The Scotsman

Reduced ferry timetable ‘will force business away’

● Service will be cut to as few as four sailings a week

- By MOIRA KERR

A winter of discontent is looming on Mull amid fears that the new ferry timetable is so restrictiv­e it will force families and businesses to move away.

In summer Mull is a modern commuter island, bustling with tourists, as two ferries ply the waters from early morning to evening for the 45-minute crossing to and from Oban.

But when the winter timetable starts today the 2,700 residents who rely on the ferry as a year-round service will be reduced to as few sailings as four a week.

Billy Mcclymont, chairman of Mull Community Council, said: “Not to be able to get a ferry before 9am to Oban and to have to be back in the queue with your car at 3:30pm for the 4pm sailing – it’s pre-historic.

“A lot of people have to go to Glasgow for health appointmen­ts and they have to stay away because they can’t get a ferry back, there’s the cost element and the problem of who is going to look after the kids.”

There is anger that, after money was poured into the introducti­on of RET (Road Equivalent Tariff ), which has given tourists cheaper ferry travel, a request for four extra sailings a week on this lifeline winter service for islanders was rejected as unviable by Transport Scotland.

Elizabeth Ferguson, chair of the Mull and Iona Ferry Committee, said: “When you think about the amount of subsidies going in to RET, we can’t find £600,000, which we believe is the cost of the four extra sailings which would make it possible to spend the full working day on the mainland.”

Mrs Ferguson added: “People are getting quite desperate to get an early and late boat for the winter.

“People are thinking, why can’t we have this in winter? We do feel short-changed.”

Andy Knight, managing director of TSL Contractor­s, which with 125 staff is one of Mull’s biggest employers, said they may be forced to move the head office.

TSL has three mainland offices and Mr Knight, 54, said: “More and more it is becoming apparentth­atlivingan­dworking on Mull in this manner is unsustaina­ble.”

A Calmac spokesman said: “Several options were identified to carry out more sailings over the winter from Oban to Mull.”

The spokesman added: “Unfortunat­elyduetoth­econdition of the infrastruc­ture at Craignure it is not possible for a vessel to berth there overnight, meaning the first sailing of the day has to start in Oban, which would have significan­t cost implicatio­ns.”

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