The Scotsman

Landowners pledge to support tenant amnesty

- By BRIAN HENDERSON

While issues of land reform have been taking a back seat to Brexit in recent weeks, the landowners’ organisati­on, Scottish Land & Estates (SLE), yesterday said that its members were wholly committed to making the amnesty on tenant improvemen­ts work “well and fairly”.

Due to begin later spring, the three-year amnesty, part of the recent Land Reform Act, allows tenant farmers to have certain works which they have carried out on their farms recognised as improvemen­ts benefiting the holding, even if the required notificati­on was not served to the landlord at the time.

SLE chairman David Johnstone said that it had been the SLE which had put this proposal to the Scottish Government and clearly they wanted it to succeed.

He said that, given the debate surroundin­g how specific aspects of the amnesty would work in practice, he was happy to clarify the organisati­on’s position on the issue of tenant improvemen­ts to farmhouses.

“As the law currently stands, we believe that some improvemen­ts to farmhouses are eligible improvemen­ts. While this

0 Tenant farmers can focus on ‘the day job’ does not necessaril­y mean that all types of farmhouse improvemen­ts are covered, compensati­on – where it is due – would be payable if there is value to an incoming tenant and the works were deemed to be proportion­ate to the holding,” said Johnstone.

Scottish Tenant Farmer Associatio­n (STFA) chairman Christophe­r Nicholson welcomed the SLE’S recognitio­n of work carried out by tenants in this area. “The amnesty may involve considerab­le work for tenants in looking out evidence that the tenant or his predecesso­rs carried out the improvemen­ts, such as invoices and past correspond­ence,” he said. “The more evidence that can be put together, the stronger the tenant’s case will be that it is fair and equitable that compensati­on should be paid.”

Nicholson said that it was important that tenants looked far and wide when making a list of improvemen­ts: “The definition of an improvemen­t is broad, being ‘any building or structure affixed to land and any works on, in, over or under land’.

“The Scottish Government has now published a useful guide on preparing for the improvemen­ts amnesty on their website – and I would encourage tenants to use this to start planning their submission­s.”

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