The Scotsman

‘National park should be built on Skye’

● Senior politician said the move could help protect the landscape

- By CHRIS GREEN 0 The island of Skye is suffering from tourist overload, which MEP Stihler believes could be helped by designatin­g it a National Park newsdeskts@scotsman.com

A new Scottish national park should be establishe­d on Skye to help the island cope with rising numbers of tourists, a senior Labour politician has said.

Catherine Stihler MEP made the suggestion in a letter to Tourism Secretary Fiona Hyslop after spending part of her summer holiday on the island.

She said that some of Skye’s key beauty spots were suffering from“significan­t overcrowdi­ng” and were in danger of being“ruined” due to the sheer number of visitors.

Concerns over the island’s tourist infrastruc­ture were raised last year, with some businesses suggesting that visitors should have to pay a tourist tax to help the island cope.

In January the US broad- caster CNN also named the island in a list of 12 “destinatio­ns to avoid” in summer 2018, a decision that was criticised by local MS P Kate Forbes. Improvemen­ts to visitor facilities are in the process of being made at popular sites such as the Fairy Pools, Neist Point, Quiraing and the Storr in response to the increase in visitors.

But Ms Stihlers aid de signa ting Skye as Scotland’ s third national park – alongside the Cairngorms and Loch Lomond and The Trossachs – would be a sensible next step.

“The designatio­n… helps preserve the landscape and natural environmen­t and could potentiall­y be replicated on Skye, safeguardi­ng its beauty for generation­s to come,” she wrote. “I visited the Fairy Pools at the foot of the Black Cuillin mountains to find the car park was full and there were up to 100 vehicles parked on the verge of a single -track road, including camp er vans and mini-buses. This was an accident waiting to happen.

“I am also concerned that these special pools will be ruined because of the wear and tear inflicted on the paths close by.

“Similar problems with overcrowdi­ng could be seen at the car park of the Old Man of Storr, while in Portree the queues of people desperatel­y trying to find somewhere to eat were incredible.”

Her interventi­on came as more than 100 tourism leaders on Skye signed a joint letter stressing that the island was “open for business”, amid fears that negative publicity may deter visitors.

It states that it has taken “many years” for local people to develop the island’s tourism industry, warning that this work could be undermined by alarmist media coverage.

“Tourism makes acri tical contributi­on to the local economy, and indeed the wider Scottish economy, and indirectly enables people to live, work and raise a family on the island,” the letter said.

A Scottish Government spokesman said ministers had “no plans” to create a new national park on Skye due to the “major cost implicatio­ns” and “administra­tive challenges” it would cause.

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PICTURE: ISTOCKPHOT­O

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