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No junior ministerial role for Environment

Following today’s earlier post about Roseanna Cunningham MSP being appointed the new Cabinet Secretary for Environment, Climate Change and Land Reform (here), it appears that the former junior position of Minister for Environment has either been chucked, or has been merged with Roseanna’s new role.

Nicola Sturgeon has announced the appointment of other junior Ministers (see here) and there is no mention of a specific Environment Minister. Although obviously, Roseanna Cunningham, as a Cabinet Secretary, is also technically a Minister.

This news can be viewed in two ways. It could be argued that the loss of a junior Environment Minister position could be detrimental (depending on the effectiveness of that junior Minister, of course!) because it means there’s only one person responsible for the Environment portfolio instead of two. However, it could also be argued that the junior Minister (again, depending on who it was) could quite easily cause the Cabinet Secretary to take their eye off the ball of a particular issue if they thought the junior Minister had things in hand, and that junior Minister could then quite easily ‘dilute’ any progress that otherwise might have been made.

The very good news is, as we suggested earlier, Roseanna Cunningham is experienced, strong and decisive. And although her portfolio has been separated and former responsibilities such as agriculture, fisheries, crofting, and food & drink have now been given to another Cabinet Secretary (Fergus Ewing MSP), her remit is still pretty wide but has added emphasis on the Environment. We have every confidence she’ll rise to the challenge and do a better job on her own than the ineffective team of Aileen McLeod and Richard Lochhead.

We look forward to seeing what she can achieve.

Roseanna Cunningham MSP is new Cabinet Secretary for Environment

Well this is good news!

In today’s Cabinet reshuffle, Roseanna Cunningham MSP has just been appointed the new Cabinet Secretary for Environment, Climate Change and Land Reform, following the departure of Richard Lochhead.

Interestingly, the title of this position, and the portfolio remit, has been changed. Roseanna’s responsibilities will be for climate change, flood prevention, water quality, land reform, physical and marine environment, sustainable development, biodiversity, natural heritage, environmental protection, environmental and climate justice, National parks, and Scottish Water.

The other responsibilities previously associated with this post (Rural Scotland, agriculture, forestry, fisheries, aquaculture, food and drink, and crofting) are now the responsibility of newly appointed Cabinet Secretary for the Rural Economy and Connectivity, Fergus Ewing MSP.

This might not be the best news for those working in conservation within the agricultural sector but it’s very good news for us. It means that Roseanna Cunningham will be able to take a closer interest in environment/wildlife issues than could her predecessor, as well as land reform. She’s definitely seen as left-of-centre of her party and is no friend of the big landed estates, so they won’t be happy with this new appointment.

Roseanna brings a lot of experience to her new role, having formerly been the Environment Minister between 2009-2011. During her time in that role she was responsible for introducing an amendment to the WANE bill for the addition of vicarious liability for estates where raptor persecution was still prevalent (see here) and she also was pretty firm that the Scottish Government would not entertain the idea of introducing licences to kill protected raptors (see here).

It wasn’t all plain sailing though. She was the Minister who rejected an amendment to the WANE bill for increased powers for the SSPCA, although she did temper this by saying that the issue should first go to public consultation. This was procedurally cautious, although in hindsight was a fair move. Little did she or we realise that five years later we’d still be waiting for the Government to act on this issue (see here).

We welcome Roseanna’s appointment and trust she will bring a new level of leadership to the table. However, much will depend on who becomes her junior Minister for the Environment (still to be announced).

UPDATE 6pm: No junior ministerial role for Environment (here).

Mark Ruskell MSP asks parliamentary questions about wildlife & wildlife crime

Mark Ruskell MSPNewly-elected Scottish Greens MSP Mark Ruskell has hit the ground running by lodging a series of parliamentary questions relating to wildlife and wildlife crime:

Question S5W-00044, Mark Ruskell (Mid Scotland and Fife, Scottish Green Party); Lodged: 09/05/2016:

To ask the Scottish Government what its position is on the culling of mountain hares on estates practising driven grouse shooting.

Question S5W-00043; Lodged 09/05/2016:

To ask the Scottish Government what its position is on the reintroduction of the European beaver to Scotland.

Question S5W-00042: Lodged 09/05/2016:

To ask the Scottish Government how many European beaver autopsied since January 2016 were (a) pregnant and (b) lactating.

Question S5W-00029: Lodged 12/05/2016:

To ask the Scottish Government when it will announce its decision regarding the reintroduction of the European beaver and what steps it has taken to ensure that the decision complies with the EU Habitats Directive.

Question S5W-00031: Lodged 12/05/2016:

To ask the Scottish Government, further to the answer to question S40-05291 by Aileen McLeod on 21 January 2016 (Official Report, C8), what plans it has to implement each of the recommendations of the Wildlife Crime Penalties Review Group and when it will do so.

Question S5W-00030: Lodged 12/05/2016:

To ask the Scottish Government when it will announce its decision regarding extending the powers of the Scottish SPCA to tackle wildlife crime.

The answers to all these questions are due 26/05/2016.

Mark Ruskell MSP was already on our radar as someone who’d be likely to stand up for the issues we care about (e.g. see here) so we’re pleased to see, now he’s been elected, he’s getting down to business and applying some political pressure.

The new Environment Minister (yet to be appointed) had also better be prepared to hit the ground running.

All change for environment portfolio at Holyrood as Lochhead stands down

scotlandThe Cabinet Secretary for Rural Affairs, Food & Environment in Scotland, Richard Lochhead, has announced his resignation in advance of Nicola Sturgeon’s impending cabinet re-shuffle (see here).

This means there will be a clean sweep across the board for the Holyrood environment portfolio, following former Environment Minister Dr Aileen McLeod’s recent failure to secure re-election (see here).

This should be interesting, especially as some probing parliamentary questions about the Government’s stance on various wildlife issues have already been lodged as this parliamentary session gets underway (more on those questions shortly).

Are we going to see a new Cabinet Secretary with relevant experience and expertise? This is a position with wide-ranging responsibilities, not only for environmental protection, environmental justice, biodiversity, natural heritage, national parks, water quality, flooding, forestry, fisheries agriculture, but also food and drink, sustainable development, crofting, climate justice and then the small matter of land reform.  And will the new Cabinet Secretary’s junior Environment Minister be capable of actually doing something or are they going to sit on their hands and bleat out the usual fatuous platitudes for the duration of their term?

We’ll find out soon enough.

UPDATE 5pm: Roseanna Cunningham MSP is new Cabinet Secretary for Environment & Land Reform (here)

SNH responds to query re: use of gas guns on grouse moors

Last week we blogged about the deployment of gas guns on grouse moors and how we were still waiting for guidance on their use from SNH and Natural England; guidance that had been promised before the start of the 2016 breeding season (see here). We were/are concerned that these devices were/are being used to deter hen harrier breeding attempts. If they were/are, this would constitute an offence of causing reckless or intentional disturbance.

Bird scarer 1 - Copy

SNH has responded with the following statement:

Thank you for your email.

I note your concerns about the use of propane gas guns, which may have the potential for disturbance of protected bird species. We are not in receipt of specific evidence of an impact on breeding or nesting birds but we would welcome any information you may have regarding this or any related concerns of improper use of gas guns. This information should be forwarded to andy.turner@snh.gov.uk. Intentional or reckless disturbance of Schedule 1 nesting birds is an offence, and any suspected incidents of this through gas gun use should be reported directly to Police Scotland on 101.

Although we do not have specific information, we are working with Natural England to provide best practice guidance on the use of this equipment to minimise the likelihood or potential of disturbance in the vicinity of protected species. We currently expect to make this available later this month. The use of gas gun equipment is regulated by Local Authorities under the Environment Act and we are not currently considering separate licensing under the Wildlife & Countryside Act. We will, however, continue to assess on a case-by-case basis any licence application to disturb scheduled birds.

Thank you for your concern.

Andrew Bachell, Director of Policy & Advice, SNH

We found this statement to be contradictory and confusing. SNH says it doesn’t have any evidence of an impact on breeding or nesting birds. Has SNH investigated any of the previous reports it has received about these gas guns being used on grouse moors? If SNH hasn’t investigated, then of course no evidence will be available.

SNH says it wants to hear about any concerns but then says improper use could constitute an offence which should be reported to Police Scotland. Can anyone imagine Police Scotland investigating the use of a gas gun in the middle of a remote grouse moor? No, neither can we. And if the schedule 1 bird has already been ‘disturbed’ by the gas gun and has since cleared off, then if the police did miraculously attend, there’d be nothing to see anyway and therefore no evidence of an offence.

SNH says gas gun use is regulated by local authorities under the Environment Act. But this legislation relates to statutory nuisance, ‘noise emitted so as to be prejudicial to [human] health or a nuisance’. This legislation does not relate to the illegal disturbance of Schedule 1 birds.

SNH says it is working with Natural England to provide best practice guidance, but in a later response to one of our blog readers (see comment from blog reader Andrew here), SNH says ‘there is insufficient evidence to warrant the production of guidance’ and then admits that ‘SNH guidance is not enforceable by law should an individual decide not to adhere to it’.

SNH says it is not considering separate licensing under the Wildlife & Countryside Act ‘but will continue to assess on a case-by-case basis any licence application to disturb scheduled birds’. But if gas gun use is unlicensed, then nobody will be submitting a licence application for use because they don’t need to.

Confused? We are.

The best advice we can offer to anyone who finds a gas gun in use on a grouse moor in Scotland is to report it to RSPB Scotland. Email: _InvestigationsSHQ@rspb.org.uk [please note the underscore at beginning of email address] Tel: 0131-317-4100.

We’re still waiting for a response from Natural England about their gas gun ‘guidance’.

Update on pesticide leg bands being attached to red grouse

Acarcidal leg band GWCT 2008 - CopyFollowing yesterday’s blog about pesticide legs bands being attached to female red grouse to deter ticks (see here), Countryman’s Weekly has been in touch:

We’d like to point out that we printed a correction to the article above in our edition of April 20 (we are a weekly title), which stated that the shoot “does not use pesticides in their dosing process“”.

Ah, so it’s just the chemotherapy drug Levamisole hydrochloride that they’re using then? What a huge relief that will be to everyone considering eating red grouse from this estate.

However, just because Cabrach Estate isn’t using pesticides to dose their red grouse (if you believe Countryman’s Weekly), that doesn’t mean that other grouse moors are not using them. The author of the original article (Linda Mellor) clearly believes pesticide leg bands are commonly used as a grouse moor management technique, otherwise she wouldn’t have written:

There has been a marked increase in grouse survival rates through this type of tick prevention‘.

As we pointed out yesterday, Linda is a professional freelance writer specialising in the game-shooting industry – if anyone should know, it would be her.

And if pesticide leg bands are not commonly used, why would the GWCT include specific advice on their website about how to use them (even though they’re unlicensed for use), as recently as last month?!

The thing is, just like this industry’s use of super-strength medicated grit with added de-wormer drugs, their use of toxic & poisonous lead shot, and their use of chemotherapy drugs, who is monitoring their use of pesticides to dose red grouse?

Er, that’d be nobody.

To say the grouse shooting industry is unregulated would be the understatement of the century.

Sign the petition to ban driven grouse shooting HERE

Trial date set for Angus Glens gamekeeper for alleged pole-trapping offences

Last month we blogged about court proceedings in the case of an Angus Glens gamekeeper, Craig Graham, who is facing accusations of alleged pole-trapping offences on the Brewlands Estate (see here).

Graham, 51, is accused of setting and re-setting a pole trap, baited with a pheasant carcass, between 9-17th July 2015.

At a third hearing at Forfar Sheriff Court yesterday, Graham pleaded not guilty to the charges.

This has now triggered a trial, provisionally set for 9th September 2016, with an intermediate diet to be heard on 16 August 2016.

The red grouse and pesticide scandal: it’s hard to swallow

Last year we wrote a blog called The red grouse and medicated grit scandal: it’s hard to swallow (here). The opening paragraph of that blog went like this:

Just when you thought that all the detrimental environmental and health hazards associated with driven grouse moor management had been exposed, and just when you thought you understood the extent of corruption and/or incompetence by the government agencies responsible for preventing the detrimental environmental and health hazards associated with driven grouse moor management, along comes something else to make your jaw drop. This time it’s medicated grit‘.

The blog was about the unregulated and unlicensed use by grouse moor managers of super-strength medicated grit (used to treat red grouse against infestations of the parasitic Strongyle worm) and how the Government agencies responsible for food safety were not testing to see whether the active drug (Flubendazole) was reaching the human food chain because those agencies ‘didn’t know where to find red grouse for testing’. Unbelievable, literally.

Well, it doesn’t end there. We’ve now uncovered another potential health hazard associated with eating driven red grouse and this time it’s pesticides.

Last month a blog reader (thank you) sent us this clipping from the April 2016 edition of Countryman’s Weekly:

Countrymans Weekly April 2016 - Copy

This young lad works on the Cabrach Estate in NE Scotland. In the article he talks about how busy he’d been in April, catching up red grouse at night to force a tube down their throats to administer a powerful veterinary drug (Levamisole hydrochloride) to kill the parasitic strongyle worm.

Amazingly, catching up grouse at night to administer medication is legal in Scotland throughout the year (except between 16 April – 31 July) under an SNH General Licence. Interestingly, it is only permissible in England during the grouse-shooting season (12 August – 10 December), although this raises serious concerns about the high probability of the drug entering the human food chain via shot birds (see here). It is NOT permissible to catch up red grouse to administer medication during the closed season in England, according to recent advice from Natural England. This is important – we’ll come back to it.

Now, back to the article. What we’re particularly interested in is the last three sentences. These are not direct quotes from the young trainee gamekeeper, but have been inserted by the article’s author who we believe was someone called Linda Mellor. Linda Mellor is a professional freelance writer, specialising in writing articles for the game-shooting industry, so we might expect her to know what’s going on on the ground:

Two go out on a quad at night; the passenger uses a net to catch up the grouse, typically females first, and ties a pesticide leg band onto the bird. This protects her directly and indirectly protects her chicks as they acquire some pesticide while brooding. There has been a marked increase in grouse survival rates through this type of tick prevention‘.

Eh? Leg bands impregnated with pesticides are being attached to the legs of female red grouse (in Scotland) to protect them and their chicks from ticks which can transmit Louping Ill Virus (and thus enhancing grouse productivity)? Really? That’s astonishing!

Acarcidal leg band GWCT 2008 - Copy

What type of pesticide is being used? What strength of pesticide is being used? For how long does the pesticide last? What is the effect on predators that may ingest a pesticide-treated red grouse? Is the pesticide licensed for use on wild birds that will later enter the human food chain? What about the statutory 28-day withdrawal period of all veterinary drugs prior to an animal entering the human food chain? Remember, the General Licence in Scotland does not permit the catching-up of red grouse until after 31st July, but the grouse-shooting season opens on 12th August. That means that these pesticide leg bands will not be removed in time to comply with the statutory 28-day withdrawal period. That makes the use of these pesticide leg bands illegal.

We’d not heard of this particular aspect of grouse moor management (perhaps it’s one of those that the GWCT is so keen to ‘keep under the radar‘) so we did a bit of digging. It turns out that several years ago various trials took place (in Scotland) to test the efficacy of this technique, some by independent researchers (e.g. see: Mougeot et al 2008 acarcide leg bands) and some by the GWCT.

There’s a useful article in the GWCT’s 2008 Annual Review (here – see pages 48-49), that concluded these pesticide leg bands did appear to reduce the tick burden of grouse chicks but that further research was required to confirm the findings.

There’s also a fascinating published thesis on the subject, that explains, among other things, how the active drug (in this case Permethrin, commonly used as an insect repellent and also used to treat scabies and pubic lice!) circulates through the body of the grouse via the bloodstream and how Permethrin-impregnated wing tags have also been trialled. It concludes that further research is required to test the effectiveness of these pesticide leg bands on the productivity of large scale grouse populations: Thesis 2011 acaricidal treatment red grouse

Now, all this research took place several years ago so we were interested in what ‘advice’ the GWCT may be giving out about the use of pesticide leg bands in 2016. Here’s what we found (downloaded from the GWCT website on 14th April 2016):

GWCT advice pesticide leg bands_website14April2016 - Copy

So, GWCT acknowledges that pesticide leg bands are not currently licensed for use on red grouse, but they suggest that grouse moor managers can adapt ‘existing products which require an off-label prescription from a veterinary surgeon’. In other words, find yourself a tame vet and do what you like, in exactly the same way grouse moor managers get around the licensing restrictions of using super-strength medicated grit (see here).

What’s also interesting about this GWCT advice is that it doesn’t make any reference to the restrictions of catching up grouse in England outside of the shooting season. Therefore their advice implies that it’s ok to do this in England, despite clear warning from Natural England that catching up grouse to administer medication between 11 Dec – 11 August is illegal (see here).

So, on the day when Marks and Spencer announced they’re preparing to sell red grouse in their stores this year (see here and here), on the advice of the GWCT(!), here are some of the ‘healthy’ things M&S can tell their customers they’ll be consuming as they tuck in to their ‘healthy and natural’ M&S red grouse:

  • Excessive amounts of toxic poisonous lead (over 100 times the lead levels that would be legal for other meat – see here)
  • Unknown quantities of the veterinary drug Flubendazole (see here)
  • Unknown quantities of the veterinary drug Levamisole hydrochloride (also used in chemotherapy treatment for humans with colon cancer – see here)
  • Unknown quantities of the pesticide Permethrin (used topically to treat scabies and pubic lice; probably not that great to ingest)
  • They should also know that their red grouse may also be diseased with Cryptosporidiosis (see here).

Yum!

And then there’s all the environmentally-damaging effects of driven grouse moor management, as well as all the associated wildlife slaughter, both legal and illegal, but this blog is long enough already.

Ban driven grouse shooting: please sign the petition HERE

UPDATE 13 May 2016: Update on pesticide leg bands being attached to red grouse here

Raven hysteria grows, aided by BBC

Last month we blogged about calls to add Ravens to the Scottish General Licence, which would allow the indiscriminate killing of this species (see here).

Our blog was tongue-in-cheek, illustrated by a picture of a raven carrying off a polar bear cub, to highlight the ridiculousness of the hysteria. (Illustration by Jackie Morris, from The Ice Bear)

raven carrying polar bear cub

Since then, the frenzy has been ramped up somewhat, culminating in an appallingly biased report on last night’s BBC Reporting Scotland (available to view here, but only until 7pm tonight. Piece starts at 10.10 mins).

In a nutshell, Ravens can currently be killed, on individual licences issued by SNH, where they are considered to pose a threat of ‘serious damage’ to livestock. However, farmers and gamekeepers are saying these individual licences are too restrictive and they want Ravens to be added to the General Licence so they may be killed indiscriminately, in the same way crows are killed. A petition has been launched but so far has only attracted 2,684 signatures, despite being widely publicised by the farming community as well as by the game-shooting community.

In contrast, a petition calling for SNH to maintain the protected status of Ravens in Scotland has reached 28, 453 signatures (see here).

At the heart of the calls from the farming and game-shooting communities is a distinct lack of factual evidence. Where are the post-mortem results of these “hundreds of lambs” that farmers are claiming have been killed by Ravens? Just because they see a Raven (well-known for being quick to exploit scavenging opportunities) pecking at a dead sheep doesn’t mean the sheep has been killed by the Raven.

Other lack of factual evidence (more like an old wives’ tale) about the supposed impact of Ravens on waders was put forward last year by Doug McAdam, CEO of Scottish Land & Estates. This was ably torn to shreds, using scientific data, by Ian Thomson of RSPB Scotland (have a read here).

Last night’s BBC report opened with the line: “In scenes that are more Hitchcock than Countryfile, hundreds of young lambs are being killed by attacks from Ravens”. The report didn’t improve, with phrases like “Wreaking havoc”, “Carnage”, “Images of the slaughtered lambs are too gory to show you”, “Hundreds of losses”, “Raven numbers have exploded over the past year”, and “Birds of darkness”.

Birds of darkness?! Come on BBC, how on earth does this resemble objective, impartial broadcasting!

The BBC report included interviews with individuals who were all pro-Raven-killing but there wasn’t one representative from any conservation organisation to challenge the so-called ‘facts’.

Not only did the BBC report exclude any commentary from a conservation organisation, it also excluded information about the counter-petition to maintain the Raven’s protected status, it excluded any discussion of Raven foraging behaviour (i.e. scavenging vs actual predation), it failed to mention that the Scottish Raven population is still recovering from persecution – it’s doing well in some areas but is still absent in other areas and is still subject to illegal persecution, notably from poisoning, it failed to discuss the husbandry practices of sheep farmers in an area with the harshest climate in Britain and how those practices may impact on lamb deaths, and it failed to mention the population status of Ravens and sheep:

The current breeding population for Ravens in Scotland is estimated at 6,000 pairs.

The current population of sheep in Scotland, according to Scottish Government stats, is 6.7 million sheep.

Perhaps the worst aspect of the BBC report was the accompanying footage. There was footage of a few Ravens at the beginning, but then inexplicably it switched to footage of Rooks! And not just Rooks flying around above some sheep, but it included footage of a rookery – a large cluster of nests in a few trees, which would mislead any viewer who can’t differentiate between a Rook and a Raven into thinking that Ravens are so common they’re nesting in colonies next to lambing fields!

There was a brief interview with Robbie Kernahan of SNH who said that Ravens would be considered for inclusion on the General Licence at a forthcoming meeting. We understand that meeting is due to take place on Monday 16th May.

Last year it is understood that SNH issued 120 licences to kill Ravens, resulting in 560 shot birds. There is absolutely no scientific justification whatsoever to add the Raven to the General Licence, which would undoubtedly result in thousands of unregulated deaths, especially when the Raven population is still in recovery.

If you want to sign the petition to send a clear message to SNH that Ravens should NOT be added to the General Licence but should remain a protected species, please sign HERE.

If you want to complain to the BBC about their chronically biased reporting, please email: haveyoursay@bbc.co.uk

Statement from Cairngorms National Park Authority re: shot goshawk

mon-15-june-copyGrant Moir, Chief Executive of the Cairngorms National Park Authority, has today issued a statement about the recent shooting of a goshawk (here) on land within the National Park:

We are incredibly frustrated to again be putting out a statement condemning the shooting of a raptor in the National Park. We must ensure such crimes become a thing of the past. We will be working with the new Minister for Environment to consider what else we can do in the National Park, building on public support for our wildlife and finding ways of getting more eyes and ears on the ground. We encourage anyone with information relating to this incident to contact the police by calling 101”.

The condemnation is good and is the least we should expect. However, the bit about “We will be working with the new Minister for Environment to consider what else we can do….” shows good intent, but in reality amounts to little more than a PR soundbite.

Remember the Cairngorms Nature action plan, aimed at restoring raptor populations & managing mountain hares for the benefit of golden eagles within the Cairngorms National Park (CNP), launched with great fanfare in May 2013 (see here)?

A resounding failure, as evidenced in May 2013 by the mysterious ‘disappearance’ of a young sat-tagged golden eagle on a CNP grouse moor (here); in May 2013 by the alleged ‘coordinated hunting’ and subsequent shooting of a hen harrier on a CNP grouse moor (here); in April 2014 by the mysterious ‘disappearance’ on a CNP grouse moor of East Scotland’s first fledged white-tailed eagle in ~200 years (here); in May 2014 by this video of masked armed gunmen attacking a goshawk nest within the CNP (here); in October 2015 by the publication of a scientific study documenting the long term decline of breeding peregrines on grouse moors in the eastern portion of the CNP (see here); in February 2016 by the publication of a scientific study documenting the catastrophic decline of breeding hen harriers in the eastern portion of the CNP (here); in March 2016 by the discovery of a dead hen harrier ‘Lad’, suspected shot, found on a grouse moor within the CNP (here); in March 2016 by the news that mountain hares were being massacred on grouse moors within the CNP (here); and again in March 2016 by news that further mountain hare massacres were taking place on grouse moors within the CNP (here); and now in May 2016 by the news that a goshawk was shot on an estate within the CNP (here).

And also remember, the CNPA has already met with the (now former) Environment Minister in January 2015 to discuss the issue of raptor persecution and moorland management within the NP – we blogged about that meeting here. The Environment Minister said afterwards that she ‘welcomed the positive collaboration shown between the CNPA and landowners and looked forward to seeing a real difference on the ground‘.

What is the point of the CNPA having further discussions with another naive Environment Minister? It’s utterly pointless. The grouse moor managers within the Cairngorms National Park are running rings around the Park Authority, and have been doing so for years: Golden eagles poisoned, golden eagles ‘disappearing’, white-tailed eagles ‘disappearing’, hen harriers being shot, breeding hen harriers in catastrophic decline, goshawks being shot, goshawk nests being attacked, breeding peregrines in long-term decline, mountain hares massacred. All within the Cairngorms National Park, the so-called ‘jewel’ of Scottish wildlife. It’s scandalous.

What we need, urgently, from the CNPA is action, not more hand-wringing and platitudes. For a start, the CNPA could be looking at the Sandford Principle (see here and here). There’s an excellent blog called Parks Watch Scotland that has also suggested some courses of action the CNPA could take: see here and here.

The CNPA CEO said today he was ‘incredibly frustrated’. We all are, but the difference is the CNPA has the power to do something about it.

Actually, we do have some power, albeit more indirect than the powers of the CNPA. We have the power to blog about the rampant and persistent persecution of wildlife within the National Park and by doing so, raise awareness amongst an unsuspecting general public of just what is happening to THEIR wildlife within the boundary of THEIR National Park. We’re pretty sure that as more people get to hear about it, the vast majority will be outraged and will join the call for further action to be taken against those grouse moor estates.

Please sign the petition and join 35,000+ calling for a parliamentary debate on the banning of driven grouse shooting: HERE