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Displaying 896 contributions
Rural Affairs and Islands Committee
Meeting date: 8 October 2025
Rhoda Grant
What would you suggest as an alternative? Given that, at the moment, the commission does not respond within 28 days and people do not—or very seldom—get a decision in that time, how can we make the legislation work in a way that puts a bit of onus on the commission but is realistic?
Rural Affairs and Islands Committee
Meeting date: 8 October 2025
Rhoda Grant
On that point, it is about the shares that are out there now and have been separated. People are possibly not even aware that they have a share.
Rural Affairs and Islands Committee
Meeting date: 8 October 2025
Rhoda Grant
If we did that in legislation, would it not have a cost attached?
Rural Affairs and Islands Committee
Meeting date: 8 October 2025
Rhoda Grant
The bill is tidying up an awful lot of the things that were wrong with crofting. Eilidh Ross said that it is a bit boring and that, possibly, everyone is looking forward to a bill that deals with the policy issues, but are there any other tidying-up issues that need to be dealt with?
Rural Affairs and Islands Committee
Meeting date: 8 October 2025
Rhoda Grant
I am sorry—I am jumping ahead.
Rural Affairs and Islands Committee
Meeting date: 8 October 2025
Rhoda Grant
I am going to get a row.
Rural Affairs and Islands Committee
Meeting date: 8 October 2025
Rhoda Grant
My understanding is that, in such cases, the croft would revert to the commission. Would that deal with the issue of exceptional circumstances?
Rural Affairs and Islands Committee
Meeting date: 8 October 2025
Rhoda Grant
Following on from what Brian Inkster said, I think that the commission is clear that it needs people to tell it about neglect in order for it to be able to investigate that. Asking the grazing committee to report on what is going on has not worked—it was clear that it would never work when that was legislated for. I am speaking not for the commission but from my understanding of what it was saying, which is that changing the process in order to allow others to report would take that reporting duty away from the grazing committee and would allow other people who saw neglect to report it.
It seems to me that neglect is one of the biggest issues that we hear about, and we hear about it all the time. Speak to anyone and they would say that. The cross-party group on crofting is always talking about neglect and about the fact that people are waiting to get crofts while others are holding crofts that they are doing nothing with. Therefore, I can understand why the commission has said, “Someone needs to tell us what’s going on. We can’t know everything unless we have people in every community telling us that.” However, that would be nigh on impossible. Might folk have a better idea about how such issues could be identified?
Rural Affairs and Islands Committee
Meeting date: 8 October 2025
Rhoda Grant
How would we do that in legislation, given that, as you said earlier, some people know that they have the share floating around and that something is going on in the common grazing that will bring them an income, whereas—
Rural Affairs and Islands Committee
Meeting date: 8 October 2025
Rhoda Grant
We touched earlier on the length of time that it takes for the commission to respond. The bill takes away the time limit of 28 days for the commission to respond to an application for another purpose or use, but the 28-day limit for the crofter to respond to the commission is staying. Is that fair and reasonable? My understanding is that, in practice, nobody gets an answer in 28 days anyway, so are we simply putting into legislation what happens in practice?