Briefings

Time this robbery was stopped

October 8, 2014

<p>Possibly one of the weakest parts of the forthcoming Community Empowerment Bill is the section on Common Good property. One of the problems with Common Good is that because it is so shrouded in complexity and ancient history, only very few people can claim to fully understand it.&nbsp; As a result, this Bill inevitably appears to be tinkering with a topic that may in fact merit legislation in its own right.&nbsp; Whatever it is, something needs to be done to stop the pilfering of the commons such as this example in Scottish Borders.</p> <p>8/10/14</p> <p class="MsoNormal">&nbsp;</p>

 

Author: Andy Wightman, Land Matters

The Theft of Ancrum Common

Extract from Land Matters – the blog of Andy Wightman

Over the past 20 years, I have uncovered many examples of areas of common land across Scotland – remnants of commonties, greens, loans and the like. Unfortunately, little is being done to protect them from land-grabs by an assortment of avaricious individuals. If such claims go without challenge, a legally watertight title can be obtained. Such claims are open to challenge but there are three key difficulties.

Firstly, local knowledge of common land rights is often limited and the institutions don’t exist to maintain awareness and prompt action. This contrasts with the situation in England and Wales where there is a well-developed framework of law. (1)

Secondly, there is often no title for common land, leaving it open for land-grabbing.

And thirdly, where such land-grabs take place, there is no way that local people can know about it. Despite claims being lodged in a public register (the Register of Sasines or Land Register), no local publicity attends the lodging of documents with the Registers of Scotland by solicitors via DX Mail.  Thus the only way one could stay abreast of any such developments would to spend thousands of pounds per day searching the registers every day all year round just in case someone had submitted a  title claim.

For example, in the course of research for my book, The Poor Had No Lawyers, I found a number of examples of such grabs. One, which I have yet to fully document, involved the appropriation of 393 acres of commonty in Perthshire in 1986 by three landowners whose agent (the solicitor), according to a note in the Register of Sasines was “aware that granters apparently only have title to rights in pasturage in xxxx commonty.” The local community was not consulted and today, many locals are angry that a valuable part of their heritage was stolen from under their noses.

Which brings me to the subject of this blog. Click here for the full blog and to gain sight of maps, documents etc

Briefings

Fighting Wonga with the wrong weapons

<p><span>A battle for the heart and soul of the credit union movement is underway, with Department for Work and Pensions leading the attack with substantial incentives on offer if credit unions will agree to move into that part of the financial services market where the pay-day lenders currently have a free run.&nbsp; But many believe it would spell the end of community based credit unions - reducing them to nothing more than automated lending machines, shoe-horned into the sub-prime space vacated by mainstream banks. They are much more than that.</span></p> <p>8/10/14</p> <p class="MsoNormal">&nbsp;</p>

 

Author: Dermot O''Neill, SLCU

Scottish League of Credit Unions

What we are:

31 Credit Unions, 34,000 Adult members , 8,000 Junior members , £32 million in Savings, £21 million in Loans

The strength of the Scottish League of Credit Unions is in supporting community-focused

Credit Unions, at whatever stage of development is deemed appropriate by the members

of each Credit Union. We recognise and respect the different needs and aspirations of

individual Credit Unions and we do not seek to impose any particular model or

developmental path.

 

Our core purpose is to ensure that our member Credit Unions become and remain: Compliant, Sustainable and Ethical

We do this by focusing on the key themes of:

Education through on-site & group training sessions using ready-made materials or bespoke solutions

Advice on legislative, regulatory, compliance and financial issues and considerations

Networking by encouraging formal & informal contact between member CU’s, their volunteers and staff

Facilitation where member Credit Unions wish to co-ordinate or work together to achieve common goals

Representation to Regulators, Local, Scottish & UK Government, other CU organisations and the media

Promotion by developing branding & advertising material templates that can be customised by CU’s

To read SLCU’s response to the HM Treasury please click here

 

 

 

Briefings

Pay day from the past

<p>Back in the day, it was one of the wonders of the industrial age. Tourists would marvel at the power and beauty of the largest water wheel ever built and watch as it powered the many looms of the cotton mill at Catrine. But the wheel wasn&rsquo;t the only man made construction of note in this Ayrshire village. The Victorians were famous for their cleverly designed reservoirs and the Catrine wheel required a lot of water to power it. Now that Victorian ingenuity is about to produce a second dividend for the village.</p> <p>8/10/14</p> <p class="MsoNormal">&nbsp;</p>

 

Author: Reevel Alderson, BBC Scotland's social affairs correspondent

In its day, it was a wonder of the industrial world. Tourists would travel to the East Ayrshire village of Catrine to see the largest water wheel in Britain, part of the local cotton mill.

 

The wheel was driven by the River Ayr – and although the mill is long gone, the river is soon to provide power for the community again. Catrine Community Trust is to bring back into operation a hydro-electric station, abandoned in the 1960s, which will harness the power of the river.

 

It will use the ingenious water system developed for the cotton mill in the village, which once employed more than 1,000 workers. When it opens in Spring, 2015, it is hoped it will feed into the National Grid, generating up to £120,000 a year for the local community, which is one of the most deprived in East Ayrshire.

 

Bob Pirrie, development officer of the Catrine Community Trust, said the scheme is the centrepiece of efforts to revitalise the village.

“This whole project is a great way of celebrating, restoring and building on the past industrial heritage of Catrine to build a positive future with new and exciting opportunities for the present day community,” he said.

But before the trust could get to this point, it had to refurbish the 18th Century dam and the voes, the artificial lakes which held water above the mill to act as header tanks to maintain the river flow.

Years of neglect had taken their toll and the weir on the River Ayr where the water was diverted into the mill lade was in danger of being washed away in the next big flood.

The voes and their channels have been cleared of silt and a fish ladder, crucial to maintaining the health of the River Ayr salmon and trout population, has been provided.

The cleared voes are now home to ducks, swans and herons. Trust development manager, Hugh Hutchison, said the project has also improved life for those with few job opportunities in the area. Local people have been employed, and received training during the engineering work – and the benefits will continue, he said.

 

“The residents are going to benefit because with our visitor centre which we will be running, we will actually be doing skills transfer. We’ll be making people more employable which will help the deprivation which has blighted this area for quite some considerable time.”

 

Catrine was founded in 1787 as a model village similar to that in New Lanark, and was developed by such leading figures of the industrial revolution as Richard Arkwright and David Dale  Now, the pioneering technology which turned Catrine from an isolated hamlet into a thriving industrial centre is once again helping to fuel the economy of the village.

Briefings

Hidden within every community

<p class="MsoNormal">Across Scotland&rsquo;s communities, some 17,000 children and young people are in the position of having to care for an adult with a long term illness, disability or addiction problem.&nbsp; These young carers are often invisible to public agencies and as a result have to carry the stresses and strains of their vital role completely alone. Some local support groups do exist but nowhere near enough.&nbsp; Community arts group, Theatre Nemo, have helped a group of young carers to make a film highlighting their plight. It premiers in Glasgow this Friday.&nbsp;</p> <p class="MsoNormal">8/10/14</p> <p class="MsoNormal">&nbsp;</p>

 

See Me…. I’m a young carer

A film designed to generate open discussions in classrooms  and beyond.

On October 10th we will be hosting the first public viewing of our recent film which was made in collaboration with the GAMH young carers group, funded by SEE ME…. this film seeks to reduce instances of stigma and promote services to young people who may be struggling to cope on their own.

At the event we will take the audience through the same classroom process that the film was designed for, this project is currently in a test phase and we will be asking the audience to contribute suggestions for improving the learning experience. 

Eventbrite Link

Our mailing address is:

Theatre Nemo

 

 

Briefings

When is a building worth saving?

<p>Old, crumbling buildings, particularly ones which hold some iconic status for a community, can be a real millstone around the collective neck. The steady decline towards dereliction is painful to watch but buildings also need to serve some kind of useful purpose to justify investing all that time and money in restoration. Having a clear end use for a building is the biggest challenge for any community heritage project. Next month the community heritage movement gather in Crieff, hoping to be inspired by stories such as the Birks Cinema.</p> <p>8/10/14</p> <p class="MsoNormal">&nbsp;</p>

 

Author: MARK MACKAY

The restoration of the Birks Cinema in Highland Perthshire is to be used as an example to guide and inspire heritage projects across Scotland.

Community groups and volunteers from across the country will gather in Crieff next month for Scotland’s Community Heritage Conference.

The event celebrates the contribution made by such dedicated people and looks to the next round of ambitious developments.

It will feature presentations on projects throughout the country, at sites ranging from cinemas and chapels to allotments.

Over two days there will also be a series of training workshops to help develop and deliver heritage projects.

One of the key contributors will be the Friends of Birks Cinema, who made the stunning rebirth of the building a reality.

The group was established in early 2006 by Charlotte Flower and two other members of the Heartland Film Society in Aberfeldy.

They wanted to explore the possibility of restoring the town’s cinema to create a community-run arts hub with a 104-seat digital screen and café/bar.

The 470-seat Birks Cinema was the location for many first dates and family outings until it closed in the early 1980s.

Until 2004 it was used as an amusement arcade but the building had long since begun to deteriorate and it was in a perilous state by the time it was bought by the Friends in 2009.

Their vision may have seemed just a dream, given the funds that required to be raised, but with extraordinary support from members of the community, trusts, businesses and individual supporters such as actor Alan Cumming, it became a reality.

The conference takes place at Crieff Hydro Hotel on November 8 and 9.

Briefings

Sharing the fund raising

October 7, 2014

<p>Seems there&rsquo;s some real momentum building around the latest mechanism for communities to raise funds.&nbsp; At a time when banks are showing absolutely no interest in attracting people&rsquo;s savings, a <a href="http://communitysharesscotland.org.uk/">community share issue</a> can seem a pretty attractive proposition &ndash; not only to local people who have a bit of spare cash and an active interest in the project in need of funding, but also to the general public who might interested in making a social difference, as well as a small return, with their money. Two more share issues went public last Friday.&nbsp;</p> <p>8/10/14</p>

 

Community Share Offer 1. –  Sunart Community Renewables

The community development charity (Sunart Community Company) has set up a co-operative (Sunart Community Renewables) to build a 100kw hydro scheme and we are looking for investors!  We are thinking long term as we have also identified two other locations for similar schemes!

Shares are £50 each, and we aim to offer 4% per annum interest – far better than many savings accounts ! The minimum investment is 6 shares (£300) and the maximum £100,000, and the offer closes in February.

The project will run for at least 40 years or so but our financials are based on the next 20 years, as this is the period during which we will attract a Feed In Tariff (subsidy) from the government.

We intend to generate green power, sell it to the grid, pay off any loans, pay interest to all our investors, eventually buy back all the shares AND invest all net profits in community projects in and around the local area. The project has been three years or so in the making and all permissions and approvals are in place and we now need to raise the £850,000 required to build the scheme. (We have already spent circa £70,000 in feasibility and planning using various grants etc.)

We know this is achievable as other communities in the UK have already established similar schemes and on the Isle of Mull, (a project I initiated in 2010) has just raised over £450,000 in community shares and is finalising finance and preparing to build!

We have decided we want to raise as much of the £850k as we can from community shares, (our minimum target is to raise circa £260,000)  both locally and from the wider ‘community of interest’, to maximise engagement in the project and minimise finance charges from commercial lenders. Anyone  who wants to invest in this scheme can (individuals as well as companies) . You don’t have to have a connection with Strontian, although clearly by buying community shares (as opposed to ordinary shares on the stock market), you accept that the shares will not go up in value, and the interest they attract is modest because we are using the other surpluses to fund community initiatives in this beautiful area of the Highlands!

To that end we are launching a ‘community share’ offer. Full details are in the attached share prospectus, including information about community shares (as they are not the same as the company shares we are more used to hearing about).If you are interested in investing in our project, you can do so online from 3 October via the Microgenius website, or if you prefer to pay by cheque you can apply immediately – details are on the attached application form. All applications remain confidential (A list of investors may be made public, but the AMOUNT invested remains confidential.)

We are encouraging applications from individuals and from companies. Individuals paying income tax can offset the investment against their tax liability at a rate of 30% which is pretty useful too!

You can find out more details on the website www.sunartcommunityrenewables.org.uk

 

 

Community Share offer 2 – Urras Energy Society

Urras Energy Society Limited has been set up to offer shares in a community renewables development. It has a co-operative structure with community benefit objectives and will be open to individuals, businesses and organisations. Shares will be made available for purchase and investors will have an opportunity to assist in the creation of a sustainable future for the community and, at the same time, secure an attractive return on their investment over a 20 year period. Additional tax benefits may be available to eligible UK taxpayers through special allowances for purchasing shares in small unlisted companies.

The objective of the share offer is to raise monies to support the installation of two 900kW wind turbines at Ballantrushal, Isle of Lewis, to operate alongside the existing turbine that was installed in December 2013. These new wind turbines will be connected to the local power grid and provide clean, green electricity for up to 1,400 homes each year.

Urras Energy will be registered with, but not authorised or regulated by, the Financial Conduct Authority and, therefore, investments are not safeguarded by any depositor protection or dispute resolution scheme.

Unlike the ‘ordinary shares’ typical of a limited company, these types of shares have a fixed value and cannot be sold, traded or transferred between members. Furthermore, only UESL can buy them back. Also, there is no prospect of them ever being worth more than their nominal value. Rather than an annual share dividend being paid to shareholders, an annual interest payment is made.

Briefings

Draw the line

September 24, 2014

<p>When social enterprise first entered the lexicon of the third sector, it took a while for the idea of&nbsp; profit not being a dirty word to be fully accepted. Profit could and should be generated just so long as it is invested back into the business or the community. The line in the sand was always that profit could not be distributed for private gain. Pressure seems to be building from south of the border to redraw that line so that it includes any private businesses that have a &lsquo;social purpose&rsquo;. Just wondering who that wouldn&rsquo;t include.</p> <p>24/09/14</p> <p class="MsoNormal">&nbsp;</p>

 

Author: by Jenna Pudelek, Civil Society magazine

Social enterprise support organisations CAN and Senscot have ended their relationship with UnLtd, set up to manage a £100m fund for social entrepreneurs, over concerns that grants from the fund are being awarded to for-profit organisations.

In a joint statement, CAN, a charity based in London, and Senscot, a charity and Scotland-wide network for social entrepreneurs, criticise UnLtd’s vision for a “private-profit social sector” as “fundamentally damaging” to public perceptions of civil society.  

Entitled Mission above money, the statement says the two organisations, who were members of Scotland UnLtd, a separate charity set up to administer grants from the Millennium Awards Trust in Scotland, have decided not to accept any further funds and their relationship with UnLtd has ended.

The Millennium Awards Trust (MAT) was endowed with £100m of National Lottery funding in 2002 as a permanent source of grants for social entrepreneurs throughout the UK. UnLtd was set up to manage the MAT.  

Rodney Stares, treasurer and founding member of Senscot, told Civil Society News that MAT funding in Scotland is worth about £200,000 a year, and around £4m-5m a year to the UK as a whole.  

CAN and Senscot’s statement says: “Any grants to private, for-profit enterprises were to be rare exceptions, with the reasons clearly documented at point of grant dispersal.

“There was an erosion of the not-for-private-profit principles from 2008, and by 2012, it became clear that a significant number of MAT endowment awards were made to structures without asset-locks.”

The aim of the trust is to fund social entrepreneurs to pursue their ideas for public benefit. Level one awards range from £500 to £5,000 and are given to allow people to develop their ideas into projects.  

The next stage can provide awards of up to £20,000 for projects to be scaled up.

“That’s the stage at which we were much more concerned about the legal structure of the venture, whether it was a company limited by guarantee, a community interest company, or a cooperative, what control was there on money being taken out of the company rather than being recycled back into social benefit,” Stares said.  

CAN and Senscot’s statement says Scotland UnLtd continued to make awards to not-for-profit ventures, but UnLtd has developed into one of the UK’s leading advocates for the inclusion of private-profit companies in the sector.   

“CAN and Senscot campaign in the opposite direction, arguing that social enterprise attracts the special recognition of fiscal benefits from the state precisely because it excludes private profit,” it says.   

“CAN and Senscot consider UnLtd’s vision of a ‘private-profit social sector’ to be fundamentally damaging to public perceptions of third sector activity; this has reached the point that we no longer find it acceptable for Scotland UnLtd to receive the flow of MAT funds to Scotland on the basis that UnLtd seek to see them distributed.”    

UnLtd responds

In response, UnLtd issued a statement saying: “UnLtd is disappointed to note a critical press release from CAN and Senscot. However, we welcome the opportunity for constructive debate on this important issue.

“Some social entrepreneurs show the potential to rapidly develop their venture to deliver major impact. Some of these believe they need to take on equity investment to achieve this growth. Few social investors are available to provide this high-risk finance at such an early stage: it really needs equity finance.

 “Using external funds, UnLtd has been carefully testing work with social entrepreneurs who create social purpose companies limited by shares, and use other methods of “locking in” their social mission – such as ‘golden share’ arrangements.”

The statement says the UnLtd has been involved in work to design a legal and reporting system for “profit-with-purpose businesses” to attract more entrepreneurs into working for social benefit.  

“We are sad that Senscot and CAN are closing down Scotland UnLtd. New arrangements are being created to ensure that Scotland still benefits from the Millennium Awards Trust and UnLtd’s wider work, in our continuing and highly successful partnership with leading Scottish agency, Firstport,” it says.

We are sad that Senscot and CAN are closing down Scotland UnLtd. New arrangements are being created to ensure that Scotland still benefits from the Millennium Awards Trust and UnLtd’s wider work, in our continuing and highly successful partnership with leading Scottish agency, Firstport.

We are delighted at the amazing talent of people stepping forward as social entrepreneurs and achieving ever greater social impact and sustainability. From innovative new social movements and charities, through to social enterprises and profit-with-purpose businesses, they are the future for the social and economic recovery we all wish to see. Our job is to help them on their way.

Briefings

A place in the country

<p>Every so often, an opportunity comes along that seems&nbsp;almost&nbsp;too good to be true. For many years now, a youth group based in Muirhouse in the north of Edinburgh has been developing an extensive outdoors education programme. As their expertise in this area has grown they&rsquo;ve started to cast around for somewhere in the country they could use as a base for their outdoors adventure based programme. An old school house in the beautiful hills outside Jedburgh has been sitting empty for long enough.</p> <p>24/09/14</p> <p class="MsoNormal">&nbsp;</p>

 

We believe in beautiful idyllic peaceful and natural wilderness spaces being accessible to everyone –Towford is just that. Photos

For many years now registered Scottish youth work Charity Muirhouse Youth Development Group (MYDG) and its Social Enterprise MY Adventure have been looking to secure a building, a bothy, a place that people can get away to and relax in – that is basic, comfortable and affordable. A place where young children can play safely but adventurously, in the outdoors, exploring Scotland’s natural heritage with their families and friends. A place where teenagers can get away from pressures and learn new skills. A place where groups of adults can build friendships but enjoy space to themselves. Towford Outdoor Centre, near Jedburgh, set in the beautiful remote yet accessible Scottish Borders, is the place we have been seeking.

Why are we crowdfunding for £6000 ?

The building has been empty and unused for 17 years. It urgently needs some heating and a rewire if it is to survive its first winter in our care. We also seek to make it more sustainable and more importantly more accessible to people with disabilities. Many of the old systems are now considered unsafe. The roof needs patching and the grounds have become hugely overgrown and inaccessible. We have a fantastic community of volunteers who can provide the labour (we are of course always looking for more, especially people with trade’s experience). However, funds are needed specifically to:

 • Put in a wood burning stove

 • Re-wire the building

 • Replace two windows

 • Up-grade the Shower/toilet block – making it accessible to people with disabilities

Crowdfunding is the best way to fund this project because we can offer amazing incentives including use of the building once it’s fully operational. We also need the funding urgently to complete the essentials for Towford to survive the Scottish winter. Please visit our crowdfunding page here where you can see a short video of Towford and find out why we are so excited about this project.

Towford Outdoor Centre lies in the upper Kale Valley, on the northern slopes of the Cheviot Hills and has been lent to MYDG absolutely free, initially for 10 years but for the longer term if we can sustain it and assure our landlord that people are using it. Formerly an Outdoor Education centre until 1996 when it was closed. Before that, it was a school from 1876 to 1964. The school log reads: on June 30th 1964 ‘Today is the last day of Towford School. We have closed today and will not be returning’. Lets return to this building a playful spirit and keenness to learn about the natural world, each other and ourselves!

You couldn’t find a better location for a Centre as Towford. Feeling remote but a mere 15 minutes from Jedburgh, the area contains an abundance of features of educational interest, quite apart from its out-standing potential for hill-walking and the beautiful conservation grade grounds. The area is typical of the Scottish Cheviot country, with its rolling hills and wide valleys, clear streams, shelterbelts and rich grazings. The widely scattered hamlets and hill-farms are linked by narrow, winding roads, little used but essential to settlement in the area. Roman remains, along with standing stones, hill forts, cultivation terraces and the like all add to the educational potential of the area. This area and this building with your help can make an outstanding contribution to the lives of many children, groups, adults and communities.

Your pledge will benefit many people from all different walks of life. The organisations who have already stated that they will use this fantastic facility is huge and includes groups who organise or fund:

 • Family Respite breaks

 • Parenting – family strengthening groups

 • Alternatives to Crime Projects

 • Self-Directed Support – personal breaks or activities

 • Affordable Family Holidays

 • Youth work residentials

 • Schools and college field trips

 • Duke of Edinburgh groups

 • Employability groups and ready-for-work programmes

 • Conservation Charities

 • Courses, Therapies and retreats

 

We are a ‘hands-on’ ‘can-do’ social enterprise that look for creative and sustainable ways of changing young people’s lives – we do this on a daily basis.

We can organise huge teams of volunteers (we have successfully done so on many projects). This keeps costs down to a minimum (materials & technical advice only). Due to this tremendous social capital your pledge will go far beyond how you imagined – making a huge difference to the long term prospect of this wonderful building becoming the source of so many positive memories and life-changing experiences.

You have the opportunity to help create something that will benefiting thousands of people every year – year on year.

 Please pledge generously and remember – we’re not asking for something for nothing – you, your friends and family will love the rewards for your pledges that are exclusive to TIC TOC backers.

 Your generosity will help to benefit thousands in the years to come.

 Thank you

Briefings

Enterprising woodlands

<p>The community woodlands movement is thriving at the moment &ndash; as anyone who attended their recent gathering in Dunbar will testify.&nbsp; Beyond those who have an active knowledge of the woodland world, the most common perception of a community woodland would be as a place to take a nice stroll. While that&rsquo;s true for some, there is often much more going on under the surface. Some even manage to turn their patch of woodland into a sustainable business. Kilfinan, in Argyll for example.</p> <p>24/09/14</p> <p class="MsoNormal">&nbsp;</p>

 

Author: Hope Whitmore, The Guardian

 “Some people,” says Rob Borruso, “are more squeamish about chopping trees than they are about killing chickens.” Watching a log being fed into the sawblade, I can understand why.

It’s a little ironic that at the heart of Kilfinan Community Forest is the timber operation which helps to make the forest sustainable. We stand back and watch as a long, thin log is strapped to a machine, and then cleaned before the moving blade is adjusted. BBC Radio 1 is playing in the shed, and as the tree is prepared, a Kasabian song with a fast beat begins to play, as though anticipating the destruction of the log. We all laugh – but it’s hard not to wince when the blade bites into the grain.

The truth is that this lumber has been vital for the forest. After a storm last year, the group sold off 90% of the fallen wood to bring in vital revenue. The remaining 10% they kept for their own use; there is evidence of carpentry everywhere as soon as you enter Kilfinan. There are picnic benches, engraved signposts, and a hut with an arch-shaped roof and feeders for the bird, all made from the trees around us. Looking down from the site you see the Argyll coast, and behind it the sea, hills, and small islands half hidden by the mist. Everything is a soft water colour, grey and green.

I’ve been walking through the forest with Nikki Brown, development manager, and Borruso, engineer turned director. We’ve come up a peaty path winding past oaks, birches and sycamores, though these are sparse and a tangle of branches lie on the ground. “This is our native area of woodland,” says Brown. “It got very badly damaged by the storms in December, we lost about 50%. It was such a shame, and some of the old oak trees went.”

In 2010, after five years of hard work and fundraising, the local community finally succeeded in a radical project to buy the 127 hectares (314 acres) that make up Kilfinan Community Forest. With the help of funding from organisations including Highland and Islands Enterprise and Argyll and the Islands Leader, the community forest is the most advanced project of its kind you will find in Scotland.

The group is now trading timber, and in October they’ll start work to harness the burn which runs through the forest, creating enough hydro power to allow the forest to become financially self-supporting. There are also plans to build wooden houses within the forest to provide affordable accommodation for people with a local connection. The plan initially features seven, but will ultimately be 20, creating a small hamlet of forest dwellers. The people who live there will have to accept the presence of timber trucks and the sound of wood cutting. “But we have this view!” says Brown, motioning to the coast.

“What I see isn’t the view,” said Borruso, “what I see is 50mph horizontal rain, and creating housing that will stand up to that.” Andrew Graham-Weall points out: “They’ll be really nice houses to live in though. Much lighter than a brick house, no damp and so easy to heat.”

Graham-Weall, owner of the nearby Tighnabruaich Art Gallery, has made a boat out of larch from the forest. It is painted white and trimmed with seaside blue. He tells me about a day he spent recently with some volunteers in the forest. “We ran a day taking a tree down and demonstrating how to use it, we turned some into planks for usable timber, one thing we made was a wood table and in the evening we ate supper off it. People were gobsmacked – they know wooden furniture is made from trees – but that this is how you use the piece of wood, they were amazed at the connection.”

He talks lovingly of the projects in the forest; the vernacular style of furniture which the group will make their own and share with the community through wood workshops, the polytunnel allotments with their glorious tomatoes and fat marrows, the forest school where the children from the primary now go as part of their curriculum: “They learn about making fires safely, making a shelter, they made a fire pit recently.”

The whole ethos is about getting people involved, through running workshops, volunteering programmes, and recently a survey of the forest’s archaeology with Clare Ellis from Argyll Archaeology. We continue through the forest past the squirrel walk, created by students from the secondary school. “We had five of them here for four weeks over summer, they came up for three or four days a week and we paid them, they learned how to make benches and made things,” says Brown. “They made a squirrel walk and this bench. There are limited paid opportunities round here for young people, and it’s one of the things that we’re really about.”

Finally we walk through the polytunnel allotments, a glorious cornucopia of squashes, tomatoes, sweet peas and lettuce. Forty local families are involved in the allotments, making 70 or so people in total, and with the building of a new polytunnel they’re planning to double that. For such a small village, a lot of people are already involved.

“It’s important to get people involved,” says Borruso, “because people care about things if they feel they own it, or own part of it, it’s about taking ownership, physically and metaphorically … there’s a great Indian-American proverb, the white man used to say, you have to see the west, you have to see the prairies to believe it, and the Indians said you need to believe the prairies to see them – it’s like that, you need to believe the project to see it, rather than see it to believe it.

Briefings

On the money

<p>Ask any community group that has been through the long, and all too often, painful journey of developing a renewable energy project and they will willingly show you the scars sustained as they climbed one hurdle after another. If it&rsquo;s not the planning process or negotiating the grid connection, it can be any one or more of several other factors. And above all of these, sits the killer question of where the finance will come from.&nbsp; Which is why it&rsquo;s so significant that the UK&rsquo;s largest, 100% community owned wind farm has just reached financial close.</p> <p>24/09/14</p> <p class="MsoNormal">&nbsp;</p>

 

Britain’s largest 100% community owned wind farm has reached financial close with a funding package from Santander Bank UK, Scottish Enterprise, Social Investment Scotland and the Big Lottery.

The wind farm is being built by Point and Sandwick Development Trust at Beinn Ghrideag outside the town of Stornoway on the Isle of Lewis.

The total funding package is £14.6m, 90% of which is funded by borrowing at commercial rates. The funders are as follows:

Santander Bank – £10.4m loan

Scottish Enterprise REIF fund – £2.2m loan

Social Investment Scotland – £600,000 loan

The Big Lottery – £900,000 grant

Social Investment Scotland – £500,000 grant

Construction has now commenced on the 9MW wind farm and it is expected to be operational by February 2015. It will generate enough energy for over 6,000 homes.

The wind farm’s gross turnover is estimated at around £3m pa.It will return 100% profit to the community development fund. Over 25 years, this is estimated to be around £50m net.

Point and Sandwick Development Manager Calum MacDonald said: “This is a breakthrough project for community energy both in terms of its size and its financing structure. It will transform the prospects of some of the remotest and most marginal communities in Britain.

“We are very grateful for the fantastic support we have received from our technical and legal advisors, SgurrEnergy and HBJ Gateley, and from our key funding partners, Santander Bank, Scottish Enterprise REIF fund, Social Investment Scotland and the Big Lottery.

“We are also grateful for the early seed funding and vital support we received from Community Energy Scotland.”

“We hope that our success will encourage other communities in Britain to think big. With the right support from Government and from the private sector, there is really no limit as to what can be achieved by community enterprises in the renewables sector.”