called out and reckoning the boy was lucky to be alive. He and others on an activity trip to the island had evidently been looking at a waterfall when he fell – avoiding all the rocks on the way down and finishing up with no more than a broken leg.