National Bird (PE1500)
Good morning. I welcome you all to this historic meeting of the Public Petitions Committee. As always, I ask everyone to switch off their mobile phones and other electronic devices, as they interfere with our sound systems. We have received apologies from David Torrance.
I will give a very brief introduction and then hand over to my colleague Gordon Buchanan to give a bit of detail about his experience of working with the golden eagle, which is a fantastic bird.
The greatest pity about golden eagles is that so few people get an opportunity to see them. Just last week, I was sitting halfway up a mountain in a very damp hide on Loch Katrine, in the pouring, driving rain and sleet—I have a very glamorous job—waiting for a golden eagle to show up.
Thank you. Again, I put on record our thanks to you for coming along. As I hinted at in my introduction, this is the 1,500th petition that the committee has received, which is a great achievement. The Parliament has received a wide range of petitions. I have always seen petitions as a sort of window between constituents throughout Scotland and the Scottish Parliament.
We think that having a national bird shows a commitment by the Scottish people to the environment. We know that tourism is a very important industry in Scotland. A huge number of people come every year to experience not just our wild landscapes but our wildlife. There are various economic studies, including on the value of white-tailed eagles to the island of Mull. We know that white-tailed eagles are worth about £5 million per annum to Mull alone and that £276 million is spent on wildlife and landscape appreciation trips to Scotland, sustaining about 2,763 full-time equivalent jobs in this country.
Have you looked at Europe and, indeed, more widely to see what other countries have done in respect of adopting national birds?
Many countries have a national bird as one of their symbols. In Europe, our nearest neighbours in Norway have the dipper as their symbol—we have that species here, too. Finland has the whooper swan, Sweden the blackbird, Belgium the kestrel and France the cockerel. The United States, of course, has the bald eagle. The procedure is fairly routine in many countries.
I have had the pleasure of seeing golden eagles flying high in Lewis, Harris and Mull and over in Norway. This is an exciting petition, which I hope is successful. You have both promoted it well.
Perhaps not, but it would give the golden eagle greater protection, because the species would be seen as one that belonged to all the people of Scotland.
I think that recognising the golden eagle as Scotland’s national bird would offer it further protection, which it needs. Over the past two centuries, the species has been persecuted. Their number has doubled in the past 100 years, but that increase is not that considerable given the on-going protection that they are offered. Colleagues south of the border who appreciate wildlife are absolutely astounded that the persecution—the poisoning and shooting—of golden eagles continues. Giving the golden eagle Scotland’s national bird status will help to protect it further. It desperately needs that protection.
The sea eagle is very much a coastal and riverine species, whereas the golden eagle—at least in this country—is much more an upland species.
As you rightly say, Mr Buchanan, golden eagles are still being persecuted; indeed, we saw such persecution as recently as a few months ago with a golden eagle called Fearnan in Angus. Therefore, it is clearly still an issue.
Good morning. I think that Mr Orr-Ewing made the point that choosing the golden eagle would be a commitment by the Scottish people to the environment but, as has been said, people hardly ever see golden eagles. Can you expand on how designation would commit the Scottish people to the environment when few of them have seen a golden eagle, other than perhaps in films?
Not many people see golden eagles regularly, but when they do see one, they regard the experience as awe inspiring, as my colleague described. As we have seen in various recent public votes, including the year of natural Scotland vote, there is a huge attraction to the species. Much of the mystery that surrounds it relates to whether or not people know the good places to see it.
Is that because of the bird or the background against which it is professionally presented? One could argue that the osprey, which probably has as much romance attached to it, has an equivalent case.
Yes. Ospreys are, of course, a lowland species, and given that they nest in the same place every year, it is quite easy to show them to the public. To date, unfortunately, we have not managed to achieve a successful public viewing site for golden eagles, but if people go to places such as Arran, Mull and Skye, which are known to be good places for golden eagles, they have a very good chance of seeing them.
The rarest sight in the countryside is a schoolchild. Having two small kids, I know that, although there is a much higher awareness of the environment in schools, it is not quite enough. I think that making the golden eagle Scotland’s national bird would generate interest because there would be a tangible connection between Scottish people, including children, and that ultimate emblem of the wild. Scotland has amazingly accessible wildlife, but not enough people are prepared to get out there and do the little bit of groundwork that is needed.
I accept that, and I do not disagree that an aura surrounds the golden eagle. We have been talking about the species being Scotland’s national bird, but the blackbird that sits outside my door waiting to be fed every morning has, I am sure, the credentials to be our national bird.
It is about how we see ourselves as a nation. Are we powerful? Are we intelligent? Are we survivors in the way that the golden eagle is? There are other candidates, but there is a traditional respect for the golden eagle.
It is worth adding that, but for the persecution problem that, as one of your colleagues mentioned, prevents the bird from becoming a lowland breeding species, we would have more golden eagles in lowland Scotland, as is the case in Scandinavia. Golden eagles are found in countries such as Denmark, where the land is no higher than 140m, and they are also lowland breeding birds in Finland and Sweden. In the absence of persecution, we could look forward to that in Scotland.
Okay—as long as we do not go for the seagull.
The substance of my question has already been covered. It is on whether, as a result of national designation of the species, persecution would cease or lessen. As my colleague Angus MacDonald indicated, although the number of birds that have been found to have been poisoned has fallen in the past year, there are still people who will persecute the golden eagle. Unfortunately, we might see the persecution of the white-tailed eagle taking place as well.
The problem is on-going, and the reason that it continues to this day is that the birds live in such remote areas. Last week, I spent the whole day by the side of Loch Katrine watching a golden eagle, and I did not see another human being.
It is worth remembering that it is a relatively small number of people—who are involved largely with driven grouse shooting, particularly in the east and the southern uplands of the country—who are involved in persecuting golden eagles. In most areas of the golden eagle’s range, particularly in the north and west Highlands and Argyll, the species is not illegally killed.
The golden eagle is a magnificent bird, but I challenge your petition in two respects.
My response to that is to point to how the people of Scotland actually view the eagle. I think that Gordon Buchanan gave a very apt description of that, and it is not what you said.
I do not know that we have had a proper debate on that; I do not even know whether people have considered that point. For me, the robin is a much more accurate representation of Scotland, with its ability to face adversity and its tenacity. It is a bird that I think people across Scotland see all the time and have learned to love.
We understand that, but the public do not seem to view it in that way.
Oh!
Sorry, but I am just answering your question. We have now had two public votes, one of which was carried out by The Scotsman and with which your former leader Annabel Goldie was involved. That gave people the option to decide what our national bird should be. The clear front-runner at that time in the poll in The Scotsman was the golden eagle. Latterly, in the year of natural Scotland, we had another vote. Scottish Natural Heritage conducted that as an independent arbiter and, again, the golden eagle came out as the clear front-runner.
What was the question?
Well, you asked—
What was the question in the opinion poll?
The original question in the—
No, the one that you have just referred to: the Scottish Natural Heritage question. What was the question?
The question in the latest poll in the year of natural Scotland was about choosing between the big five species, as SNH saw it, that people regard as important in Scotland.
But that is quite a different thing, is it not?
Yes, but the previous poll that was conducted by The Scotsman was more about what should be Scotland’s national bird.
What was the question in The Scotsman poll?
It was a poll—
I am asking you what the question was.
I cannot remember the exact question, to be honest, but it was about choosing which species would be suitable as Scotland’s national bird.
So how many people participated in the Scottish Natural Heritage poll?
I think that the figure that I quoted earlier was 12,000.
They were asked to choose from a selection consisting of the golden eagle, the harbour seal, the otter, the red deer and the red squirrel.
That is correct, but I think that there was one other.
So they were not actually asked to choose from a selection of birds.
Not in that case, but the previous poll in The Scotsman did ask people to choose from a selection of birds that occur here.
And the question was—sorry, what was the question again? Can you remind me what you said the Scottish Natural Heritage question was?
It was to choose from the big five species that SNH considered to be impressive species that occur here in Scotland and that are an attraction to the public.
Is that the same thing as saying that they were voting for it to be a national symbol of our country?
No, but we think that it does give an indication of what the public see as an important and valuable species.
Okay, fine. I am not sure that I am persuaded, but I understand your position.
Parliament?
Well, through parliamentary motions or legislation. Would Parliament endlessly be determining that things are the national something or other?
I refer to Mr Stewart’s earlier comments about questions around national birds in other countries. It is quite standard procedure for countries across the world to have national trees and national birds, at least. I do not know about the other things that you mention, but those are the popular subjects for national emblems.
Perhaps this is just about where my interests lie, but I am not interested in having a national anything other than a national bird. To have a national tree is fantastic, however.
I entirely agree with that, although what you describe is not the bird as a national symbol being represented in the heraldry of the nation, which is quite different—but thank you.
I am afraid that we are very short of time, but we can have a very quick question from Chic Brodie.
This is on the point that you made about the public. What would the golden eagle, as a national symbol, mean to children in some of the inner-city parts of the large cities of Scotland?
I think that children living in all parts of Scotland should be given an opportunity once a year, as part of the curriculum, to get out and actually see a little bit of wild Scotland. There is nothing really being done, in that our children go to—
I understand that, but Mr Carlaw made the point that the robin can be seen by these children, as can sparrows, blackbirds and others. What specifically will the golden eagle mean to children in the inner parts of our larger cities?
It is a powerful, emotive symbol. That is why it is being used.
That is a concern. I am very supportive, and I do not necessarily disagree, but the point that Jackson Carlaw made is that we are talking about a very powerful bird. It is beautiful and it is powerful, but we have to match that across Scotland. I am talking about the spirit of Scotland, which you mentioned, and that embraces more than just the Highlands and Islands. We have to have some sort of affinity and identity that embraces all our children, not just a few who might see the power and beauty of this bird in actuality.
The bird that the majority of people see most often is the pigeon. If you want to go for a populist vote, the pigeon is accessible to everyone, but it does not necessarily do the job.
There is something in the aspiration. As a young person growing up, I had a strong interest in seeing birds such as golden eagles. We need to get children outdoors, and we know that that is important. The RSPB is a big provider of environmental education.
I am afraid that we are out of time, but I ask the witnesses to hold on for a couple of minutes. We have finished with questions and points, so we now come to the summation, when the committee considers the next steps.
I certainly agree to those three organisations being consulted. When we write to the Scottish Government, would it be possible to ask whether it would be minded to conduct a consultation similar to the national tree consultation that was held by the Forestry Commission between September and December 2013?
That probably encompasses my point. The presumption that we are making is all of a sudden in favour of the concept of there being a national bird. I would like to know whether the Scottish Government thinks that that would add something. If so, does the Government feel that it would be appropriate for the public to be more widely involved in the choice of bird and for there to be a proper public debate and scrutiny around the question?
That is a good point.
I thank both witnesses for coming along. As you can hear, the committee is taking the petition forward. We will keep you up to date with developments. Thank you, in particular, for coming along to give evidence on the historic 1,500th petition.
Supermarkets (High Streets) (PE1497)
The second new petition is PE1497, by Ellie Harrison, on behalf of Say No to Tesco, on supermarket expansion on local high streets. Members have a note by the clerk, the SPICe briefing, the petition and a submission from the Scottish Retail Consortium. Sandra White MSP had hoped to attend the meeting, as she has a constituency interest in the petition but, as a member of the Justice Committee, which is meeting now, she is unable to attend and has asked that her apologies be noted.
I am a resident of the west end of Glasgow. I am joined by my friend and colleague, Paula Fraser, with whom I have worked over the past year on the Say No to Tesco in Scotland campaign. The campaign, which has been completely run by volunteers such as us from around our local communities, developed in response to our frustrations in trying to prevent two new Tesco stores from opening in our area, where there are now 10 within just 2 miles. Nearly all of them have been new over the past decade, and store number 11, which we seem powerless to block, is due to open this year.
Thank you. If Paula Fraser wants to respond to any questions, she is welcome to do so. For the record, I understand that you are referring to all large national or multinational chains and not just to Tesco. We must be careful about the legality of the comments that are made today.
We have read its submission and we have done some research on who the Scottish Retail Consortium is. We discovered that it is affiliated to the British Retail Consortium, whose members include Tesco and all the other big supermarkets, so it is obviously biased.
Is it fair to say that you see the solution as being to use planning powers to protect smaller businesses?
Yes—absolutely. You said that the Scottish Retail Consortium mentioned business rates. Addressing rates is part of what can help local independent businesses, but it is definitely not all that is needed to protect small businesses. The large corporations have a lot more money and a lot more say, and they provide incentives to councils through the developments that they propose. They can do a lot that small independent businesses cannot do, and changes in planning legislation are the only thing that would make a difference for the small independent businesses.
Good morning. I do not think that you have helped your case today. Using words such as “soulless”, “ruthless” and “cartel” is not a constructive way of approaching the issue. I have no truck with large supermarkets and would like to see fairness in competition, but do you think that they really are “soulless” and “ruthless”?
I think that the way in which these—
Do you think that they are “soulless” and “ruthless”?
I think that they are soulless. There is a new Tesco at the end of my street, which we could not prevent from opening. It is a clone of all the other Tesco Expresses in the area, of which there are now 10, as I mentioned. In comparison with all the other shopfronts down the Great Western Road in Glasgow, that Tesco shopfront uses very bright lights, and it has lines of fridges, which create a completely different atmosphere from that of all the other shops.
How Tesco brands and markets its products is part of competitive practice. Why have you picked on Tesco?
It is not only Tesco that we have a problem with—
Hold on—your petition says that it is
That is what we called our campaign when it began, because it started with the proposed opening of a new Tesco Express in our area. That sparked things off, but that does not mean that we are interested in stopping only Tesco.
Have you considered the competition law implications of what you are asking for?
I do not think that two people lodging a petition is picking on the biggest retailer in the whole UK, which, after all, takes £1 in every £8 that is spent on shopping. That is not just groceries—
Have you considered—
I do not think that we are picking on it.
My question is—
Somebody has got to stick up for the small shops that are closing.
Would you answer my question? Have you considered competition law in your attempts to stop supermarkets having smaller shops on high streets?
We are not trying to completely stop supermarkets from doing anything.
You are—you are saying, “Say no to Tesco.”
No. There is of course competition law, but we have to look out for the smaller local independent retailers and do something that recognises that the buying power of the chain superstores is unfair for those retailers.
I know that you are talking about only food, which I will come back to in a minute, but what would you say to Debenhams and Marks and Spencer?
We are talking just about food—
Why?
Because it is one of the fundamental things that we need to consume.
So is clothing.
Food is different from all the other things that are sold on our high streets in that every human being needs to buy it week in, week out. People can do without buying new clothes if they really need to, but food is an essential human need.
I listened very attentively.
If you had done that instead of speaking over me, you might have noticed that we flagged up the fact that the problem is not just with Tesco; it is also with Sainsbury’s. In the west end of Glasgow, where we come from, Tesco is employing incredibly aggressive tactics in opening new stores; in Edinburgh, Sainsbury’s is employing the same tactics, and very soon other supermarkets will be doing the same in other parts of the country. As I mentioned, Morrisons intends to roll out its chain of M Local stores over the course of the year.
Can you tell me what the results of Tesco, Sainsbury’s and Morrisons were in comparison with those of Aldi and Lidl over the past financial year?
Well, I looked—
Can you tell me what the results were?
Are you referring to the fact that they are not doing as well as the other companies that you mentioned?
That is correct.
Given the profits that they are still making, I do not think that that is a consideration when we are talking about their opening more and more of these stores and snuffing out local independent businesses.
There is no evidence that they are snuffing out those businesses. Let me ask you another question—
I am sorry—there is no what?
There is evidence—there is evidence at the end of my street. I have spoken to the local newsagent and the grocer, both of whom say that, since the shop that we mentioned opened, their sales have dropped. They will see how it goes for the next couple of months—the shop only opened in December—but they might well pack up.
I am sorry, but there is a lot of evidence. Before the store opened, a store that we failed to stop opened on Queen Margaret Drive, where the newsagent on the corner and another newsagent on the same street lost 70 per cent of their sales. The fruit shop is struggling and another shop on the corner had to close and was sold to someone else, who hopes to carry on.
We can debate jobs, but we are talking about town centres. Where do the people who work in Tesco Expresses spend their money? What other shops do they go into?
We are not talking just about town centres; I want to pick you up on that. We are talking about areas outside city centres—local high streets in areas where people live, where they want to be able to buy food within walking distance of their flats. As I said in my opening remarks, those are areas in which independent businesses can afford to operate. They cannot afford to operate in city centres, but they can afford to do so in the outskirts. Tesco is coming into that new market and is posing a direct threat to those businesses.
In relation to the legal situation and competition, where is your evidence that the six supermarkets are in a cartel?
I was talking about what could happen in the future if we—
No, you said that there is a cartel.
No, she did not.
No. I was talking about what could happen in the future if we do not address the issue. I referred to the energy sector, because the direction in which the energy sector has gone over the past 20 years is one whereby the big six energy companies all put their prices up at the same time. [Interruption.] They do all put their prices up at the same time; do not shake your head.
What relation does that have to the expansion of supermarkets on high streets?
We cannot afford to allow that to happen to our food supply. Given the rate at which small supermarkets are opening and the rate at which Tesco, Sainsbury’s and Morrisons are monopolising our food supply, we run the risk of going down the same path. Eventually, they will have complete control and we will have no alternative in where to buy our food.
Can I interrupt you for a second? This is all very interesting, but we are short of time and I am keen to bring in as many members as I can.
Once again, many of the questions that I would have liked to put to the witnesses have been asked. As Mr Brodie did, I urge the petitioners to temper some of their language, because what they say will appear in the Official Report. I know that some of the comments that have been made—such as those about Tesco and minimum-wage jobs—are untrue. Tesco does not pay much above the minimum wage, but it certainly does not pay its staff the minimum wage. The witnesses need to be careful about using such language, because that will be picked up on, although they have a good case to present.
That issue is why we need choice and statutory powers that councils can use in different areas. The situation is different in different streets. Many streets do not face the problem with empty units that you are talking about and do not need a Tesco or a Sainsbury’s to fill a space and bring footfall back to the area.
One of the difficulties with that response is that you are asking the Scottish Government to take action. When the Scottish Government takes action, I expect that action to be consistent throughout Scotland. I do not expect the Government to say that certain pieces of legislation apply only in the high streets of, say, Falkirk and Stirling. We expect legislation to apply everywhere. How would we get the correct legislation in place to ensure that the policy was adopted throughout Scotland? Of course, if it were adopted throughout Scotland, it would be to the detriment of some high streets, if we follow the main thrust of your argument.
I do not think that the proposal would be to the detriment of some high streets. The legislation would apply across Scotland and it would mean that, in the planning process, we had some way of stopping more of the express stores opening on streets that we do not need them to open on. When we consider the cumulative square footage of supermarkets, we will be able to see which high streets have no supermarkets and need one to open. Applying the legislation in such a high street would not be a problem, and it would enable people to limit the number of supermarkets in high streets where they would cause problems and where people do not want them. A retail impact assessment would enable people to be consulted and allow a consideration of the situation in the area.
As I have said, the issue for me is that we are talking about some of the major retail chains, such as Tesco, Asda, Waitrose and Sainsbury’s, and I wonder whether the same objection would have arisen if Lidl or Aldi intended to move into the retail unit on Great Western Road. Would it have?
Yes, because we have enough of the big supermarkets. If an Aldi or a Lidl were to open on that site, in the form of one of the express or local stores, it would pose a threat to the independent businesses that we are trying to support.
Miss Harrison, could you say a wee bit more about the situation in Bristol? Does the policy cover the whole of Bristol, or is it broken down to cover only specific streets and areas, as John Wilson suggested?
The position was taken by the new mayor of Bristol last year. There have been riots in Bristol where the community have not wanted a Tesco to open but it has done so, against their will, and they have felt that they have had no choice but to riot outside. The mayor is trying to stop the proliferation of those small stores and is proposing that the use class of big chain stores be changed so that, if a small, independent business shuts down and Tesco wants to move into that unit, planning permission would have to be granted, as there would be a change of use from one class to another. He sees the problem that exists and proposes that as a solution.
The mayor wants the policy to cover the whole of Bristol. He wants there to be a special planning deal from Westminster, so that there would be an experimental by-law that could be used to distinguish between applications from supermarkets and applications from local independent traders.
When I was a young boy growing up in the 1960s, most high streets had a Templeton’s, a Galbraith’s or a Co-op. Those stores then disappeared. Have we not just come full circle? Similar stores are now back on the high street in the form of Tesco and Sainsbury’s stores. In terms of their size, their product offering and their contribution to local high streets, are the chains not simply bringing back Templeton’s, Galbraith’s and the other supermarkets that I remember being on streets in Glasgow’s west end such as Queen Margaret Drive and Great Western Road? That is partly where I grew up, as I was at school there and lived there for some time. Have we not just come full circle, with a move away from out-of-town stores to chains once again being represented in our local communities?
Even if we are seeing those stores coming back, I do not see how that is a good thing for local independent traders who are trying to sell their goods and are already supplying what we need. The new stores are unwanted.
I am trying to suggest that your perspective is somewhat limited to quite a short timescale. I know where you are, so I will give you two examples: Giffnock and Troon. My constituents have been dancing in the streets since local branches of Tesco, Sainsbury’s and other chains opened in their communities. Invariably, they moved into abandoned Woolworths stores, which had lain empty since the demise of Woolworths. In Giffnock, we then saw the American Whole Foods Market store arrive, the butcher, deli and grocers are all prospering and a kosher food shop has opened. In Troon, the butcher, deli, fish shop and baker all thrive perfectly happily alongside a small Tesco that has moved into an abandoned Woolworths unit. I begin to wonder whether you are inviting us to legislate for Great Western Road and Queen Margaret Drive.
No. I think that you are completely wrong—
Well, I am not completely wrong because I have just identified two communities that contradict your argument.
You are wrong in that we are not trying to legislate for Queen Margaret Drive and Great Western Road. There is a bigger problem. If you look at the number of people who are campaigning against big supermarkets opening stores, particularly express stores, you will see that it is a problem not just in those two streets.
Do people shop in them?
Of course, some people shop in them. Some people are given no choice because of all the local independent businesses that have shut down.
That is where I invite you to help the committee. I would like you to submit written evidence that details specifically which shops have closed in Great Western Road and Queen Margaret Drive directly as a consequence of a small local Tesco opening.
Okay. It might be too early for Great Western Road—
I understand that 10 such stores have opened—they have obviously been crippling. Shops close all the time for a legion of competitive reasons, so I have not been persuaded, but I am willing to follow up whether other stores in the community have closed entirely as a result of the advent of a local Tesco.
I will be able to give you evidence of the ones that have closed on Byres Road, as well—not only because of Tesco. As I said, the issue is not only about Tesco; it is about there being so many such stores.
Byres Road now has a Waitrose, and it used to have a Somerfield. It has always had supermarkets.
Yes, but it has not always had the number of supermarkets that it now has. It now has Marks and Spencer and Tesco Express alongside Waitrose, Iceland and Farmfoods. Those are all in the same street.
When I was younger it had as many stores as that, they just had different names. Although you have identified the modern branding of those stores, historically there were other stores, which I have named, that operated in exactly the same communities. People shopped in them, too, but the other, independent, food retailers survived perfectly happily alongside them because there were people who preferred to go to those independent stores. However, I am willing to see the evidence and follow up the number of stores that say that they closed for that reason alone.
The witnesses will have picked up that we have, unfortunately, run out of time. However, I ask you to hold on for a few seconds, please. We are at the summation stage, so there will be no further questions to you or us. Jackson Carlaw has recommended that we seek further information.
Sorry, convener. I did that rather off my own cuff, without going through you.
Not at all—it was a very sensible suggestion that we seek further information from our witnesses. Do members agree to that?
It must be definitive. Shops have faced an economic situation, so the evidence must be definitive and applicable, as Jackson Carlaw said. If the witnesses do not mind, I would also like to know what the implications are for the customers in terms of price competition. It must be fairly rabid if there are six stores sitting next to each other.
Do members wish us to get that information before deciding whether to ask the Scottish Government and the Federation of Small Businesses in Scotland for further information, or should we do those things in parallel?
I think that we should do those things in tandem. We need to write to the Federation of Small Businesses in Scotland, as a number of small retailers are members of it and we might get further evidence to back the petition. The petition indicates that the number of small businesses has declined due to the encroachment of some major retailers.
Do members agree to that?
I agree with John Wilson’s view that we should contact town centre managers and put in a pitch that we should approach Falkirk Council. A very good team works in town centre management there, and I am sure that it would be delighted to provide some evidence.
Do members agree to that?
The witnesses will have picked up that we are continuing the petition. We will write to a number of relevant bodies, including the Scottish Government, the FSB and town centre managers. We will also ask the Scottish Government specifically about retail impact assessments, and we have asked the witnesses to supply us with a bit more evidence.
A9 Average Speed Cameras (PE1503)
The third new petition is PE1503, by Mike Burns, on behalf of the average speed cameras on the A9 are not the answer campaign, on a review of A9 speed camera proposals. Members have a note by the clerk, the SPICe briefing and the petition.
Thank you very much for giving me your time today. The 600 and 500-page documents are almost identical, so the larger of the two will give you all the information.
Thank you very much, Mr Burns. You managed to keep to your time, which is impressive. I have two quick questions. Have you looked at how average speed cameras work in the rest of Europe?
Yes. We have been looking at average speed camera systems. We focused on the A77, which is the example that Transport Scotland and the A9 safety group focused on. The average speed camera proposal in its original incarnation, which was 136 miles, would have been the second longest on the planet. There is nothing to compare to it except in Australia, which has vastly different road conditions and design from what we have in Scotland.
Clearly, you have issues with the A9 safety group. In the autumn, I attended one of its meetings along with a number of other MSPs. Is the composition incorrect? Should ordinary drivers who use the road be involved? What is your main issue with the group?
As far as we can work it out, the A9 safety group has, in essence, worked behind closed doors since its establishment back in 2012. Its minutes show that the safety group set up a communications sub-group to develop a website to share information. However, that did not appear until after the campaign had started and there was significant media interest. We also note that the A9 safety group has not published any meeting minutes since August 2013, with the possible exception of two evidence pieces in October, so we have not been kept up to date with what is going on.
You are enthusiastic about trying to get reform of that group so that it is more representative of ordinary drivers.
In order to instil public confidence in the decisions that it has made, it is imperative that the group is representative of those who use the A9. As a campaign, we received an invitation not to participate in the group but to comment on how its communication could be improved. There was no formal offer of involvement, although I would not personally seek that because I do not believe that I can represent every A9 user—I can represent only the people who have signed up to the campaign.
Good morning. I think that we understand the anguish of people who travel or who have travelled on the A9. I live in Ayr. I have lived there since before and after the installation of the average speed cameras, and I have noticed that the average speed has dropped considerably. I participate in and ensure that. Why could that measure not work for the A9?
The statistical evidence that has been produced shows that none of the mean speeds on the A9 breaches the speed limit, according to Transport Scotland’s official website. The formula, which was provided by the Transport Research Laboratory, suggests that average speeds would drop by at least 6mph. There are distinctions within that modelling and the statistics that have been used, but that suggests that the current average speed is already below the legal speed limit. The biggest problem with the A9, which came across loud and clear through the Facebook campaign, the online petition and the independent survey that we paid for and ran, is frustration with slow-moving traffic.
It works between two cameras, however. On the A77, a person can do 80mph and then 60mph between one set of cameras and average the speed over whatever distance they travel.
Yes, but the point is that overtaking is deemed to be the major cause of incidents on the A9, and average speed cameras do not stop bad overtaking. Anecdotally, they may reduce the desire to overtake, but they do not directly prevent people from performing the lethal overtaking manoeuvres that anybody who drives up and down the A9 will have seen on an almost daily basis.
That is not my experience on the A77.
I disavow it because it does not represent the 95 per cent of A9 users who are car drivers. I am not disputing the job that it has done, and it certainly has a lot of experience. The current head of the A9 safety group, Stewart Leggett, was a member of its previous incarnation—the A9 road safety group—back in 2006. That group considered proposals that we reintroduced in the 20-point interim plan, but nothing has been progressed since 2006. That is eight years in which proposals to improve safety have not been advanced although there has been continuity between the two groups, with the same person having been a member of both.
You made an interesting point about the fact that the AA, the RAC or the Institute of Advanced Motorists do not sit on the board of the A9 safety group. Have you made any approaches to elected representatives in your area to suggest that they should be on the A9 safety group?
We certainly made the point directly to the chair of the A9 safety group when the campaign started. Because the A9 safety group had in essence been working behind closed doors, with no website or public displays of information and no minutes published, people did not know what was going on and were caught by surprise. It was only when the big announcement came out of the blue that people sat up and said, “Hang on, how have they reached this decision?” I believe that Transport Scotland then worked frantically to get the information out, but it was information that the group itself said should have been put out more than a year earlier. Why did it take a campaign to force the information out?
Did you accept that invitation?
The meeting did not proceed. Transport Scotland said that it would speak to the A9 safety group to clarify that the invitation would be okay. That is referenced in one of the freedom of information requests—document 13/01358, I think. It never advanced past that point. I asked for a formal invitation to be sent to ensure that everything was kept above board and that people knew what was going on, but that was never received.
I have driven on the A9 regularly for the past 30-odd years and I have seen drivers taking some hair-raising chances when overtaking that were pretty akin to playing Russian roulette. Your original submission refers to the dualling of the A9 that is planned but not imminent. You also refer to the need for
I can certainly give some examples. We published a 20-point interim plan. I do not claim that the plan was right and I do not claim that it was wrong. The aim of everything that we have done was to promote a national public debate on the A9 that has needed to happen for years. Some of our suggestions were deliberately controversial, because we found out that other things were happening in the background. For example, at a practical level, respondents to the surveys on Facebook said that we need more speed limit signs because there are multimodal speed limits—the limits can vary for a car-derived van, a passenger car, a coach or a lorry. However, from reading the A9 safety group minutes, it looks as if speed limit signs have been removed during the past two years to remove roadside furniture. That causes problems for people who are not familiar with the area.
I sympathise and agree with everything that you have said about the A9 and the need to dual it. I was in the motor industry for 25 years and saw some of the horrendous wrecks that arrived, some of which had involved fatalities. Is the point of average speed cameras not that they allow more reaction time by having motorists drive at a slower speed? I understand what you say about the facts showing that only 2 per cent of accidents were the result of speed as opposed to 50 per cent being the result of overtaking manoeuvres, but that might disguise the fact that the overtaking manoeuvre led to an accident because of the reaction times of other motorists.
That might be the case. When we look closely at the figures that Transport Scotland has provided, it seems to be anticipated that accident rates will rise for the first year or two after the installation of any system before they fall. Average speed cameras might allow more reaction time, but they do not stop platooning or enforce spacing to allow people who have done the slower-move overtake to pull in safely. Regular drivers of the A9 have seen that problem alarmingly frequently.
That would be as a result of their experience. I did not actually identify HGVs in my comments.
No, but I was just trying to cover it.
I simply return to the point that a motorist is better able to respond to an unexpected incident when driving at 50mph than when driving at 70mph. If your argument is that the introduction of speed cameras will not prevent all accidents, that has to be correct, and I do not dispute it. However, I am not wholly persuaded—I would like to find out more—that introducing a lower average speed limit will not ameliorate the consequence of some of the inappropriate driving that you say happens. I am not wholly persuaded, because drivers who are restricted to 50mph will be able to react to that inappropriate driving safely in a way that they cannot do when they are driving at 70mph. On balance, I am not entirely persuaded that it is such a black-and-white argument as you are making it.
If someone overtakes at 70mph, that will probably not even activate an average speed camera. The problem is that we would then be relying on an expectation that drivers will adapt their behaviour and slow down. The point of the camera is to catch somebody. If somebody does an overtaking manoeuvre at 70mph, they will still get away with it.
No—with respect, it is not. I have lived in Troon for some time, so I am familiar with—
I lived down in Glasgow and used the A road for five years, so I know it as well.
The introduction of cameras was not about catching people speeding; it was about getting people to adjust their behaviour. Indisputably, that has happened. Cars now drive to a 50mph restricted limit and not to a higher limit. Drivers do not speed up between cameras. They understand that they have to adjust their behaviour. I was not a big fan of the introduction of cameras, but it is not technically correct to say that drivers have not adjusted their behaviour. I think that they have.
In that case, the question that I would pass back to you is: what is the tourist volume on that road compared with, for example, the A9? An important point that has arisen from Transport Scotland—
I would say that the tourist volume is fairly great.
Is it as great as that on the A9, where people have been stuck in queues for four hours?
I am sorry, convener. I know that you do not want us to get into this discussion, but I have to say that those who try to go down that road on a sunny day will soon realise that most of Glasgow is going in the same direction. I think, therefore, that the tourist volume is as great as that on the A9.
This is important because, according to information released by Transport Scotland on the patterns of speeding offenders, the vast number were not in cars registered in Scotland but in hire cars registered in the Birmingham and West Midlands area. If Transport Scotland’s A9 safety group is going to launch a speed awareness campaign, will it be taken into all the car hire depots for people who are about to drive their hire cars away? That is the level of awareness raising that we need. After all, we have seen evidence of and, indeed, experienced people who are unfamiliar with the road driving dangerously on it because they do not understand the set-up or lane control. Some of them do not even know what the speed limits are, because the signs have been removed.
I accept what you say, but I think that, if I were to be confronted with one of those motorists, I might be able to adjust my manoeuvring more easily if I were restricted to 50mph than I would be if I were driving at 70mph. All I am saying is that a lot of accidents happen as a result of reaction times as much as anything else, and the average speed camera proposal is designed to give people more reaction time on what is, as you have accurately identified, an extremely dangerous road about which drivers feel huge frustration. I just wonder whether you are right to dismiss the contribution that speed cameras could make.
I have never dismissed their contribution—
But you are obviously opposed to them.
I am opposed to them as the only solution. The campaign has made it clear from the start that it does not object to the use of average and fixed speed cameras as part of a wider model. For example, fixed speed cameras have been used successfully on the A90 at Laurencekirk to slow traffic on the dual carriageway to 50mph. Transport Scotland knows that there are problems at junctions on the A9 and could, as Highland Council has suggested, quite easily slow down speed limits at the junctions to address those issues.
I am afraid that we have run out of time, Mr Burns, but I ask that you hold on for a couple of minutes.
I just want to make two quick points, convener. First, I remind Mr Burns of the heavy volume of traffic on the A77, which after all is one of the main routes from Ireland into the UK. The traffic going in the other direction is also quite heavy. Secondly, in the evidence that you provided with the petition, you refer to FOI requests to Transport Scotland and say that
From 2004 to August 2013. We do not have any figures from that point, because the freedom of information request took two years.
Did Transport Scotland provide any figures on how many of the accidents caused by overtaking happened on the A9’s dualled and single-lane sections respectively?
Not specifically, but they are in the 600-page document that details all the accident figures. My understanding is that 77 per cent of the accidents on the A9 were on single carriageways, and that that is where the problem seems to be.
That 75 or so per cent of accidents could be down to drivers’ frustration at having to travel behind slower-moving vehicles.
Yes. Those of us who have had to drive for four or five hours to get the 100 miles from Inverness to Perth will agree that that is undoubtedly the case.
I am sorry, but I will have to cut you off there, Mr Wilson.
Yes.
Like you, I am a regular traveller on the A9 and my experience is that the mixture of dual and single carriageways and two-plus-one stretches makes things quite confusing, particularly for tourists who are not familiar with the road. They are probably thinking, “Am I still on the dual carriageway?” or, “There’s an overtaking lane opposite me, but I’m on the single carriageway.” That can be dangerous and there is no doubt that it can cause or contribute to accidents.
Absolutely.
We now move to the summation. There will be no more questions or points, Mr Burns, but I ask you to stay where you are for the moment.
It has been suggested that we ask the AA, the RAC and the Road Haulage Association for their views on the petition.
We should also hear from Police Scotland. Moreover, I suggest that, when we write to those groups, we ask for the most up-to-date and latest information on the A77.
It would be sensible to have that as a comparator.
When we write to the A9 safety group, would it be possible to ask whether it has considered inviting the AA and the Institute of Advanced Motorists on to it? I also suggest that we write to the Freight Transport Association as well as the Road Haulage Association.
I think that it would be good to get the views of the Institute of Advanced Motorists.
As you will have picked up, Mr Burns, we will continue your petition and write to all the organisations that have been mentioned. We will discuss the matter at a future meeting and the clerks will keep you up to date with developments. We are certainly keen to find out the further information that your petition seeks. The issue is important; after all, as I think you pointed out, the A9 will be the longest stretch of average speed camera road in Europe.
It will be second longest in the world. The longest is in Australia.
On behalf of the committee, I thank you for that offer.
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