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Chamber and committees

Official Report: search what was said in Parliament

The Official Report is a written record of public meetings of the Parliament and committees.  

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Dates of parliamentary sessions
  1. Session 1: 12 May 1999 to 31 March 2003
  2. Session 2: 7 May 2003 to 2 April 2007
  3. Session 3: 9 May 2007 to 22 March 2011
  4. Session 4: 11 May 2011 to 23 March 2016
  5. Session 5: 12 May 2016 to 4 May 2021
  6. Current session: 13 May 2021 to 2 February 2026
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Displaying 628 contributions

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Rural Affairs and Islands Committee [Draft]

Crofting and Scottish Land Court Bill: Stage 1

Meeting date: 8 October 2025

Tim Eagle

Section 14.

Rural Affairs and Islands Committee [Draft]

Crofting and Scottish Land Court Bill: Stage 1

Meeting date: 8 October 2025

Tim Eagle

No. I wish you could.

Rural Affairs and Islands Committee [Draft]

Crofting and Scottish Land Court Bill: Stage 1

Meeting date: 8 October 2025

Tim Eagle

I will go back to my previous point. I am trying to get my head back into gear around the house site issue. I am not an expert in this, but my understanding is that you can build a house on a piece of croft land. There would be nothing in the example that Katie MacKay gave that would prevent another family from building a house without needing to decroft that land.

Rural Affairs and Islands Committee [Draft]

Crofting and Scottish Land Court Bill: Stage 1

Meeting date: 8 October 2025

Tim Eagle

Right. So, you could do that with private funding, but you could not take out a mortgage to do it.

Rural Affairs and Islands Committee [Draft]

Crofting and Scottish Land Court Bill: Stage 1

Meeting date: 8 October 2025

Tim Eagle

I will turn to Eilidh Ross, if you do not mind. I am not trying to put you in conflict here—you said that you were fine with that. However, if we want thriving rural communities, surely that does not work. That makes sense, does it not? Why would we want that in the bill?

Rural Affairs and Islands Committee [Draft]

Crofting and Scottish Land Court Bill: Stage 1

Meeting date: 8 October 2025

Tim Eagle

Okay—that makes sense.

Rural Affairs and Islands Committee [Draft]

Crofting and Scottish Land Court Bill: Stage 1

Meeting date: 8 October 2025

Tim Eagle

Yes—I get that. I was not clear on that, but I am clearer now as to what you are trying to get at.

Rural Affairs and Islands Committee

Subordinate Legislation

Meeting date: 1 October 2025

Tim Eagle

I hope that you can hear me all right. I am sorry that I cannot be with you in person this morning. I had better be quick, because of the convener’s time limits.

I want to touch on data and monitoring. When I am out and about in some of these coastal communities, I get the feeling that they cannot trust what people say in terms of the data, monitoring and so on. Can you run me through a wee bit more about where we are in terms of baselining before we go into this? What do we then need to improve, or what do we need to carry on doing, to monitor effectively and ensure that the data is open so that everyone can see it and have trust in it moving forward, so that we know where we need to get to or where we will go to meet those conservation objectives?

Rural Affairs and Islands Committee

Subordinate Legislation

Meeting date: 1 October 2025

Tim Eagle

Sorry, convener—you are right that time is precious.

There are two sides to this, are there not? One side is about what we are looking for in terms of the areas that we are protecting, while the other side is about what the consequences are from the displacement of fishing, so it is about how we monitor those two sides. When you talk about science, Elspeth, I presume that that means data from both sides, so that we know the full picture.

Rural Affairs and Islands Committee

Subordinate Legislation

Meeting date: 1 October 2025

Tim Eagle

Thank you, convener, and hello, everybody. I am sorry that I cannot be there in person today. It is a fascinating discussion. David Anderson has just touched on exactly the issue that I was going to raise; I asked this question in the earlier session. When I was out over the summer, trust came up a lot. Disagree with me on that if you think I am wrong, but, when I am at the harbours—obviously, I am in the north-east, and I connect with what people are saying, which is that this is about more than fishing; this industry is the cultural lifeblood of the people of Scotland—trust in science comes up a lot.

The practical part of me says that, if we do this, and there seems to be broad support around it, how do we take the data that we have—one of the earlier witnesses said that we have loads of data because we have been doing this for years—and make that as open and easy to understand as possible, as a baseline? How do we then monitor effectively, both with scientists and with your members, and how do we disseminate that information? Any further thoughts that you have on that would be gratefully received so that, if this happens, we can show what the future will look like, whether things are getting better and so on.