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QUESTION:
Why
are you giving the crofting estate of Barra to
the Scottish Ministers?
ANSWER:
Active personal management of a crofting estate is both challenging and
rewarding.
But it is also demanding and
time-consuming.
Having put in almost 35 years at this job
and beginning to slow down at age 74, I decided
that it was time to retire. Giving the crofting
estate to SEERAD seems an excellent way to
ensure continued good management in both the
short and the long term.
QUESTION:
What
will you and your family’s relationship with
Barra be when you are no longer a crofting
landlord?
ANSWER:
It will remain home for us.
The crofting estate is just one of our
many contacts there.
Among others are our ongoing connections
with Kisimul Castle, our home in Garrygall, and,
above all, our friends and acquaintances in the
Island.
We
spend a great deal of time on Barra and expect
to continue to do so. Being relieved of the
administration of the crofting estate will free
up much time, making it possible to participate
in Barra life in other ways
which we hope may be useful.
For
example, my elder son Rory and I are both
working actively as agents of the Barra
Community Councils Joint Air Services Committee.
We expect to continue doing so until the
island air services are fully secured for the
indefinite future.
Barra and its welfare are important to
all of us and we anticipate continuing as active
members of the community.
QUESTION:
What,
if any, consultation did you have with crofters
and other members of the local community before
you made this agreement?
ANSWER:
I
made discreet inquiries to find out whether
crofters currently tenants of SEERAD’s estates
in Barra and Vatersay consider SEERAD to be a
good landlord.
The responses to those inquiries were
affirmative.
QUESTION:
What
of the effect of the transfer on possible
community ownership?
ANSWER:
The
transfer of control to SEERAD will leave the
situation respecting community ownership
unchanged, except that there is now an
additional option:
Barra-wide or Barra-and–Vatersay-wide
community ownership.
QUESTION:
Does
SEERAD’s attitude towards community ownership
differ from yours?
ANSWER:
Not
as far as I know.
QUESTION:
What
is your attitude towards community ownership in
Barra and Vatersay?
ANSWER:
It
is essential that any move towards community
ownership be both initiated and led throughout
by the people of Barra and Vatersay without
outside pressure.
It
is equally essential that at every stage a
substantial majority of both crofters and
non-crofters resident in Barra and Vatersay are
agreed to take the next step and make the
decision to do so only in the most open and
democratic ways possible.
And
finally,
the body established to own and manage the
estate must itself be structured to be as
possible and controlled entirely by Barra and
Vatersay residents through democratic processes.
If all of this happens and the decision is for
community ownership, then I shall be an
enthusiastic supporter.
QUESTION:
What
is your view of the proposal for community
ownership of South Uist Estates, which
has been quite controversial?
ANSWER:
I
think it would be a trifle impertinent for
someone from Barra to comment publicly on what
the people of Uist are doing or not doing about
community ownership.
QUESTION:
What
about the possibility that the Barra and
Vatersay estate might become merged into
community ownership with South Uist?
ANSWER:
That
is possible only if a strong and definite
majority of both crofters and the wider
community in Barra and Vatersay want it to
happen.
I very much doubt if that will ever be
the case.
My own view is that any such a merger
would be a serious mistake, because the people
of Barra and Vatersay should manage their own
affairs.
QUESTION:
When
will the actual transfer to the Scottish
Ministers be made?
ANSWER:
As
soon as all the legal details can be handled,
which I hope will not take more than two or
three months.
Ian
R MacNeil of Barra |