The Scotsman

Western Isles is microcosm of damage being done

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The Western Isles has suffered proportion­ately more from the SNP Government’s council cuts than any other authority in Scotland. That strikes me as shameful.

Under the Salmond-sturgeon regimes, the islands have absorbed a 17 per cent cut with much worse to follow. A further £10 million of cuts are being planned and job losses are expected to double from the 230 so far.

These are devastatin­g figures in a community of 30,000 people where employment opportunit­ies are few. In many parts of the islands, there are not enough people left to provide services for an ageing population.

This cruel treatment is based on double-jeopardy – your population is falling, therefore we will give you less money which, in turn, helps ensure your population will fall further.

If “Westminste­r” was to espouse such a crass approach, Holyrood would be in indignatio­n overdrive.

Plenty lip-service is paid to the contributi­on of our periphery to enrichimg Scottish life, blah, blah, blah. But when it comes to actual treatment of fragile rural communitie­s, there is no positive philosophy or even joined-up thinking.

Islands are not “subsidised”. An audit of what their collective industries contribute in tax revenues, not to mention the images they provide to all aspects of Scottish promotiona­l activity, would show a healthy surplus.

However, they depend heavily on public services, reliable transport links and first-class interconne­ctivity to overcome barriers of remoteness. Instead, service are slashed via an inflexible formula, transport services are in disarray and communicat­ions a lottery.

Every council in Scotland is reeling from the Scottish Government’s cuts which are five times greater than reductions to its own budget. The Western Isles is a microcosm of that problem – but surely one that has already suffered enough.

 ??  ?? Western Isles transport services – so crucial to overcoming barriers of remoteness – are in disarray
Western Isles transport services – so crucial to overcoming barriers of remoteness – are in disarray

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