Briefings

Stirrings of democratic renewal

February 26, 2014

<p>Until very recently, if someone was publicly bemoaning the lack of genuine local democracy in this country, you could safely assume that person was either Andy Wightman or Lesley Riddoch. Now it seems everyone&rsquo;s having a go. Hard on the heels of COSLA&rsquo;s Commission to Strengthen Local Democracy, Scottish Parliament&rsquo;s Local Government and Regeneration Committee has launched a call for evidence to support its own inquiry which ends next month. No doubt both inquiries will consider a new report (authored by Andy Wightman) by the Green Party &ndash; Renewing Local Democracy in Scotland.</p> <p>26/2/14</p> <p class="MsoNormal">&nbsp;</p>

 

The Scottish Greens have published a set of ideas for revitalising local government and local democracy.

Full report can be accessed here

The party, which has councillors in Aberdeenshire, Edinburgh, Glasgow, Midlothian and Stirling, is calling for a move towards much smaller units of government that would be able to raise the majority of their funding locally. The aim is to emulate the kind of stronger democracy other European countries such as Denmark, Germany and the Netherlands take for granted.

The Greens’ ideas, launched at an event in Nairn and backed by a new report from land and governance expert Andy Wightman, are aimed at contributing to a growing debate around local democracy. COSLA has a Commission on Strengthening Local Democracy, Scottish Labour has a Devolution Commission and a Scottish Parliament Committee has just launched a new enquiry into the future of local government.

Scottish Greens see the independence debate as an opportunity to promote wider ideas of decentralising power within Scotland and  protecting the status of local government in a written constitution. The party’s Green Yes campaign has published a new briefing.

Key ideas include:

– Current councils broken down into municipalities serving around 20,000 people each. European municipalities average 5600 people.

– A set of larger regions to coordinate issues such as health, economic development, colleges and transport

– A flexible ‘Lego brick’ model for coordinating other services between smaller units.

– Municipalities should raise at least 50% of their own revenue, up from 20% today.

– Local government should get a statutory share of national income tax

– The status of local government should be enshrined in a written constitution for the first time.

The discussion comes at a crucial time for Scotland’s communities:

– Local services are being cut because of reduced central funding and the economic downturn

– Council tax has been frozen, disempowering councils from raising revenue

– Community councils have little power or funding and coverage is patchy

– Local authorities are considering leaving umbrella body COSLA

– Participation in local government elections is extremely low (recent by-election turnouts include Govan 20%, Black Isle 28%, Hamilton South 24%)

Patrick Harvie MSP, Co-convener of the Scottish Greens, said:

“As Scotland debates whether powers should shift from London to Edinburgh we should also consider how we shift control from Edinburgh to local communities. The current system is unfair and unsustainable.

“Our ideas address the clear need for change but in a measured way that is flexible and involves people rather than imposes from the centre.”

Party vice-convener Martha Wardrop, one of Glasgow’s five Green councillors, said:

“We are determined to push the issue of local democracy up the agenda and we welcome contributions from others interested in bringing power closer to the people.”

Andy Wightman, author of Renewing Local Democracy in Scotland, said:

“Everywhere should have a local democratic body to take decisions on local matters. This is what our friends across the rest of Europe take for granted.

“Scotland could have regional bodies focusing on strategic functions such as transport and economic development, while communities could have meaningful democratic institutions instead of councils like Highland trying to cover an area the size of Belgium.”

Briefings

Empowerment proposals

<p>Over 400 responses were submitted to the Scottish Government&rsquo;s consultation for its Community Empowerment Bill. The timescale looks something like this. After responses are analysed, a revised Bill will be introduced to Parliament before the summer recess (June 2014).&nbsp; Roughly 9 months of Parliamentary scrutiny will follow before the Bill can become Law.&nbsp; Most of the responses are available for public inspection from this Friday. Some of the more radical ideas, such as Community Land Scotland&rsquo;s proposal that large estates should only be sold with Ministerial approval, have already been trailed in the press.</p> <p>26/2/14</p> <p class="MsoNormal">&nbsp;</p>

 

Author: David Ross, The Herald

SALES of large estates should not go ahead without ministerial approval in an attempt to achieve greater equality and diversity in land ownership, according to radical proposals by the group representing community buyouts.

Community Land Scotland (CLS), which includes the owners of Eigg, Assynt and Gigha, said just 432 landowners accounted for half of Scotland’s privately owned land, vast acres which were “at the mercy of the few”. It said its “constructive and realistic” suggestions would allow for more diverse ownership.

But landowners denounced the proposals as divisive, destructive and absurd, saying they would have a “seriously detrimental” effect on the rural economy.

CLS made its proposals in evidence to the Scottish Government on the Community Empowerment Bill consultation.

It proposes non-crofting communities should enjoy an extended right to buy, similar to their crofting counterparts. Currently they are limited to a right of first refusal, if the owner decides to sell.

It says in circumstances where a request to purchase has been registered “and the triggered discussion, mediation or negotiation has failed”, ministers should be able to give the green light to a community buyout, if it is in the public interest and if it furthers sustainable development.

CLS repeats its call for a land agency to be created to help in this process, but breaks new ground with two other proposals.

It wants a “new provision to require the approval of Scottish Ministers to the purchase of the most substantial areas of land most often seen in the sale of large estates, the threshold to be determined by regulation”.

It also wants a “new provision for Scottish Ministers to have regard in their considerations and actions to the achievement of greater equality and diversity in the ownership of land in Scotland, including through community ownership”.

David Cameron, the Harris-based chairman of CLS, said the Community Empowerment Bill proposed to alter the Land Reform Act to make it more effective.

He said: “At the heart of the issue of land reform sits the fact that too much of Scotland’s land is owned by too few people. These people control vast acres and the development, or not, of that land is totally at the mercy of the few.

“As the debate for more land reform grows it is increasingly clear securing greater diversity in ownership is an objective more and more widely shared. To achieve that requires concrete legislative ideas. Our suggestions for how to bring about more diverse ownership are constructive and realistic.”

But Douglas McAdam, chief executive of landowners’ body Scottish Land and Estates, said: “When there are so many people and organisations working together to deliver real benefit to rural Scotland, the championing of the enforced sale of property and land businesses is a backward step – particularly since the First Minister himself has said that it is a route the Scottish Government did not want to pursue.

“The suggestion the state should interfere or have some control in an open property market is absurd. This would have a negative impact on the property market and send out the wrong message about Scotland being a place to do business. It could also have the effect of paralysing the many amicable transfers of land that happen across Scotland.

“Such a measure would be a threat to land businesses of any size and is completely out of step with the forward thinking requir-ed to benefit rural Scotland.”

He said there already was legislation that provided communities with the first option to buy when land was put on the market by a willing seller and Scottish Land and Estates continued to support this system.

Briefings

Land Fund awards

<p><span>Long term plans for the community purchase of a petrol station, a post office and a multi faith community woodland cemetery will all come to fruition thanks to the recent announcement of funding from the Scottish Land Fund. Each of the&nbsp;</span><a href="http://www.localpeopleleading.co.uk/upload/Scottish%20Land%20Fund%20puts%20local%20communities%20in%20control.docx">nine awards&nbsp;</a><span>offers a fascinating window into some of the issues that these communities have to contend with. None more so than the complex interplay between land, housing, school and sustainability as illustrated by the successful application from Ulva School Community Association on Mull.</span></p> <p>26/2/14</p> <p class="MsoNormal">&nbsp;</p>

 

Author: Mull and Iona Community Trust

Grants totalling £241,000 have been confirmed for Ulva Ferry.

The local development officers working in the Ulva Ferry area have received a massive boost with the confirmation that funding for the post has been extended for three years, until March 2017. This massive vote of confidence from Highlands and Islands Enterprise is testament to the work of Cally Fleming, Alasdair Satchel who have been working together as a job-share and Colin Morrison.

Alasdair has recently stepped down from the post to concentrate on his work in the media and arts world and has been replaced in the interim by Colin Morrison.

The project was inspired by the successful campaign in 2011 by Ulva School Community Association (USCA) to save the school from threat of closure.

The first part of the project was to consult with the local community and to prepare a Community Development Plan based on the priorities identified by residents.

The first element is provision of affordable housing for rental to enable young families to stay in the area – a primary objective to sustain Ulva Primary School.

Thanks to a sympathetic local landowner, a plot of land has been made available for purchase with assistance from the Scottish Land Fund who provided a grant totalling £141,760. As match funding for this, a second plot has been donated free of charge by the same landowner and this will be sold with a Rural Housing Burden to ensure that the house built on it is available at an affordable price in perpetuity.

The grant from Scottish Land Fund includes a revenue element which will cover the cost of a project manager, 3 days per week for two years. The post holder will manage the design, procurement and construction of two, three bedroom houses semi-detached houses on the school plot. These two houses will be offered to local families for rental at an affordable rate.

Helen Leitch, convenor of USCA said “This award is fantastic news. Affordable housing was the highest priority identified in our community planning consultation: in an area with very few houses to let, lack of affordable accommodation has been badly affecting the ability of young folk with families to live and work here. The whole community, with the school at its heart, has been suffering. Financial assistance from the Scottish Land Fund means our plan to build two new homes to offer to families can now be realised. Two new homes may not seem much to some, but will make a huge difference to this area’s future. We can’t wait to get started!”

Mull and Iona Community Trust are supporting USCA in the project, as anchor organisation, MICT will employ the local development officer and project manager and will take on the long term responsibilities of owning and renting the two houses.

Other projects in development include a pontoon development, renewable energy, community transport and a play park, all in line with the community development plan and the long term objective of providing housing and improving employment prospects in the area.

Briefings

Creative economy

<p>The islanders of Eigg have become synonymous with green energy and community ownership and have rightly earned international acclaim for their achievements in these fields. Although both the energy and ownership model have been catalysts in the island&rsquo;s renaissance, they aren&rsquo;t sufficient in themselves to drive forward the island&rsquo;s economic development. &nbsp;Creativity and the arts are often viewed by governments as being in the &lsquo;nice to have&rsquo; category or the &lsquo;low hanging fruit&rsquo; when looking for cuts in spending. Perhaps Eigg can once again turn conventional thinking on its head.</p> <div>26/2/14</div>

 

Investing in Creativity: how art is the new way to enhance Eigg’s economy.

Eigg Box will be a new space for artists to make and do creative work.  The newly built eco workspace on the Isle of Eigg will bring together local island creative businesses with artists from around the world.

Established as a self-sustaining social enterprise, Eigg Box will be a powerhouse of creative activity, entrepreneurship, inspiration and collaboration. However, unlike its urban counterparts, Eigg Box’s eco-built studios and creative workspace will be on the Isle of Eigg; a community-owned, renewably-powered island, off the north-west coast of Scotland with a population of less than 100.

Eigg Box turns on its head the notion that a centre of entrepreneurship and creativity needs to be at the centre of population.

Eigg Box makes the remote central.

The Why?

Other similar (mainland) projects have shown providing high quality, custom built working space increases productivity, reduces isolation, and offers tenants the opportunity to share costs, collaborate and pitch for work jointly. Time spent as a visiting artist-in-residence can motivate, transform and inspire creative practice, and bring new skills and perspective to a local community.

For island-based artists and creative businesses, Eigg Box means somewhere better to work, companionship and creative collaboration and a working environment with fewer distractions and more focus than the kitchen table! Eigg Box also offers the chance to share everything from skills and ideas, to the electricity bill, marketing and training.

For Eigg it means new and more diverse island businesses, providing much needed local employment, helping retain and grow our population and providing community benefit.

For visiting artists, Eigg Box means coming to join a vibrant and supportive group of like-minded creative souls and experience Eigg community life. It offers artists the chance not just to work in a different (and very beautiful) place, but also engage with the Eigg community, with ideas, issues and concepts that are out of their norm and challenge perspectives on what living on an island is all about. At the end of the day, we all live on an island, Eigg is just a bit smaller!

Eigg Box will provide:

Work space for creative businesses in self contained studios, open plan studio spaces or hot desks

You can work in Eigg Box:

•             On a part or full-time basis (Eigg islanders)

•             As visiting artist or creative professional; from a few days up to three months

•             As a day visitor

As well as work space Eigg Box will have:

•             An event or temporary exhibition space

•             An area to relax in, share a coffee and ideas

•             A kitchen

•             An online shop

•             Storage space

•             Wireless broadband access (currently 6Mb, aiming for 50Mb)

•             Regular training and professional development opportunities

•             A meeting room which will include skype & video conferencing facilities

Eigg Box will also run events and training for tenants and in conjunction with local and visiting creative organisations.

Benefits to tenants include:

•             Having appropriate space to work in

•             Less isolation

•             Opportunity to collaborate

•             Opportunity to develop and pitch for work jointly

•             Sharing of costs and resources

•             Promotion and marketing of work

•             Support from Eigg Box manager & fellow tenants

•             Business advice, mentoring and other support

As a visiting artist, the chance to spend time living & working on Eigg, being part of our community with time and space to develop ideas, skills and practice.

Eigg Box aims to contribute to the local economy directly and indirectly by working with and supporting other island businesses:

•             Accommodation providers (hostel, guest houses/B&B & self-catering)

•             Catering & transport providers

•             Other creative service businesses – dance studio & recording studio

•             Community spaces – community hall, primary school, museums

Creativity is now becoming firmly established as an innovative way to sustain our islands’ economy. Let’s have more of it!

This month will see the completion of Sweeney’s Bothy on Eigg,. It is the latest building in the Scotland-wide Bothy Project initiated in 2009 by artists Bobby Niven and Will Foster.

Sweeney’s Bothy is the third in the planned network of small-scale, off-grid art residency spaces in distinct and diverse locations around Scotland.

You can find out more about the processes that led to the whole vision being developed by looking at Sweeney’s Bothy and the blog posts associated with it.

The Bothy warming party on Saturday 15 February will be followed by constant occupation of the space by visiting artists for the next few months as it is fully booked until June! The focus for the residencies will be wilderness ecology, and we are looking forward to some stimulating interaction between the visiting artists, the Green Team and the Earth Connections Centre on Eigg.

Briefings

Community acquisition

<p>Setting up a new business is hard. A third of all new businesses no longer exist after 6 months. Harder still if the new business has a social mission to employ people who normally might struggle to find a job. The challenge becomes harder still if the new business with this social mission is to be owned and managed collectively by the local community rather than a business focused entrepreneur. An innovative Lottery backed programme run by Social Firms Scotland may have the answer. Don&rsquo;t start up from scratch &ndash; purchase a going concern.</p> <div>26/2/14</div>

 

THE future of more than 25 jobs in New Pitsligo has been secured following the purchase of John Smith & Sons bakery by the Fraserburgh Development Trust.

The Trust has now completed the acquisition of John Smith &Sons Bakery New Pitsligo Ltd, following the retiral of the present owner John Smith.

The bakery has existed in New Pitsligo since 1903 and the Trust has ensured that the present employees will continue their employment and that the bakery will continue to trade under the name of John Smith and Sons New Pitsligo.

The Trust has been working with John Smith, of John Smith & Sons, to conclude a deal that would mean the bakery would operate as a Social Firm, which means that any surplus generated will go towards building the business and developing future training and employment opportunities.

Chairman of Fraserburgh Development Trust, Ian Watson, commenting on the acquisition, said: “The Trust is delighted that we were able to continue the jobs into the future and the John Smith bakery name and its importance as the biggest employer in New Pitsligo continues. 

“The plan by the Trust is to build for the future in new Pitsligo and to move from the old bakery building to new premises, ideally in the next two years. A site and plans for the new bakery and training facility has been submitted to Aberdeenshire Council for their consideration.”

The Trust have already received development grant funding from the BIG Lottery to carry out an extensive public consultation exercise in the village and for the design team to work on layout and scope  of the proposed new bakery and training centre.

Former owner of the bakery Mr John Smith, who was determined that the business continued to operate in New Pitsligo, said: “Obviously, I have mixed feelings with my having to give up a lifetime’s work, as I am the last of the Smith line involved in this bakery business. However, I am very pleased to know that the business is going to continue and that the jobs will continue in the future. Hopefully, the bakery will be going for another 100 years. 

“Without a doubt, it would have been a disaster for New Pitsligo if the jobs had been lost.”

The news of the acquisition was also welcomed by the Secretary of New Pitsligo Community Council, who said: “New Pitsligo Community Council has discussed, individually and with FDT, the proposals for a new bakery at New Pitsligo.

“The plans to employ existing staff, disadvantaged people and making provision for training young persons will be so advantageous also because New Pitsligo is such a large village we need to have plenty opportunity of employment.

“All members are 100 percent behind the Fraserburgh Development Trust with their vision and plans.”

Social Firms Scotland has been supporting FDT’s acquisition of the John Smith & Sons bakery since 2010 through a mergers and acquisitions programme funded by the Big Lottery. Social Firms Scotland’s CEO, Pauline Graham is delighted that everyone’s efforts have made this a reality.  She said: “We all realised the economic necessity of retaining jobs in the area, in addition to the opportunity to develop an already thriving business and employ more people within a community owned business. 

“There is a good values match between family owned businesses and social firms and we are delighted that the acquisition is now complete.  We wish the new venture every success”.

Briefings

Wild land must be protected

<p><span>In the last edition of Local People Leading, we reported that plans by Scottish Natural Heritage to produce a map delineating Scotland&rsquo;s wild land had angered several communities because of the potential constraints such a map would impose on local development.&nbsp; But there are clearly two sides to this debate with equally strong views being expressed.&nbsp; John Hutchieson, Chair of John Muir Trust, the charity dedicated to protecting Scotland&rsquo;s wild land, offers a perspective that suggests the majority view on the ground is firmly on the side of SNH.</span></p> <p>26/2/14</p> <p class="MsoNormal">&nbsp;</p>

 

Author: John Hutchieson

John Hutchison plays a key role in some of Scotland’s most high profile community organisations, and is also the chair of the wild land charity, the John Muir Trust. Here he argues why communities should support the core wild land map published by SNH. 

The previous email briefing of the Scottish Community Alliance highlighted some of the reservations expressed by some community groups towards the wild land map. 

To redress the balance, however, we should acknowledge that many community organisations and individuals living in rural Scotland are strongly in favour of the map. 

Of the more than 400 responses to the consultation over the map, 80 per cent were in favour, with just 14 per cent opposed and the remaining 6 per cent neutral. 

Even more striking is the fact that most of the opposition to the wild land map comes not from communities, nor from the voluntary sector, but from big business. 

Of the 59 submissions opposing the map, no fewer than 40 are from UK and international, energy corporations, property developers, landowners and their representative organisations such as Scottish Land and Estates. 

On the other side, those supporting the map are overwhelmingly from the non-commercial sector, and include community groups, environmental charities, outdoors organisations, local authorities, as well as individuals. 

A map that helps protect our wild land from exploitation from external forces is more likely to benefit rather than damage local communities, as has been recognised from some of the submissions. 

Communities in the southern uplands and central belt, for example, have enthusiastically welcomed the prospect that local wild land areas, such as Merrick and Clyde Muirshiel Country Park will receive official recognition and protection. 

Indeed a number of community groups argue for the wild land map to be extended into their own area. 

Kilmorack Community Council in Inverness-shire, which is currently involved in a community buy-out of the Aigas Forest, with the aim of “returning it a more natural state and include paths or tracks for community and visitor use” calls for the map to be extended into this “truly wild and natural environment”. 

Similarly, Cabrach Community Association say: “We would like to see the Cabrach included in the Core Areas of Wild Land 2013. The Cabrach is a very remote and beautiful area of Scotland which marches with the Cairngorms National Park.” 

For years, a group of crofters in Laid on the shores of Loch Eriboll in north west Sutherland fought to save their community from social and economic destruction when a Liechtenstein-registered company and a Belgium landowner tried to turn their area into a superquarry.

In their submission, the Laid Grazings Committee say the wild land map “would have clearly helped us in our fight against the Eriboll superquarry which would have devastated Laid and Loch Eriboll”. 

The grazings committee also approvingly quotes John Muir Trust chief executive Stuart Brooks stating in the Northern Times that the wild land map is “not about preventing small scale development by local people and communities”.

Some organisations have either misunderstood or have been misinformed about the purpose of a wild land map. It is essential to remember that it is not a designation, but an integral part of the revised Scottish Planning Policy upon which the Scottish Government consulted last summer. It therefore offers planning guidance. 

It will offer less protection than, for example, National Scenic Areas and National Parks –  both of which have towns, villages, major roads, bridges, businesses and tourist facilities within their designated land areas.

Because of its rugged, mainly mountainous nature, and lack of existing infrastructure, wild land is unsuitable for any large scale development other than major wind farms, and the kind of superquarry that threatened such havoc in Sutherland.  

These types of developments are driven by multinational corporations and private landowners, and invariably have a divisive and damaging impact on local communities, as well as on the landscape and ecology. 

Wild land is not pristine wilderness. The core wild land map already includes within its boundaries many structures – houses, lodges, bothies, farm buildings, lighthouses, even small business premises. 

No-one has ever suggested that mapping wild land should lead to ‘a blanket prohibition on any development’. 

The John Muir Trust, one of the most foremost advocates of the wild land map, works with a number of community trusts and supports sustainable community regeneration.  

The North Harris Trust, for example, signed an agreement last month for a three turbine wind farm on an area of wild land north of Tarbert. The John Muir Trust backed the scheme all the way through from its inception. 

The Trust also recently helped fund a feasibility study for a hydro scheme on one of our wild land properties in Strathaird in Skye, which should soon come to fruition. 

Far from being an economic threat, the strong promotion of Scotland’s wild land can benefit some of our most remote communities by creating a renewed surge of interest in the Highlands.

That in turn will generate a greater awareness not just of the landscape, but also of the culture, history, patterns of landownership and social issues that affect these areas.

Briefings

Oban to play host

February 12, 2014

<p>If you live in rural Scotland and have an active interest in community affairs you might want to put 6th - 8th November 2014 in your diary. Oban has been chosen to host Scotland&rsquo;s inaugural Rural Parliament with the main venue for the event being the much acclaimed, community run Atlantis Leisure Centre. It&rsquo;s anticipated that 400 delegates will descend on Oban over the three days of the Parliament with other venues across the town being brought into use. Plenty of opportunities in the coming months to shape the Parliament&rsquo;s programme. See <a href="http://www.scottishruralparliament.org.uk">here</a> for details</p> <p>12/2/14</p>

 

Author: Press and Journal

The first meeting of the Scottish Rural Parliament will take place in Oban. Around 400 delegates are expected to give the west Highland capital a late year boost when they arrive for the three-day event in November.

Oban-based Councillor Duncan MacIntyre, policy lead for economic development said: “This is fantastic news. Obanisona high just now and anything like this adds to it.

“Oban is the right place to have the Scottish Rural Parliament and I am fully supportive of it.”

He was referring to last week’s announcement that Oban is to benefit from a £18.9million infrastructure project that could bring in £125million in private investment and create hundreds of construction jobs.

The money is through the Tax Incremental Financing system through which councils can pay for infrastructure projects by borrowing against the future business rate income from new development.

The Scottish Government announced its backing last year for the Scottish Rural Parliament. The management group with responsibility for taking it forward has formed a company called Scottish Rural Action, with the sole purpose of developing and organising Scotland’s first Rural Parliament.

Chairman of Scottish Rural Action, John Hutchison, said: “The aim of the Rural Parliament is to provide an opportunity for rural communities to share issues and consider solutions to the challenges they face. It is a chance to meet people from other rural communities and decision makers, debate ideas and share best practice.

“Ultimately it is about rural communities having an opportunity to present a collective voice to Government. There is at present no other mechanism for doing this.”

Rural Affairs Secretary Richard Lochhead said: “The establishment of a Rural Parliament in Scotland has been a long held ambition of mine, and I am delighted that the very first meeting will be held in Oban in November.

“Rural Parliaments work well in other European countries, giving rural communities and businesses a stronger voice in policy making and an opportunity to celebrate all that is good about living and working in rural areas.

“I would urge everyone across rural Scotland to take advantage of the opportunity to be involved in shaping the content, remit, agenda and themes of our nation’s very first Rural Parliament and make it a success.”

Argyll and Bute Council’s area committee for Oban Lorn and the Isles will discuss arrangements for the historic gathering at its meeting on Wednesday.

This will include debating making the Corran Halls in Oban available to the organisers free of charge for the duration of the event.

Briefings

Whose parks are they anyway?

<p>Glasgow City Council&rsquo;s approach to the management of its public parks is a curious one. There&rsquo;s a long history of the Council dreaming up alternative uses for the parks which the denizens of Glasgow have consistently taken exception to. From trying (and failing) on three separate occasions to turn Glasgow Green into a coal mine back in the mid-19th century, to trying (and failing again) more recently to build a nightclub in the Botanics, you might think the Council would think twice before issuing a strict new code of conduct to park users.</p> <p class="MsoNormal">12/2/14</p>

 

Author: Ken Smith, The Herald

MANY a parent has chided a child for disturbing a pet dog when it is quietly lying on the carpet sleeping, bothering no-one.

Sometimes Glasgow City Council seems to have an insatiable desire to poke the citizens of the city awake when they are bothering no-one, particularly over the city’s parks.

You would think the council would cut the grass, pick up the litter, paint the railings occasionally, and let everyone get on with using the parks for a bit of fresh air and exercise. But there is hardly a green space in the city where local citizens have not felt the need to set up committees to defend their parks from the council’s plans, whether it is zip-wires in Pollok Park, nightclubs in the Botanic Gardens, private sports clubs on Glasgow Green or even tree removal at Bellahouston.

Now, when things are a bit quiet in the parks, the council is busy again, drawing up draconian rules which have managed to anger swathes of park users.

These rules can be pretty effective. I remember reading the old rules on a noticeboard at Botanic Gardens which state that no-one can “beat, shake, sweep, brush or clean any carpet, rug or mat in the park without prior consent”. And I have never once seen anyone with a rolled up rug and carpet-beater in the park since the notice went up.

Of course the council has a bit of previous, as the police might say, stretching back more than 100 years. In 1858 Glasgow council planned to sell off most of Glasgow Green to be mined for coal. Only public opposition led to the plans being dropped, although the council tried twice again in years to come, hoping, presumably, that people had short memories.

More recently the Fleshers’ Haugh part of Glasgow Green was to be sold off to a private developer, provoking a public campaign to have it halted. You see, when the council goes hand-in-glove with a private developer, no matter how good the plans are, the public are suspicious. The same happened when entertainments group G1 wanted to build a nightclub in the Botanic Gardens. Inevitably a Save Our Botanics Group was convened to stop what they saw as a blight on the park, fearing drunks trampling the flower beds at all hours of the day and night.

Mind you, there had been a nightclub there before, the old Sgt Peppers – I don’t think the Beatles were ever paid royalties for that – in the old railway station at the park entrance. If my memory is correct, it later went the way of many a building which has outlived its usefulness in Glasgow. It accidentally burned down.

One of the stranger park protests was plans to remove trees in Bellahouston Park in the eighties for the Pope’s visit. Wild claims were made that 200 trees were to be chopped down. In the end only 12 trees were carefully uprooted and stored until after the visit then replanted.

A tabloid newspaper reporter told me they were keen to photograph the actual removal of the trees but did not know when it would happen. The paper eventually found a chap in a flat overlooking the park who had a portrait of King Billy on his wall. He readily agreed to become the paper’s tree watcher and phoned daily to report on what was going on.

One person who did protest at the Pope’s visit was the late Pastor Jack Glass, whose rigid Protestantism opposed all things Roman. The story was told that when Pastor Jack stood outside Bellahouston Park with his banner on the day of the Pope’s visit, Archbishop Tom Winning told him as he arrived: “Nice day for it Jack.”

The story I like about Bellahouston Park was when BBC reporter Alastair Smith covered the British Stunt Kiting Association’s event there. When he did his live broadcast you could hear a pin drop in the newsroom as colleagues gathered to see if he made any unfortunate spoonerisms.

Talking of trees, Glasgow’s Incorporation of Gardeners wanted to plant 2014 fruit trees in Glasgow parks for the Commmonwealth Games. They were told though that there were no fruit trees in Glasgow parks as the punters would eat the fruit. Presumably that sounded too healthy.

So far the council has managed to anger dog walkers, cyclists and nursery schools with its draft regulations, which is quite an achievement. The rules state you must always keep your dog at your heel or on a lead so presumably you wouldn’t be able to throw it a ball or a stick, which is the classic enjoyment of having a dog.

Still, one thing everyone agrees on is that you have to clean up after your dog. A reader in another town had to point out the sign “Dog fouling – maximum fine £100” to a chap who had ignored his dog’s toilet. His brusque reply – “My dog doesn’t play football” – didn’t help the situation.

Cyclists would only be allowed to go at 5mph – a fast walking pace and slower than runners. Trying to keep your balance at that speed is one for the trick cyclists.

Permission would also be needed for any group of nursery children going in the park for a walk. Goodness, even organising a game of football with your mates would seem to be against the new rules unless you have permission.

But sometimes the council does get it right. After trying to turn the disused bandstand in Kelvingrove Park into a nightclub, and being opposed, the council has finally decided simply to renovate it as a bandstand. A stroll through the park yesterday shows that work is well ahead. What will be more delightful than sitting in the outdoors this summer listening to some live music? Mind you, the new rules state you can’t play a musical instrument in the park, so it will be interesting to see how that works out.

Briefings

A nudge in the right direction

<p class="MsoNormal">Whether the purpose of government policy is to get us to eat more fruit and veg, insulate our homes or reuse more and waste less, much of it is based on the premise that it would be in our &lsquo;best interests&rsquo; if we changed our behaviour in some way. The problem for policy makers is that we don't always want to change our behaviour to fit with what the Government thinks is &lsquo;good&rsquo; for us. That&rsquo;s where the &lsquo;Nudge Team&rsquo; come in.</p> <p class="MsoNormal">&nbsp;12/2/14</p>

 

Author: Oliver Wright, The Independent

I am sitting in a featureless meeting room in the Cabinet Office with a man called David Halpern. And I’m about to hear one of the more surprising – but simple insights – into human nature that I’ve heard in a long time. 

“Do you have kids?” Hapern asks.

“No,” I reply.

“Well, if you do, then this is worth remembering.”

Halpern begins to tell me about the work of American psychologist Carol Dweck, who has spent her career examining how you can improve the academic performance of children. In particular, one set of tests she devised to examine the effect of feedback on learning.

“So you do a maths test and divide your study group in half,” he explains. “In one group, after they have done the test, you say, good result – you’re very smart. And in the other half you say, good result – that was a really good effort. Then both groups are given a really hard maths test a week later. It is deliberately hard and, of course, some kids give up in the face of that.

“Then a couple of weeks later the groups are given a maths test of the same standard as the original. Now the kids who were told it was really good effort are doing about 20 per cent better than they were originally.

“But the kids who were told, you are really smart are doing 20 per cent worse. It is a one-line difference in the way they are given feedback.”

And the reason? “Imagine you hit a difficulty and certainly kids do with hard school work. How do you interpret that? If you believe that it’s just a matter of some people are smart and some people are not, you think ‘I must be dumb’. But if you believe your performance is really to do with your effort – then you try harder. If you can put a kid down a trajectory of believing – it changes their trajectory in the face of challenge.”

Now not many people outside the world of Whitehall will have heard of Halpern or the unit that he runs from a small, cramped corner of the Treasury. But over the past four years the Government’s Behaviour Insights Team (or Nudge unit) has had a profound effect on the way in which Whitehall interacts with the people it is governing – using simple techniques like the example above. The unit uses insights from behavioural economics and psychology to subtly change the processes, forms and language used by Government – to achieve outcomes that are in the “public good” and save money.

The team found, for example, that by changing the wording used to encourage organ donation, more than 100,000 extra people would sign up annually.

In another case the unit experimented with sending out personalised text messages to people who owed money to the courts.

It found that texts which were not personalised resulted in 23 per cent of people paying the fines, while 33 per cent of those people who received the text paid. If no text was sent, only 5 per cent paid.

The unit has also worked to increase the number of people who pay their tax on time, redesigned the process around which people are required to look for work while on benefits and looked at encouraging people to give to charity – all with impressive results.

So how did it all come about? Halpern, a former member of Tony Blair’s Strategy Unit, says he was always interested in the applications of psychology in the real world since buying a second-hand textbook when he was 14 and thinking, “Oh my god this is so cool”.

But during the Blair years Nudge didn’t catch on – even though it was considered.

“The Blair administration was expanding the state – spending more and regulating more, which was Tony’s orientation, often,” Halpern says. “[In that environment] Nudge feels very different. It’s like, ‘we knew you were a nanny state and now we know you’re really an ultra-nanny state’.”

But that all changed with the financial crash and the incoming Conservative-led Government in 2010.

“Their instincts were generally, ‘we’ve got no money and we’re going to constrain the size of the state and deregulate’. So now you are using these approaches as a softer alternative to regulation.”

But, still, a lot in Government were nervous of Nudge – especially as it was being promoted by David Cameron’s infamous blue-sky thinker Steve Hilton. “We were a skunkworks operation of a few people in a corner,” he admits. “You were sort of given this Mission Impossible and told you’ll probably die and we’ll say we’ve got nothing to do with you.”

But the academic theory did work in practice – and the Nudge team were suddenly in demand. “The pivotal moment was about eight months in, when we did a presentation to permanent secretaries and we showed them our first results.  You could see the mandarins were thinking to begin with: ‘We’ve seen it all before – the bright young things are coming into Number 10 – if we keep our heads down, it will all go away.’ But then, they’re not dumb and they see these results and they realise that the marginal costs of these changes are almost nothing.

“They’re all under pressure on budgets. And then you are putting in front of them an approach which is tangibly getting results.”

Now, four years in, Nudge is about to be spun off into a new company – partly owned by the Government, partly owned by the social enterprise charity Nesta and partly owned by Halpern and other employees. It will allow the unit to expand and take on more work outside the constraints of Whitehall. But given that one of Nudge’s theories is “friction cost” – that the harder you make it for people to do things the less likely they are to do it – surely leaving Whitehall will make it less likely that they’ll be used by Government to solve problems?

Halpern admits this could be a problem. “Look, this is an experiment. I do worry a bit that a lot of what happens in Government happens because you bump into people at the margins and you say ‘hey what about this?’. But in some ways, given how Whitehall works, it may be easier for a Government department to go to an outside body to help them with a piece of work than to get another bit of Government to do work for them.

“Certainly the intention is to maintain the continuity of service. Jeremy Heywood [the Cabinet Secretary] will still be able to send an email to me at the weekend and ask, what do you think about so-and-so?”

But Nudge will expand to look at other areas as well. Halpern wants to examine ways of unlocking “hidden entrepreneurs” who adapt products that could grow the economy but never get beyond garages.

“The famous example is of the mountain bike that was created not by a manufacturer but by someone by using bits of other bikes and putting it together in their garage.

“Studies suggest that 6 per cent of Britons have come up with a significant adaptation in the last year. But most of these never diffuse.

“If more of them did, then the benefits would be enormous. We are going to do a study to identify how many good ideas there are and what is stopping them diffuse.”

Whether life outside Whitehall works for Halpern and Behavioural Insights Team time will tell. But that may not ultimately matter. They have already unlocked a mind-change in Whitehall – that is perceptible across most Government departments.

That maybe the only nudge that is necessary.

Nudge and wink: How it works

“Nudge” articulates the idea that people can be persuaded to make the right decisions by simple changes in how choices are presented to them. The theory was laid out in a ground-breaking 2008 book of the same name by economics professor Richard Thaler and law professor  Cass Sunstein.

The American academics argued that people often make bad decisions in areas of their lives – from personal finances and health to broader issues like how they treat the planet. This simple statement challenged the idea that people act in a purely rational way – always making choices that benefit them financially or in some other way – which is often used as the basis for economic models.

Professors Thaler and Sunstein argued that “choice architecture” – how the options are framed – can help “nudge” people towards the most beneficial outcome without actually restricting their personal freedom.

The authors wrote that “the libertarian aspect of our strategies lies in the straightforward insistence that, in general, people should be free to do what they like”.

But they also said it was “legitimate for choice architects to try to influence people’s behaviour in order to make their lives longer, healthier, and better”.

Critics have suggested that stronger measures – a push or a shove – are usually required to bring about significant social change.

“Basically you need more than just nudge,” Baroness Julia Neuberger said after a House of Lords inquiry into the theory’s effectiveness found little to suggest it was effective on a large scale.

Briefings

Boost for transport

<p>Last summer, Scottish Parliament held an inquiry into Scotland&rsquo;s community transport providers and concluded amongst other things that its creaking infrastructure needed some serious investment. Credit to Scottish Government for its speedy response. Community Transport Association, the umbrella body providing advice and support to Scotland&rsquo;s 250+ community transport operators had its core funding doubled and a new &pound;1m vehicle fund was established. The deadline for applications has just closed - it&rsquo;s been oversubscribed by 400%.</p> <p class="MsoNormal">&nbsp;12/2/14</p>

 

Full report can be read here 

Extract of report which relates to resources…

166. Whilst the Committee acknowledges that decisions on their spending priorities are matters wholly for local authorities, it is of the view that the variation in the availability of funding for community transport across Scotland presents significant financial challenges to many operators which in turn can impact on the service provision to users. The Committee therefore considers that the potential for the provision of funding to further assist the community transport sector should be explored.

167. In particular, the Committee is of the view that there is a strong case for a source of capital funding to be introduced to assist in the purchase of new and replacement vehicles. Vehicle purchase has been highlighted as the principal funding concern of operators. If vehicles are replaced at the appropriate stage in their life span this will deliver improvements in reliability, safety and comfort and ensure that services are more efficient and sustainable. The availability of a funding stream would also significantly reduce the financial pressures on community transport providers, allowing them to redirect resources to other aspects of their service provision.

168. Whilst only rough estimates of the likely cost of a managed rolling programme of funding the provision of new or replacement of vehicles across Scotland have been provided to the Committee, it appears that this could be delivered at reasonable cost, particularly when balanced against the likely benefits.

169. The Committee welcomes the very positive comments made by the Minister in evidence that he would be prepared to consider how this might be delivered. The Committee therefore calls on the Scottish Government to work with sector representatives to consider how such a scheme might be developed and introduced. This work should include a full assessment of the likely costs and consider from which source these might be funded. It should also bring forward proposals for application criteria and management and delivery options.