logo
Island businesses say 'no sign' of promised £4.4m amid ferry crisis

Island businesses say 'no sign' of promised £4.4m amid ferry crisis

STV News26-05-2025
Businesses on South Uist are calling on the Scottish Government to come good on their promise of £4.4m of resilience funds for those worst affected by the ongoing ferry crisis.
The Government's original announcement came one month ago, the day before transport minister Fiona Hyslop travelled to the island to attend South Uist Business Impact Group's (SUBIG) crisis meeting, where over 50 businesses presented testimony on how the ferry crisis has affected them in the hopes of discussing a way forward.
However, since the meeting, the business group has heard no further mention of the fund.
John Daniel Peteranna, director of local community landowner Storas Uist, said: 'Uist has suffered a severely reduced ferry service all this year.
'Island businesses stand ready to work with the government on how the fund might work, but are disappointed at the government's slow approach.
'This fund is urgently needed to ensure island businesses can survive until the ferry service improves.'
The call comes after South Uist's ferry, the Lord of the Isles, returned to its home port of Lochboisdale for the first time since Hogmanay.
Saturday saw the first service between South Uist and its 'usual' mainland port of Mallaig for almost six months.
Loti is the only 'large' ferry in CalMac's fleet capable of entering Mallaig harbour while also able to travel out to South Uist. At 37 years old, it is one of the oldest in the fleet and prone to breakdowns.
Last September, a fire in the engine room during the crossing led to its removal from service for weeks, further disrupting the island's economy.
The return of the island's ferry also means the island's full summer timetable can finally commence, albeit two months later than planned.
This shorter route to Mallaig, only three and a half hours instead of the five and a half hours to Oban that businesses, families and other travellers have endured for the past six months, also means South Uist will benefit from two sailings a day on Mondays, Thursdays and Saturdays in the full summer timetable.
But, as the MV Lord of the Isles slunk into her berth on Friday evening, shrouded by squalls of long absent rain, islanders know that this full summer timetable will last for only two weeks.
For most of June and July, CalMac is cutting one service a week to the island and redirecting two others to distant Oban instead of Mallaig.
'Island businesses and families need a timetable they can rely on', Mr Peteranna added.
'We shouldn't live in fear of our service being cut every time there's a problem somewhere else in CalMac's fleet. We call on the government to present the details of the resilience fund.'
With its regular ferry returning from helping out on routes to islands CalMac prioritises above South Uist, there is cautious optimism from hospitality and other businesses that something might yet be made of the summer season.
A Scottish Government spokesperson said: 'Scotland's island communities and businesses face many challenges, we recognise the need to provide additional targeted support and that is why we have allocated an initial £4.4m to establish a resilience fund to support island businesses.
'People and businesses need to have confidence in ferry services running reliably and frequently to support their livelihoods, among many other factors and it is clear that any delays or maintenance to vessels can create real difficulties and we are determined to do everything we can to support islands, local businesses and employers through these challenging times.
'We are currently working at pace with partners to refine eligibility criteria and so that we can open for applications as soon as possible.'
Get all the latest news from around the country Follow STV News
Scan the QR code on your mobile device for all the latest news from around the country
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Scottish Seafood Company opens new Edinburgh factory, bucking regional closure trend
Scottish Seafood Company opens new Edinburgh factory, bucking regional closure trend

Scotsman

timean hour ago

  • Scotsman

Scottish Seafood Company opens new Edinburgh factory, bucking regional closure trend

- In a welcome boost to Scotland's seafood industry, The Scottish Seafood Company has officially opened its new state-of-the-art processing facility in Edinburgh, creating a significant number of local jobs and reinforcing the company's commitment to keeping Scottish seafood production firmly rooted in Scottish soil. Sign up to our daily newsletter Sign up Thank you for signing up! Did you know with a Digital Subscription to Edinburgh News, you can get unlimited access to the website including our premium content, as well as benefiting from fewer ads, loyalty rewards and much more. Learn More Sorry, there seem to be some issues. Please try again later. Submitting... The facility opening comes at a crucial time for the region's food processing sector, which has faced challenging headwinds with several recent closures affecting local employment and supply chains. The Scottish Seafood Company's expansion represents a decisive vote of confidence in Scotland's workforce and the exceptional quality of Scottish maritime produce. "We're absolutely delighted to establish our new operations here in Edinburgh," said Campbell Mickel, CEO of The Scottish Seafood Company. "Whilst others may be looking elsewhere, we believe passionately that Scotland's seafood industry belongs in Scotland. Our new facility allows us to showcase the very best that our waters and our people have to offer." Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad The company has built its reputation on sourcing premium Scottish seafood directly from local fishing communities, ensuring that both the economic benefits and the authentic character of Scotland's maritime heritage remain within the country's borders. The new Edinburgh facility will serve as a hub for processing, packaging, and distributing the finest fresh Scottish salmon and whitefish, Scottish shellfish, and frozen exotic imports, providing a one stop shop, for customers across the UK and beyond. Processing fresh Scottish whitefish, salmon and shellfish Scottish Seafood Company's investment demonstrates the ongoing viability and potential of Scotland's food processing sector, particularly when companies maintain strong ties to local supply chains and communities. The facility is expected to support both direct employment and indirect economic activity throughout the regional supply network. "This isn't just about business – it's about preserving and promoting what makes Scottish seafood truly special," continued Mr Mickel. "From our coastal communities to our processing facilities, every step of our operation reflects our commitment to Scottish excellence." The company's dedication to domestic production comes at a time when many customers in the industry are examining the benefits of local sourcing, reduced transportation costs, and the preservation of traditional Scottish food processing expertise. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad The company already has a long list of satisfied customers, including high end and world-famous restaurants across Scotland. 'Working closely with Campbell and his team is a know he can be relied upon for the very best quality and his service is fantastic. He genuinely cares about the products and displays a Chef's passion for everything he supplies.' said Douglas Roberts, Executive Chef at The Witchery. CEO, Campbell Mickel opens new seafood processing facility in edinburgh Harajuku, the multi-award-winning Japanese Food and Sushi restaurant, has been a long-standing customer for Sashimi grade fish, which is exclusive to The Scottish Seafood Company. Nobuo San, Head Chef, states, "We depend on the unmatched quality of the products supplied to create our ever-popular sushi and sashimi dishes." For more information about The Scottish Seafood Company and their commitment to Scottish seafood excellence, visit

Trump acts like a tinpot Caesar demanding tribute from his vassals
Trump acts like a tinpot Caesar demanding tribute from his vassals

The National

timean hour ago

  • The National

Trump acts like a tinpot Caesar demanding tribute from his vassals

His recent sojourn to Turnberry, that gilded monument to his vulgarity, was not a diplomatic mission but a thuggish display of extortion, a brazen shakedown of Europe's ruling elites by a man whose grasp of statecraft is as profound as his understanding of basic syntax. Trump, that oafish imbecile, that blustering buffoon, conducts himself not as a statesman but as a swaggering mob boss, squeezing concessions from his subordinates with all the subtlety of a knee-capping enforcer. His meeting with Ursula von der Leyen was less a negotiation than a ritual humiliation, as the European Commission president prostrated herself before the whims of an American imperialist regime that views trade not as mutual exchange but as plunder. READ MORE: Scottish Labour councillor suspended for 'bullying' member of the public The resulting 'deal' is a grotesque farce – Europe, trembling before its mercantile overlord, agrees to higher tariffs, coerced purchases of US goods, and the funnelling of billions into the maw of the American war machine. This is not diplomacy; it is tribute exacted by a gangster. And what of Keir Starmer, that eager supplicant, scurrying to Turnberry to kiss the ring of his transatlantic patron? His obsequiousness was met with the usual Trumpian blend of ignorance and malice – vague platitudes on Ukraine, half-brained mutterings on Gaza, and the usual litany of lies about stolen aid and imaginary victories. Starmer, ever the loyal vassal, could do little but nod along, his own political fortunes tethered to the whims of a man who views international relations as a protection racket. But let us not mistake this for mere farce. The stakes are dire. The European bourgeoisie, though seething at their subjugation, dare not defy their American paymasters, for fear of provoking an all-out trade war – or worse, losing the military backing that sustains their own imperialist ventures in Ukraine. They are trapped in a spiral of their own making, forced to bankroll US arms shipments, to prop up Nato's blood-soaked adventures, all while their own workers face the coming storm of economic devastation. History teaches us that empires built on extortion do not endure. The Roman tax farmers, the Habsburg enforcers, the British East India Company – all eventually crumbled beneath the weight of their own rapacity. Trump's gangster diplomacy is no different. It will end the same way. Alan Hinnrichs Dundee ON Monday, we were informed on BBC Scotland that a celebration had taken place in respect of the 70th anniversary of the opening of the Dounreay nuclear power plant. In attendance was a chap calling himself King Charles and a non-Scottish manager of the site who made me feel squeamish as I listened to his sycophantic fawning over the said King's attendance. Can I just clarify the background to this development back in 1955? The idea of developing nuclear energy at that time was filled with the possibility of a major disaster happening. The year, 1955, was just a decade after the horrific Hiroshima and Nagasaki tragedies. Nuclear weapons and power production were issues of dread for the general population. So, if this development was going to happen, where should it go? Obviously, Westminster decided that it should be located as far away from London as possible. Look at your map and you will see that Dounreay is as far from London as you can get without ending up in the Pentland Firth. The residents of Thurso and Wick would be obliterated if anything untoward happened, but they were expendable. In fact, probably most of Scotland would end up the same way. I was a wee boy in a small rural Highland primary school back in the mid-50s. I well remember the gift we were all given at that school. It was a glossy magazine with the front cover showing the impressive Dounreay dome. It was designed at deflecting attention from the dangers and promoting the idea that we were at the cutting edge of technology. I believe all schoolkids up here would have been given a copy too, so that our minds would be shaped to accept this thing that terrified those down south. A few jobs were created for workers at Dounreay but that was insignificant compared to the perceived dangers. Along with the nonsensical Protect And Survive booklet that was distributed at that time regarding saving yourself in the event of a nuclear attack, this magazine that we children received was just government propaganda to influence, lie to and control the population. Officials must have been laughing to themselves as they prepared them. Today, they still use the same methods and our voters are still inclined to believe them. Without truth, what hope is there for Scotland or even society at large? Alasdair Forbes Farr, Inverness-shire THE statement by Keir Starmer that the UK would move to recognise a Palestinian state, if Israel did not agree to a ceasefire and take steps to end the war, is more than a little contradictory given previous statements. The statement noted that Palestinian statehood is the 'inalienable right of the Palestinian people' and the UK Government is committed to delivering a two-state solution, with a 'safe and secure Israel alongside a viable and sovereign Palestinian state'. It therefore seems rather odd that, despite a previous commitment to recognising a Palestinian state, this should now come with conditions attached. Alex Orr Edinburgh

What was it really like reporting on Trump's working holiday in Scotland?
What was it really like reporting on Trump's working holiday in Scotland?

STV News

timean hour ago

  • STV News

What was it really like reporting on Trump's working holiday in Scotland?

'That's him away'. Its a line from the end of the great film Local Hero, which Andrea Brymer quoted to me standing on the 18th green of the New Course on the Menie Estate. Marine One, the US President's helicopter, whisked Trump away from an action packed few days in Scotland. On previous visits by President Trump I have covered protests and the politics around the trip, but this was the first time I had been up close and seen a bit of how these things work and the sheer scale of it all. I was on holiday last week so wasn't involved in reporting the first few days of the most public private visit ever. It was quite a return to work on Monday though, knowing that I would be inside Turnberry at the Ballroom press conference ahead of the bi-lateral meeting between the President and Prime Minister. That came about by pot luck. The Scottish Parliamentary Journalists Association was given two spots in the media pool alongside four Westminster reporters and the travelling White House press pack. My name was drawn out of the hat for broadcasters and Andrew Learmonth of The Herald was drawn on the newspaper side. STV News My plan was always to ask about whisky tariffs, which seemed like the most pressing Scottish issue to raise with the President and the Prime Minister as they finalise the UK/US trade deal. Under the deal as it stands they come under the 10% tariff rate, but the industry say that will cost £4m a week which will hit jobs and investment. They are pushing for zero tariffs because Scotch Whisky can only be produced in Scotland, production can't be moved to the US, and there is no similar tariff on bourbon imports from the US to the UK. Before Monday I had only ever seen White House press briefings with the President on telly or online and they seemed like real bun-fights. All at the whim of President Trump, a bit of a free for all with journalists trying to catch the President's eye or just outshout their colleagues. There is no guarantee of getting to ask your question, let alone pressing POTUS for an answer. So I turned up at Turnberry on Monday more in hope than expectation. In fact I turned up at a car park near Turnberry at 8.30am to be bussed in through the ring of steel. I turned up for a day at a five star hotel, with a packed lunch as instructed after a warning that lunch options would be restricted – that made me laugh. They did actually provide sandwiches, shortbread and obviously for a Trump resort, millionaire's shortbread. We were sequestered in a room in the Spa, from the window we could see the President's car – known as the Beast. STV News These kind of events inevitably involve a lot of hanging about, in fact they are probably 90% hanging about. We were allowed out of the room to go to the toilet – complete with gold coloured taps (almost everything is gold coloured) or visit the shop where you could buy a Maga hat at £55 or a pack of gold Trump playing cards (made in China, that made me laugh too) for £15. For all Trump's business credentials, I think he has missed a trick by not selling tartan Maga hats at Turnberry and Menie. After five hours of hanging about, we were taken outside for the arrival of the Prime Minister and his wife. They were greeted on the steps of Turnberry by President Trump. This is when it really felt like the court of Trump. The President of the United States of America was meeting the Prime Minister in the UK but everything was on Trump's terms, he was calling all the shots. They stayed on the steps for a while as a piper played loudly in the background, then took some questions from the waiting press pack. I had been running over my question in my head, during the hanging about, in preparation for the press conference and was a bit surprised that he was taking so many questions on the steps. What if this was it? Inevitably things were running late, they always do so what if there wasn't going to be another chance? So I shouted, above the pipes, 'Is there a better deal to be done on whisky tariffs?'. He answered 'We'll talk about that. I didn't know whisky was a problem. I'm not a big whisky drinker'. The President took about 15 minutes of questions on the steps, much of it drowned out by the piper. He spoke about Gaza, Russia, other parts of the trade deal and said the Prime Minister's wife was well respected in America. That may well be the case, but I don't imagine many Americans know who she is given how much she carefully keeps out of the spotlight. STV News Back in the holding room, no one knew what opportunity there would be for further questions, but after an hour of hanging about we were led round the back of the hotel, past dozens of golf buggies, including the President's special armoured one – a kind of mini-beast or beastie – past the bins and in the back door to a store room filled tables and chairs for the Ballroom. After half an hour of hanging about there were allowed in to the Ballroom where the President, the PM and their officials were waiting for us. I made sure I was near the front to try to nab a good spot. I knew that my earlier question and answer had been drowned out a bit by the piper so was determined to get it in again. After a lot of hanging about I wasn't taking any risks. These things last as long as the President lets them. He could take a couple of questions or dozens. It really does come down to who shouts the loudest or catches his eye. Realistically I wasn't going to catch his eye but I am quite loud. STV News After questions on Russia and Gaza I took my chance – 'Mr President, you say you love Scotland, you're the most Scottish President ever (he likes being the most something ever). Is there a better deal to be done with the Prime Minister for Scottish industry, on whisky for example?' He then told us about his mother coming from Lewis, 'serious Scotland' as he described it, he says he loves Scotland and the way he talks he does seem to have a genuine affection for Scotland. I know he doesn't like being interrupted and I know I can be a bit interrupt-y so I had to restrain myself as he went on about that. Eventually I followed up with 'but is there a better deal to be done for Scotland, for whisky?' He said 'I assume when we do our trade deal a lot of it comes to Scotland I hope, maybe all of it should go to Scotland.' He said that smiling at the Prime Minister who jumped in to say 'it's a very good deal for the whole United Kingdom', but the President came back with 'a lot of it is coming to Scotland, and I am very particular this is a part of the world I want to see thrive'. The press conference continued for another hour, and it contained real news lines: cutting the deadline for a Russian ceasefire in Ukraine from 50 to ten or 12 days, recognising the humanitarian crisis in Gaza, although President Trump is still incredibly closely tied to Israel. Andrew Learmonth got his question in about the First Minister's plans for another Independence Referendum, to which President Trump said he didn't want to get involved in politics. He had advice for the Prime Minister on tackling immigration and he took a question on wind power from the Press Association's Craig Paton to pick up his lance and tilt at 'windmills', Donald Trump as Don Quixote. To give President Trump his due he took pretty much all the questions thrown at him. He didn't answer them all directly, he rambled on and on at times, but in many of his answers there was a news nugget. The press conference ended after a few questions on the Epstein scandal – I think the US media threw them in just to shut him up. STV News The whole thing was quite an experience. Up close President Trump was more engaging than I had expected, more charismatic, but alternating between interesting and boring, funny and just plain barking. I had one job to do at Turnberry on Monday. Get a line on Scotland. For me the news line was on whisky tariffs, and the President delivered. The First Minister and the whisky industry believe there is now a window of opportunity over the next few weeks to get the tariffs on whisky down, maybe even down to zero. They think they've got until the President's state visit in September. That's when it will shift from the political travelling Court of Trump we've just seen, to the actual Court of King Charles, which is what President Trump really loves – 'No-one does pomp and ceremony like you people'. Get all the latest news from around the country Follow STV News Scan the QR code on your mobile device for all the latest news from around the country

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store