The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)
Local authority’s cuts to biodiversity project slammed by critics
COUNCIL: Climate crisis is controversial backdrop to move
Angus has slashed support for a crosscouncil biodiversity initiative in a move critics claim “sends out completely the wrong message” at a time of climate crisis.
Councillors voted to cut Tayside Biodoversity Partnership funding from £26,000 to just £6,500 this year – and drop it to only £1,500 per annum thereafter – after being told it did not provide “value for money”.
The decision has left Perth and Kinross Council to carry the can for the funding, with the neighbour authority stressing it has no plans to reduce support.
The Angus move was confirmed just days before a presentation fanfaring a double diversity success, including national recognition for a scheme around Carnoustie to save the Small Blue butterfly, the UK’s smallest.
Talks around future funding of the co-ordinator’s post have been going on for months but despite a plea to delay the decision, councillors voted narrowly to make the money-saving move.
Kirriemuir and Glens SNP councillor Julie Bell said: “Australia is on fire, the ice caps are melting, and for me this is a time to escalate the effort and increase our biodiversity.
“If Angus Council feels it is not receiving its fair share of its investment in the partnership, I believe that’s a management conversation, but it is wholly counter-intuitive to reduce funding when we need to scale up our efforts.”
Brechin and Edzell SNP member Kenny Braes added: “We are losing 150 species every single day on the planet and we don’t want any of those to be in Angus. “Biodiversity doesn’t follow the lines of local authority maps and we are seriously sending out completely the wrong message on this.”
Forfar Conservative councillor Braden Davy said: “If this is maintained it would be a more than £100,000 of additional cost for Angus Council taxpayers. This seems a safe and sensible way to save that sum.”
Communities director Stewart Ball told councillors: “The council has absolutely no intention of scaling back its work in terms of biodiversity.
“What we are proposing here is withdrawing the funding for the co-ordinator, but delivering that work in a different way – we see it becoming embedded in business as usual for all council employees,” he said.
A Perth and Kinross Council spokesperson said the authority “has no plans to reduce its current funding for the Tayside Biodiversity Partnership.”
“Australia is on fire, the ice caps are melting, and for me this is a time to escalate the effort and increase our biodiversity. COUNCILLOR JULIE BELL