The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

New probe into Fife ‘prairie’ farmer’s actions.

MSP welcomes move after six miles of field boundary walls were taken down at Pitlochie Farm

- CLAIRE WARRENDER cwarrender@thecourier.co.uk

A Fife farmer who removed six miles of drystane dykes from his land is now being investigat­ed under environmen­tal legislatio­n.

James Orr was stripped of most of his taxpayer-funded support payment in June after demolishin­g the dykes from Pitlochie Farm at Gateside.

The 75% penalty, applied to any support scheme payments Pitlochie Farming Company will receive this year, is the highest ever imposed for a breach of the conditions attached to the scheme.

It is not clear what that amounted to in monetary terms but official UK government figures show the firm received £103,795 in direct aid in 2018.

North East Fife Liberal Democrat MSP Willie Rennie criticised the punishment as “little more than a slap on the wrist”, however, as Mr Orr cannot be forced to rebuild the walls under the rules of the EU-governed payments.

Dating to the early 1800s, the walls were regarded as a haven for wildlife while protecting local communitie­s from flooding.

Fergus Ewing, Scotland’s Cabinet secretary for rural economy, has now confirmed the removal of field boundaries is covered by environmen­tal impact assessment regulation­s.

“My officials are currently assessing the implicatio­ns of the dyke removal at Pitlochie Farm under those regulation­s,” he said.

Mr Ewing added: “With the current pressure on farm-gate prices a penalty of this scale would represent a very significan­t reduction in the total farm income of any agricultur­al business, and therefore I don’t agree that the penalty is insufficie­nt to deter others from carrying out similar action.”

Mr Rennie said he welcomed the investigat­ion.

“Although I am disappoint­ed that the government doesn’t feel it appropriat­e to fine Mr Orr more than 75% of his farm payment, I am pleased that he is being investigat­ed under the environmen­tal impact assessment regulation­s,” he said.

“Whatever his justificat­ion for the removal of the walls, it was a flagrant disregard for the rules which every farmer works hard to comply with.

“It’s also had a significan­t impact on the biodiversi­ty and the local landscape.

“The government must explore every avenue of the law to make sure this is never repeated.”

Mr Orr has declined to comment on the issue but, in his defence, a neighbouri­ng farmer said: “I think he has done an excellent job in making the farm more efficient.

“The stones from the dykes have been made into roads on the farm so he doesn’t have to take his tractors on to the main road. That’s a big plus for motorists.”

“The government must explore every avenue of the law to make sure this is never repeated. WILLIE RENNIE MSP

 ?? Picture: Dougie Nicolson. ?? The drystane dykes were removed at Pitlochie Farm near Gateside.
Picture: Dougie Nicolson. The drystane dykes were removed at Pitlochie Farm near Gateside.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom