The Scotsman

Scottish Affairs Committee warns support not reaching remote areas

- Ilona Amos

Government support packages aimed at helping struggling householde­rs through the cost-of-living crisis are failing Scots living in the most remote parts of the country, MPS have found.

Members of the Westminste­r-based Scottish Affairs Committee are warning that blanket Uk-wide schemes intended to help people afford rising bills are not sufficient­ly “ruralproof­ed” and do not meet the needs of remote communitie­s in Scotland who face a “rural premium” for goods and services.

As a result of factors such as an increased exposure to fuel price inflation, Scots living in places such as Orkney and Shetland, the Highlands and Islands, and Argyll pay some of the highest costs in the UK due to a greater reliance on transport, using expensive alternativ­e fuels for offgrid households, and extra charges for food deliveries to outlying locations.

Evidence submitted to the committee showed the highest rates of fuel poverty in Scotland were found in the most rural regions – and this was prior to the recent sharp rise in prices.

Data showed between 30 per cent and 40 per cent of homes in Na h-eileanan Siar, Highland, Argyll and Bute, Moray, Shetland Islands, and Orkney Islands were faced with fuel bills of more than a tenth of their income after housing costs.

The committee also heard that food insecurity had led to a “cost-of-surviving crisis” for some in particular­ly remote areas, while delays to improvemen­ts of ferry and road infrastruc­ture has further exacerbate­d difficulti­es for rural communitie­s.

MPS are calling for the Scottish and UK government­s to work together in order to better understand the scale and complexiti­es of the challenges facing rural Scottish communitie­s.

They are recommendi­ng financial support packages especially tailored for rural people’s needs to more effectivel­y tackle the acute and unique pressures those households face.

Agreeing consistent definition­s of food poverty and more effective collaborat­ion to overcome transport infrastruc­ture challenges would be welcome steps forward, the MPS say.

“During the cost-of-living crisis, people living in remote parts of Scotland have found themselves in a perfect storm of poorly insulated, high-energy-usage homes, with an extended journey to local amenities and food shopping bills off the charts,” said Scottish Affairs Committee chair Pete Wishart, SNP MP for Perth and North Perthshire.

“Schemes implemente­d by both the UK and Scottish government­s have been welcome in large parts of Scotland, but the reality is these households have been lumbered with a ‘rural premium’ that hasn’t been adequately addressed by state support.

“We must learn the lessons from the economic challenges households have faced over the last few years.”

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