The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)
Alcohol rule hits a dud note with music festival
Leisure trust refuses to hire out venue where alcohol will be sold
A music festival which has grown to become Scotland’s fourth biggest of its kind could be forced out of Fife, it has emerged.
The PKD Festival, which is held at Dalgety Bay Sports Centre, has grown in size and stature over the past eight years and attracts people from miles around each summer.
But The Courier has learned that the event is effectively homeless after centre operator Fife Sports and Leisure Trust introduced a new policy on alcohol.
Other sites for the 2017 event are now being looked at but have their own logistical problems, while offers from elsewhere in Scotland – namely Livingston and Kinross – are also being considered.
However, organisers have now pleaded with trust chiefs to make the PKD Festival an exception to the new rules and retain its original home.
The family festival, which this year attracted retro acts including S Club, boyband 911 and indie stars Space, started life as a pushkart derby but has been rebranded Promoting Kinship Day, with profits going towards community projects in Fife.
“We’ve just been nominated for Outdoor Festival of the Year, alongside the likes of T in the Park, and that’s big kudos for us, but it seems as if Fife Sports and Leisure Trust are sticking to their guns,” organiser Mark Bennett said.
“The sense of kinship this festival brings in is incredible and it’s not just from Dalgety Bay, people from all over Europe come. It really brings everyone together but unfortunately we don’t own the land.
“What we would love is for the general public to persuade Fife Sports and Leisure Trust to make an exception for Dalgety Bay Sports and Leisure Centre.”
A leisure trust spokesperson confirmed that it had reviewed its booking conditions, in part due to an increase in requests for the hire of facilities where alcohol would be sold at an event.
“Following wider consultation with its board of directors, it was decided that the trust would no longer accept bookings for hire of its facilities where alcohol would be sold or consumed,” it added.
“This policy reflects the trust’s commitment to improve the health of Fifers and promote and raise awareness of the links between activity and improved physical and mental health and wellbeing across Fife’s communities.
“We are sorry to lose bookings, particularly ones where organisers of events have had an established relationship with the trust, however, we have suggested the PKD Festival organisers may want to approach Fife Council to find alternative facilities for them to host their event.”