The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

‘Pointless’ fisheries probe costs taxpayer £500,000

INVESTIGAT­ION: Task force made 53 recommenda­tions which were ignored

- Kieran andrews poliTical ediTor kiandrews@thecourier.co.uk

Scottish ministers spent almost £500,000 of public money on a wild fisheries investigat­ion they paid little heed to, it has emerged.

The SNP Government decided not to pursue widespread reform of district salmon fishery boards despite a taxpayer funded taskforce making 53 recommenda­tions.

Industry leaders claimed most of those were in place before the threeyear long review started.

Sir Edward Mountain, the Scottish Conservati­ve spokesman on land reform, said: “Fisheries managers spent months considerin­g the report and justifying what they were, in most cases, already doing.

“There was turmoil in the industry with additional costs incurred not only by the review team but also by those who sought to promote their views and what they were doing.

“All of this would have been laudable if there was genuine evidence that the management of wild fisheries was being done badly. There was not. This was a review based on the political ideology of a few, and timed with a finely tuned political mind.”

The Sunday Times reported that £446,000 was spent on the review, announced in January 2014 by former First Minister Alex Salmond.

A taskforce set up to spearhead the review delivered its report in October that year.

Last month, the Scottish Government revealed it would not be implementi­ng the majority of proposals.

Meanwhile, a Holyrood committee has urged the groups tackling Scotland’s worst wildlife crimes to end the “clear distrust” between them.

MSPs voiced alarm at the situation as they called for greater cooperatio­n and better reporting between wildlife groups, other organisati­ons and police to help stop the cruel treatment of wild animals.

The Scottish Parliament’s Environmen­t Committee has been scrutinisi­ng the Scottish Government’s annual report on wildlife crime in 2015 and its comments came in a letter to environmen­t secretary Roseanna Cunningham.

Graeme Dey, the committee’s convener and Angus South MSP, wrote: “Tackling this issue effectivel­y requires genuine, collaborat­ive working and the committee was disappoint­ed to see the clear distrust and tension which exists between some of those whose participat­ion is so essential.”

 ??  ?? The report into salmon fishery boards cost almost £500,000.
The report into salmon fishery boards cost almost £500,000.

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