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Chamber and committees

Official Report: search what was said in Parliament

The Official Report is a written record of public meetings of the Parliament and committees.  

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Dates of parliamentary sessions
  1. Session 1: 12 May 1999 to 31 March 2003
  2. Session 2: 7 May 2003 to 2 April 2007
  3. Session 3: 9 May 2007 to 22 March 2011
  4. Session 4: 11 May 2011 to 23 March 2016
  5. Session 5: 12 May 2016 to 4 May 2021
  6. Current session: 13 May 2021 to 29 December 2025
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Displaying 952 contributions

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Rural Affairs and Islands Committee

Subordinate Legislation

Meeting date: 1 October 2025

Alasdair Allan

We have been speaking about data. Much of the fishing fleet is already embracing technologies such as remote electronic monitoring and catch monitoring. Would it be useful for the use of that technology to be mandatory in these sites and elsewhere?

Rural Affairs and Islands Committee

Subordinate Legislation

Meeting date: 1 October 2025

Alasdair Allan

It is on this subject.

Rural Affairs and Islands Committee

Subordinate Legislation

Meeting date: 1 October 2025

Alasdair Allan

It is the really the same issue as has been raised. You will probably have heard in the previous panel a discussion about the phrase “the best available science”. Obviously, the best available science is all anyone can and should act on, but is the Government constantly assessing where the gaps in the data are in order to try to proactively fill those? That was one of the questions that was being asked by the previous panel.

Rural Affairs and Islands Committee

Crofting and Scottish Land Court Bill: Stage 1

Meeting date: 24 September 2025

Alasdair Allan

But those moneys would have to be held by the sheep stock club and not by the grazings committee.

Rural Affairs and Islands Committee

Crofting and Scottish Land Court Bill: Stage 1

Meeting date: 24 September 2025

Alasdair Allan

I do not want to jump ahead too far and go into enforcement, but it is important to put on the record that most crofters are doing the right thing, and the reason why those who are doing the right thing get angry about the issue of abandonment is not because they feel that their neighbours are making money out of it; it is because, ultimately, if a township is denuded of people who are active crofters, the collective aspect of crofting becomes impossible in that township.

On the idea of environmental use, the key word seems to be “managed”. You have touched on this, but do you have an idea, even provisionally, of what that word might mean? The land has to be put to environmental use, but that has to be managed use.

Rural Affairs and Islands Committee

Crofting and Scottish Land Court Bill: Stage 1

Meeting date: 24 September 2025

Alasdair Allan

As has been touched on, reporting is crucial in all of this. Recent crofting legislation has changed the people who are tasked with reporting on non-compliance. Will the bill improve the process of reporting on non-compliance and remove some of the need for neighbours to describe the activities of their neighbours, which is obviously not an ideal or workable situation?

Rural Affairs and Islands Committee

Crofting and Scottish Land Court Bill: Stage 1

Meeting date: 24 September 2025

Alasdair Allan

Resource has been mentioned, too. Are there provisions in the bill that would free up resource and allow the commission to concentrate on the task—it is not your only task but, ultimately, it is part of your responsibility, as you have described—of taking tenancies off people if a croft is abandoned? Are there provisions that would free you up to do some of that?

10:00  

Rural Affairs and Islands Committee

Crofting and Scottish Land Court Bill: Stage 1

Meeting date: 24 September 2025

Alasdair Allan

I saw the same croft as the convener did, and, without referring to it too specifically, it raises a few questions in my mind that have also come up in other contexts.

It would be fair to say that most crofters are quite enthusiastic about finding ways of including care of the environment in legislation and giving it due recognition. I suppose that, as the convener has outlined, some of that comes down to enforcement and some of it comes down to whether the enforcement procedure is more than a desktop exercise when it tries to judge between active environmental management and abandonment. Would it be fair to say that one of the questions that has been asked of the commission in the past is about how it ensures that more crofts are visited and seen rather than judged from afar?

Rural Affairs and Islands Committee

Crofting and Scottish Land Court Bill: Stage 1

Meeting date: 24 September 2025

Alasdair Allan

I have one more question on that issue. Section 2 removes the 28-day time limits when a crofter applies for consent to use their croft for another purposeful use or when a crofter applies for permission to be temporarily absent. Why is that being changed? It is the Government’s decision to write the legislation, but what is your understanding of why that is in there? Will that be useful to you or to the process? Will it help to deal with things promptly? Does that just give you more time?

Rural Affairs and Islands Committee

Crofting and Scottish Land Court Bill: Stage 1

Meeting date: 24 September 2025

Alasdair Allan

I am not a crofter.