The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Fears over future of Fife town centres

REPORT: Action must be taken to halt decline with 14% of shops lying empty

- PETER JOHN MEIKLEM

Action is urgently needed to halt the decline of Fife’s town centres, it has been claimed.

A major report by the Federation of Small Businesses showed the kingdom has the fourth highest rate of vacant shops in Scotland.

At around 14%, Fife is one of only seven areas in Scotland with an above-average rate of empty and unlet shop properties.

The report points to the upcoming closure of Kirkcaldy’s Debenhams and a raft of bank and shop closures since the start of 2016,

The FSB wants measures including millions of pounds of investment, a government commission to investigat­e “the blight” and banks to set up shared hubs.

Kirkcaldy4­All manager Bill Harvey said: “We have had review after review dealing with things like this. By the time a commission reports back, and action is taken, we might by five or six years behind the line.

“Some town centres will have gone by then.”

Angus and Fife town centres are among those worst hit by the “blight” of shops lying empty and unused, according to a report.

Angus, Fife and Dundee City are all among the seven council areas in Scotland with more vacant retail properties than the national average of one in 10.

The Federation of Small Businesses (FSB) paper Transformi­ng Towns reveals Angus is hardest hit, with 15% of shops lying empty and unlet, closely followed by Fife and Dundee City.

The report reveals town centres across the region are reeling from waves of closures, with at least 54 recorded since 2016.

The FSB is calling for a raft of measures to bolster town centres, including £90 million per year in new investment, a government commission to investigat­e “the blight” of vacant shops and for banks to set up shared hubs.

Angus has already been allocated £1.08m and Fife £4.35m from the Scottish Government’s £50m Town Centre Fund for 2019-2020.

Andrew McRae, FSB’s Scotland policy chairman, said: “More people in Scotland live in towns than cities. That’s why government must make a generation­al investment in our towns to overcome their current challenges.”

He said investment should come from the Scottish National Investment Bank and the UK Government’s Stronger Towns Fund.

“After the wave of recent closures, we need to rethink how we use our high streets,” he said

“A new commission should investigat­e the barriers to bringing vacant properties back into use, even if that means turning offices into housing, or department stores into art galleries.

“We need to make it cheap and easy for independen­t businesses to take up high street property.”

Bruce Robertson, Angus Business and Retailers Associatio­n, welcomed the report, but said action is required now to stop the situation from sliding further.

“It is encouragin­g, but it is all very well talking about what is possible when little action seems to come from it.”

He said he was not surprised the number of empty shops in Angus is among the highest in Scotland.

“It’s a big number, but it is no wonder. There is no encouragem­ent for investment in Angus. At the moment, I wouldn’t invest in Angus retail.”

Vicky Gunn, owner of Millie’s Pet Services in Carnoustie, said she has mixed feelings about the challenges facing local businesses.

She will shortly expand her grooming business into the building vacated when the town’s Bank of Scotland branch closed.

She said: “On one hand it’s given us room to expand, but on the other it’s painful.

“With opening hours, I have to travel to Arbroath or Broughty Ferry to do my banking as many customers prefer to use cash.”

She said business owners should work more closely together to protect town centres and high streets.

She added: “Just standing in the front of my shop, I can see three empty units from here. We are all fighting for ourselves, when the message should be about bringing people together to see where we can support each other.”

An Angus Council spokesman said they will take time to consider the contents of the report.

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