The Scotsman

Ministers ditch £50k island move offer plan

- By ALISTAIR GRANT alistair.grant@scotsman.com

Plans to offer young people and families up to £50,000 to stay in or to move to islands threatened by depopulati­on in Scotland have been ditched.

The Scottish Government said the proposed “Islands Bond”, which formed part of the SNP’S Holyrood election manifesto last year, would not go ahead following responses to a consultati­on.

It said respondent­s were fairly evenly split between those in favour and those opposed to the idea.

However, those in favour were largely non-islanders.

Concerns were raised over whether the approach would actually help reverse population decline, with some respondent­s branding it a waste of taxpayers’ money, open to abuse and potentiall­y divisive.

SNP rural affairs and islands secretary Mairi Gougeon said it was “never intended to be a silver bullet”.

Liam Mcarthur, the Liberal Democrat MSP for Orkney, said the plan “was always an election gimmick”.

He said: “Rather than tackling the root causes of depopulati­on, it risked opening up divisions within our island communitie­s.

"This ill-conceived idea was not the brainchild of Mairi Gougeon, but thankfully the islands minister has had the good sense to listen to the overwhelmi­ng feedback from islanders and drop the proposals.

"I have repeatedly argued that there are far better ways to build the resilience of our island communitie­s, through investing in transport links, broadband and affordable housing.”

Tory MSP Rachael Hamilton called the scheme “no more than an eye-catching gimmick”.

She said: “The moment it was properly examined it became clear that it was a half-baked, ill-thought-out waste of taxpayers’ money unpopular with most islanders.

“As many pointed out, it would have been a shortterm fix that would do little to reverse the SNP Government’s long-standing neglect and underfundi­ng of local services, particular­ly in rural areas.

"If the SNP genuinely wanted to address islanders’ priorities, it would have sorted out the ferries fiasco it created, and focus funding on the urgent cost-of-living crisis, education, health and jobs, rather than distractio­ns like this.”

Ms Gougeon said: "It is directly because of the feedback from islanders that we are changing our approach.

“The Islands Bond was never intended to be a silver bullet to address our island population challenges.

"Rather, it was just one element of our wider work, across all Scottish Government, to support our island communitie­s."

The Scottish Government previously said the Islands

Bond would “encourage both population retention and growth in island communitie­s, and stimulate local economies through supporting investment in our islands”.

It would have been backed by a £5m fund across this parliament­ary term, with up to £50,000 available for each individual “award”.

 ?? ?? The proposed ‘Islands Bond’ has been scrapped
The proposed ‘Islands Bond’ has been scrapped

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