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A flag-waving celebration

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Shetland is once again celebrating its Flag Day on midsummer’s day 21st June.

People throughout the isles are encouraged to fly the blue and white flag from as many vantage points as possible on that day, whether from buildings, flag poles or vehicles.

The Shetland flag

The Shetland flag

As part of the celebrations on Friday SIC is inviting folk to submit photographs that incorporate the Shetland flag. People have until 21st July to submit entries. The best entries will be published on the council website.

SIC convener Malcolm Bell said: “The Shetland flag is now an established and recognised symbol of Shetland’s identity. Many of us proudly wear it every day and my badge is often commented upon when I attend events away from Shetland. I encourage everyone with Shetland at heart to support the Flag Day events and the photographic competition in particular.”

The flag, which has the blue of the saltire and the Nordic cross, was designed by Roy Gronneberg and Bill Adams in 1969, 500 years after Shetland was transferred from Norway to Scotland. It was officially recognised in 2005 and Shetland Flag Day was started in 2007.

Photos should be emailed as a jpeg file to communications@shetland.gov.uk


Sports Fixtures for w/e Friday 21st June, 2013

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JUNIOR INTER-COUNTY

SUNDAY 16th & MONDAY 17th: Shetland v Orkney Junior Inter-County Sports:
16th: Athletics 10.30am Clickimin Track;
16th: Netball 4pm Clickimin Centre;
16th: Football 6.30pm Gilbertson Park;
17th: Hockey 10.30am Brae;
17th: Swimming 2pm Clickimin Pool.

SENIOR FOOTBALL LEAGUES

(All kick-offs 6.45pm unless otherwise stated)

Friday 14th G&S Flooring Premier League:
Celtic v Delting at Seafield;
Spurs v Whitedale at Gilbertson Park (referee Michael Grant);
Thistle v Scalloway at Clickimin South (Derrick Bradley).

Saturday 15thBill Hill Cup (joint reserve and works league knockout, sponsored by Colin Campbell Sports – quarter finals):
Celtic B v Scalloway B at Seafield (Robbie Summers);
Delting B v Wastside Rebels at Brae (Daniel Mainland);
Spurs B v Chernobyl at Clickimin South (Robbie Leask);
Whitedale B v Ness United C at Strom Park (David Mouat).

Monday 17thManson Cup (semi-finals, second leg):
Celtic v White­dale at Gilbertson Park (Robbie Leask);
Thistle v Whalsay at Seafield (Steven Goodlad).

Wednesday 19thMind Your Head Res­erve League:
Ness United A/B v Delting B at Cunningsburgh (Robbie Goudie);
Scalloway B v Celtic B at Fraser Park (Martin Young);
Thistle B v Whitedale B at venue to be confirmed (John Saunders);
Yell v Spurs B at Mid Yell (Gary Smith).

WORKS LEAGUE

(All kick-offs 6pm unless stated otherwise)

Tomorrow 15thBill Hall Cup (joint works league and reserve league knockout):
Spurs B v Dynamo Chernobyl at Lerwick (referee Robbie Leask);
Celtic B v Scalloway B at Lerwick (Robbie Summers);
Yell or Whitedale B v Ness United A/B at Mid Yell or Strom Park (David Mouat);
Delting B v Wastside Rebels at Brae (Daniel Mainland).

Tuesday 18thInjury Shetland Works League:
Ness United A/B v Baroc Revolution at Cunningsburgh (6.30pm, Derrick Bradley).

HOCKEY (at Midway Pitch, Brae)

Monday 17th
Shetland Select v Scalloway at 6.30pm.

Thursday 20th
Shearer Shield: Zetland v Scalloway at 6.30pm (umpires Simon Skinner, Sarah Couper and Whalsay represent­ative).
Grutness Trophy: Burra v Whalsay at 7.50pm (Skinner, Couper and Scalloway rep).

 

 

SIC frustrated by continued government inaction on housing debt

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Gary Robinson

Gary Robinson

Shetland Islands Council is urging the UK and Scottish Governments to recognise the “critical” urgency of arranging talks to resolve its outstanding £40 million housing debt.

Political leader Gary Robinson said yesterday that the SIC had written to both governments, along with local authority umbrella group Cosla, having become frustrated at the length of time it is taking to broker a meeting.

With a “sticking plaster solution” only in place to cover interest payments on the debt in 2013/14, Mr Robinson said it was vital an agreement was struck before this autumn’s budget-setting exercise for 2014/15.

It comes as The Shetland Times’ petition aimed at getting the debt wiped out continues to grow steadily. Four weeks after it was launched, the petition now boasts 1,586 signatures, including 264 paper coupons. Numbers have doubled in the past fortnight.

Shetland MSP Tavish Scott writes below that it is of “little consequence” to SIC tenants whether it is Westminster or Holyrood that writes off the debt. Both remain “desperate for oil revenues that flow through Sullom Voe”.

“The moral argument is unarguable,” Mr Scott writes. “If they all need Shetland so badly then it is time to write a cheque.

“All [tenants] know is that they pay the debt and if it is not written off then rents rise, repairs are cancelled and a spiral of housing decline will take place.”

Last week Highlands and Islands list MSP Jean Urquhart quibbled with Northern Isles MP Alistair Carmichael’s assertion that the Scottish Government should act to address the debt burden.

Mr Carmichael said the SNP government still received money to service the debt but chose to spend it elsewhere. Ms Urquhart countered that it is the UK state which has benefited from over £300 billion in revenue from North Sea oil, and called for “visible action… within the halls of Westminster.”

For his part, Mr Robinson said the debt pre-dated devolution, and he hoped the Scottish Government would “come on board and try to help us make that case to Westminster”.

He said: “Ultimately the pledges came from the Westminster government of the day, and I think you’d probably have quite a tough argument that those pledges and the debts incurred against the pledges were devolved to Scotland.”

Mr Robinson added that a date set aside for a meeting with the two governments “went by the wayside”, since when “it’s all gone very quiet”.

“We’ve just written again to try and push this along, and I’m due to be in Edinburgh at the end of the month. If I’ve not heard anything before then I’ll certainly be raising it with Cosla again, with a view to getting them to push for the meeting.”

He also warned that, while the council has gradually managed the debt down from £50 million thanks to favourable interest rates, even a one per cent increase would “have significant impact on the interest due to be paid on the debt”.

This newspaper has requested an interview with UK chief secretary to the treasury Danny Alexander. In opposition he actively campaigned for Highland Council’s housing debt to be cleared.

We have also asked to speak to Scottish housing minister Margaret Burgess. A spokeswoman for the minister said yesterday: “We are aware that [the SIC] is working hard to reduce its housing debt to a sustainable level, and the Scottish Government will continue to work with the council on this where that is possible.

“The housing minister is due to meet with members of the council over the coming months to discuss this situation in further detail.”

You can sign The Shetland Times’ petition here.

Financial boost for anti-windfarm group’s legal fund

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Campaign group Sustainable Shetland has been given a £3,000 boost as its legal challenge over the Viking windfarm project draws nearer a conclusion.

The judicial review into the decision to grant planning permission without having a local public inquiry is expected to conclude at the Court of Session in Edinburgh next week.

One of the UK’s leading conservation charities, the John Muir Trust, has donated £3,000 to help cover Sustainable Shetland’s legal costs.

Permission for the 103-turbine windfarm was granted by the Scottish government in 2010. The group’s legal challenge got under way in January, but was adjourned to see whether the UK government wished to get involved. It resumed in early May but legal wrangling resulted in further delays.

Head of policy at the John Muir Trust Helen McDade said the donation was “in the spirit of solidarity with a besieged community, and in support for a just cause”.

“We are delighted to make this donation to Sustainable Shetland’s legal fund. The Trust joins with the group in demanding an inquiry where the claims of the developers can be rigorously tested.

“The development, of 103 turbines, each rising higher than the tallest buildings in Glasgow and Edinburgh, would be visible across most of the Shetland mainland.

“The site will stretch up to 11 miles long and seven miles wide, damaging and destroying precious natural habitats. It will require 65 miles of new roads, up to 10 metres wide, which will be bulldozed through peat and blanket bog, releasing vast quantities of carbon into the atmosphere – contributing to the very greenhouse gas emissions this scheme is supposed to be reducing.

“It will mean the construction of a number of new buildings of concrete and steel, and the excavation of a dozen quarries to provide materials.

“We are 100 per cent behind the legal action by Sustainable Shetland to prevent this ecological catastrophe which would severely impact on Shetland’s reputation as a wonderful natural heritage tourism destination.”

Sustainable Shetland’s judicial challenge centres around a claim that the Scottish government failed to comply with its obligations under the EU Birds Directive – in relation to the windfarm’s potential impact on the whimbrel, a migratory wading bird. The government insists it took the birds directive, and the other concerns of objectors, into consideration when making its decision.

Weatherman Batty’s anti-poverty challenge coming to Northern Isles

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STV weatherman Sean Batty is taking up a cycling challenge in the Northern Isles to raise money for children and young people in Scotland affected by poverty.

The 150-mile route will see Sean cycle across Shetland and Orkney meeting local people, schools and community groups who are raising funds for the STV Appeal 2013.

Sean Batty will be cycling across the Northern Isles this summer.

Sean Batty will be cycling across the Northern Isles this summer.

Sean’s challenge will take him across Shetland on Sunday 28th July starting in Unst, cycling from Burrafirth to Belmont, through Yell and from Toft to Sumburgh Airport. The next day will be spent fundraising in Shetland before travelling to Orkney.

On Tuesday, 30th July, Sean will cycle an 80-mile route round the west of mainland Orkney, meeting fundraisers along the way, back to Kirkwall and then south to Burwick.

The cycle ride will be filmed for an STV Appeal programme later this year.

Sean said: “Over the past two years of the STV Appeal I’ve clocked up around 180 miles for the charity and this year I am aiming to do around 200 miles in just a few days. These challenges have been made so much easier by the knowledge that there are so many generous people out there that are willing to contribute towards this great charity.

“The first year of the appeal I cycled the length of the Western Isles which I found extremely difficult as it had been years since I had been on a bike.

“I’ve never been to Shetland and Orkney and I’m also really looking forward to seeing the Northern Isles and meeting lots of people who are fundraising along the way.

“It has been great being part of the team that delivers the cheques to community projects across the country and seeing where the money goes. I know that the money raised for the appeal makes such a big difference to so many young people and the best bit is all the money raised stays in Scotland to help our own young people.”

Aquaculture award for NAFC centre

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The NAFC Marine Centre in Scalloway won the aquaculture supplier of the year award at The Crown Estate’s Scottish Marine Aquaculture Awards.

NAFC Marine Centre business development manager Alan Bourhill receives the award from director of Knox Marine Dave Hutchens.

NAFC Marine Centre business development manager Alan Bourhill receives the award from director of Knox Marine Dave Hutchens.

Following Thursday’s award ceremony in Edinburgh senior development manager at the NAFC, Alan Bourhill, said: “These awards are renowned for recognising ‘the best of the best’ in the aquaculture industry, so we were delighted to receive two shortlist nominations, but to go ahead and win an award is a fantastic achievement for the centre.

“I am very pleased that the innovation, professionalism and commitment to customer care shown by our aquaculture development team over the past few years has resulted in the award of ‘aquaculture supplier of the year’.

“We have been committed to developing and delivering an industry-focused bespoke portfolio of aquaculture courses, so to receive this type of validation and support from our industry clients is very satisfying and a great endorsement of our training products and services.”

The Crown Estate’s Scottish Commissioner Gareth Baird congatulated NAFS and said: “Such excellence and high standards will help ensure the continuing success of an industry that is critically important to Scotland’s coastal communities and local economies.”

ALLIED TAXIS SHETLAND LTD.

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Full-time taxi drivers
Required for dayshift and nightshift.

Part-time taxi drivers
Required for weekend days and nights and occasional shifts.

Part-time taxi drivers
Required for contract work.

All applicants must be over 25 and hold an SIC Taxi Driver’s Licence and a clean driving licence. Assistance can be given for applicants to obtain an SIC Taxi Driver’s Licence.

Part-time telephone/radio operator
Required for weekend shifts and holiday cover. No experience necessary as full training will be given.

For details on all positions Tel. 690069.

VAUXHALL ASTRA BREEZE

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1.7 diesel, SV08 AF0, 27,000 miles, colour star silver, one owner, well maintained and in excellent condition.

£5,500.

Tel. 01595 693554.


MICHAEL INKSTER & CO.

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Farm of Lud,
Quendale, Shetland

This represents an ideal opportunity to purchase a substantial farm situated in the South Mainland area of Shetland comprising approximately 41 Ha (approximately 101 acres) of mainly prime land. The quality of land is believed to be amongst the best in Shetland.

Included is a cluster of farm buildings near the public road and a sheep/cattle “cru” in one of the fields, as well as a hill right for 30 sheep though the byre/shed is excluded from the sale along with a small area of surrounding land and the necessary access – a plan is available for prospective purchasers. There are also three rights of way through a portion of the farm.

It is thought that this farm will be of particular interest for those with existing agricultural interests in the area but equally it represents an ideal opportunity for anyone looking to acquire a substantial, good quality working farm in a lovely scenic area of Shetland within easy commuting distance of Lerwick and very close to Sumburgh Airport.

Offers are invited in excess of £200,000.

To view telephone 01595 695266 or contact selling agents.

Michael Inkster & Co.,
I&C Solicitors & Estate Agents,
159 Commercial Street,
Lerwick.
Tel: (01595) 696901
Fax: (01595) 696904
email: michaelinksterandco@lineone.net
Internet: www.shetlandislesproperty.co.uk

KGQ HOTELS LTD

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Full-time Receptionist

Required, experience not essential as training will be given.

Application form or CV to:

Marna at the Queens Hotel,
Tel. 01595 692826.

CITROËN BERLINGO VAN

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SM 03 WFF, MoT April 2014.

£500

Tel. 07765 604722.

BURRA

WANTED

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2×4 or 4×4 single or double cab pick-up. Landrover Defender considered.

Tel. 07794 954952

DOWLE, SMITH & RUTHERFORD

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Photo of 2 Murrayston, Lerwick2 Murrayston,
Lerwick

Two bedroom, end-terraced property benefiting from a goodsized garden, situated on the west side of Clickimin Loch within easy walking distance of the Clickimin Leisure Centre, Sound School & Tesco’s.

In addition to two double bedrooms, the double glazed accommodation also includes a 23’, dual-aspect living / diningroom, kitchen, shower room and a useful boxroom. Electric storage heating. Grassed garden area plus a single garage.

Some modernisation would be beneficial which is reflected in the price, offering an excellent fi rst time buy with the benefit of a
mature garden and a single garage. EPC: E.

Viewing – please telephone 01595 695747 (daytime) or
01595 694410 (evenings & weekends).

Offers over £125,000

Further information from and all offers to:

Dowle, Smith & Rutherford,
Solicitors and Estate Agents,
St Olaf’s Hall,
Church Road,
Lerwick,
Shetland.
ZE1 0FD.
Tel: 01595 695583
Email: property@d-s-r.co.uk
www.d-s-r.co.uk

High living costs threaten future of remote communities – report

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The outcome of Shetland’s bid to continue to receive regional aid from the EU could have been different if a report highlighting the threat facing the future of rural communities was available at the time.

That is the view of the SIC’s political leader Gary Robinson following the release of a report highlighting the worrying chasm in living expenses between urban and rural areas.

The study – A Minimum Income Standard for Remote Rural Scotland – showed people living in rural communities need to earn up to 40 per cent more to achieve the same living standards as people in urban areas.

Attempts by Shetland Islands Council to have the isles recognised as being “on the periphery of the periphery” floundered last month.

New rules on regional aid meant Shetland was excluded from automatic classification as an assisted area, because its gross domestic product (GDP) was above the EU average – despite an argument at the time that the Commission’s rationale failed to take account of economic realities in the isles.

Mr Robinson says the outcome could have been different if the information contained in the report was available to the council during its intense lobbying campaign at all government-levels.

Gary Robinson taking part in the Our Islands – Our Future conference last month. A new report suggests the future will be financially difficult. Photo: Rosalind Griffiths

Gary Robinson taking part in the Our Islands – Our Future conference last month. A new report suggests the future will be financially difficult. Photo: Rosalind Griffiths

He hopes it may be used to help back subsequent arguments by the Scottish government for Shetland to receive the aid after all.

“My immediate thought was that it would have been quite useful to have had the information in black and white to have taken to the European Commission,” he said.

“It maybe would have been helpful in that respect. That is the kind of thing we would be able to use it for.

“Similarly there’s a review of local government spending at the moment as well and that [the report] is the kind of thing we could probably bring into play to argue our corner.”

Mr Robinson said the report, which was commissioned by a group of 10 public bodies and local authorities including the SIC, would help make people aware of the costs of living in island groups like Shetland.

The next step, he said, was to find ways of reducing those costs.

“I think we’ve all known for a while that everything is more expensive, [but] we’ve maybe not been able to quantify exactly how much by.

“Now we’ve got that kind of information. But I think the other thing has to be to actually try to minimise the cost difference between the islands and the mainland, for example.

“The whole concept of subsidiarity within the European Union is that there should be equal access and nobody should be disadvantaged.”

Asked if the report could be brought back to the Commission for Shetland’s case to be re-examined, he said: “I did get a letter on the back of the announcement from Nicola Sturgeon saying the Scottish government hadn’t given up and was going to continue to fight our corner.

“They were hoping they might be able to persuade the commission to look at Shetland as being contiguous with the rest of the Highlands and Islands. It [the report] could be helpful to any argument they make.”

Council convener Malcolm Bell welcomed the report’s findings.

“We have always known Shetland in common with elsewhere in rural Scotland has a high cost of living, although there are obvious benefits too. I welcome this report as, for the first time, it provides clear evidence of the problem and quantifies the cost.”

The report shows:

• That people in remote areas pay higher prices for many goods, including food, household items and clothing.

• That delivery charges for items ordered remotely add further to the cost of living.

• That households have to pay much more for home energy to get the same level of comfort as elsewhere in the UK.

It highlights household budgets which, including rent, rise from almost £320 per week for a single adult living in a remote mainland town to just under £672 for a couple with a family in an island settlement.

The study is critical of the range of welfare benefits, insisting the system fails to cover the cost of living in remote areas.

A single person on basic benefits has less than a third of what they require, it says.

A pensioner on the minimum pension credit falls by “considerably more” than ten per cent short if he or she lives in the most remote areas.

The report states: “This study has found that households in remote rural Scotland require significantly higher incomes to attain the same minimum living standard as those living elsewhere in the UK.

“This is partly due to the costs of additional travel, but mainly caused by the cost of buying the same things as elsewhere, and the extra cost of keeping warm.

“These high living costs threaten the sustainability of local communities by making it harder for people from a range of backgrounds and ages to live there at an acceptable standard.”

The shortfall in broadband coverage is also highlighted in the findings, which has long been a bugbear for many in the isles.

“Although the basic principles of what would meet people’s minimum needs for communication and technology were the same in rural and remote Scotland as elsewhere, the difference here was in the level of choice available in terms of service providers,” the report states.

“Participants said that they were limited to accessing broadband via BT and that Vodafone was the only mobile phone network that had sufficiently wide coverage.”

The report does point to benefits of living in rural communities, however.

It states people in isolated areas believe it important to participate in local, community-based and fund-raising activities.

It also states “social interventions” already prevent costs from being even higher.

These include free pensioner travel by bus and ferry, social housing that keeps rent and fuel bills down and free prescriptions and eye tests.


Red-throated diver dies after becoming tangled in illegal net

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The dangers of illegal trout nets were demonstrated this week when a rare red-throated diver was killed and another trapped in the sea off Cunningsburgh.

A member of the public spotted the birds on Monday, which were caught in an almost invisible monofilament net close to the shore at Mail Beach, and reported the incident to the RSPB.

RSPB Northern Isles area manager Pete Ellis said the net was about 20 metres long with little grey floats along its length. The net was “not obvious”, he said, and had it not been for the birds it would have been difficult to spot.

Glen Tyler of SNH (left) and RSPB Northern Isles manager Pete Ellis carefully free the birds – one surviving red-throated diver, a drowned one and also a drowned shag.

Glen Tyler of SNH (left) and RSPB Northern Isles manager Pete Ellis carefully free the birds – one surviving red-throated diver, a drowned one and also a drowned shag.

Mr Ellis said: “In my view it was an illegally set trout net, which are incredibly dangerous to birds. Underwater monofilament nets are virtually transparent and the birds don’t see them.”

He said that red-throated divers, which are a highly protected species, nest on lochans but feed in the sea, where they catch sandeels. This makes them vulnerable to nets.

Convinced the net was illegal, Mr Ellis called the police. Police said there were two alleged offences: setting the net and killing the red-throated diver.

The species is rare nationally but Shetland is a “hot spot”, having about one third of the British population.

With the help of a passer-by, the net was retrieved from the sea. As Mr Ellis had suspected, one of the red-throated divers was dead and the other injured. There was also a dead shag entangled. Mr Ellis was able to cut the injured bird out and release it.

Now, he said, he wants to draw the public’s attention to the issue. Nets were a problem about 10 years ago but had not been much in evidence since then. He said: “It would be a real shame if these things are happening again.

“These nets are illegal and extremely dangerous to wildlife. We want to draw people’s attention to them … and [ask that people] report them to the police and RSPB, particularly if there are birds in them.”

Secretary of Shetland Anglers Association Alec Miller emphasised the group’s strong opposition to such practices.

“Sea trout are an endangered species, from our point of view” he said, “and we’ve been undertaking a restocking programme for nearly ten years. We would hope that people would be aware of that and not be setting nets to catch sea trout, particularly as it can have consequences like this.”

Shetland’s police chief Angus McInnes confirmed that setting nets close to the shore such as this was a form of poaching, as well as posing a danger to other wildlife.

He asked anyone with information about who may have set the net, or anyone who finds a similar net elsewhere, to contact Lerwick police on 101, or Crimestoppers on 0800 555 111.

Rosalind Griffiths and Malachy Tallack

Weather Outlook for Shetland – Friday, 12th July 2013 at 11:50

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WEATHER OUTLOOK FOR SHETLAND

Friday, 12th July 2013 at 11:50

HEADLINES

TODAY: Shetland cloudy. Orkney warm and sunny.
TONIGHT: Outbreaks of rain. Misty or fog patches. Breezy.
TOMORROW: Becoming dry and bright for a time. Rain later.
DAYS 3-5: Breezier with some rain or showers.
DAYS 6-10: Unsettled for a time then fair.

SUMMARY

Rather cloudy across Shetland with the chance of a little drizzle and mist at times, particularly later in the afternoon. Dry and bright across Orkney with some warm sunny periods.  Light to moderate SW’ly winds. Rather cloudy overnight with outbreaks of rain and drizzle along with extensive mist and coastal fog. Winds becoming moderate to fresh W to NW’ly.

Saturday dry and brighter by morning but becoming cloudier with outbreaks of rain arriving later in the afternoon. Moderate W’ly winds backing fresh SW’ly. Sunday mainly dry though rather cloudy with moderate to fresh SW to W’ly winds.

Cloudy with outbreaks of rain on Monday and Tuesday. Turning showery later as fresh SW’ly winds veer W or NW’ly. Showers dying out on Wednesday as winds ease. Perhaps a drier spell with lighter winds for the end of the week into the following weekend before unsettled and windy conditions return.

 

GENERAL SITUATION AND SYNOPSIS 06:00 UTC

As the anticyclone over the UK weakens in the north a depression near Iceland will drive a cold front east across northern Scotland later today. Though weakening this front will replace the warm, moist SW’ly of recent days with a fresher W to NW’ly airflow.

By the weekend the main centre of high pressure is forecast to be over the near Atlantic, with a ridge maintained east across the UK and a mobile SW to W’ly airflow becoming established across northern Scotland.

Present predictions suggest low pressure moving east from Iceland will maintain a SW to W’ly airflow well into next week, with a sequence of fronts affecting the Northern Isles. Later in the week and possibly during the following weekend we may see an Atlantic anticyclone building a ridge northeast across Scotland.

 

FORECAST FOR NEXT THREE DAYS

Confidence level: Confidence level: Weather type –medium. Timing – medium.

Temperatures today rising to a high of 15° or 16° Celsius and 17° or 18° in any sunshine. Perhaps 20° Celsius in the sunnier parts of Orkney. A low tonight of 8° Celsius. On Saturday and Sunday temperatures 12° to 14° Celsius by day and 8° Celsius overnight.

 

FRIDAY 12th: Rather cloudy across Fair Isle and Shetland with some brighter periods though there may also be a little drizzle and coastal fog at times Dry across Orkney with some warm sunshine.  F2-3 SW’ly winds. Cloud will thicken through the afternoon with mist and low cloud forming around the hills and headlands. Rather cloudy this evening and overnight with outbreaks of rain and drizzle along with extensive mist and coastal fog. Winds increasing F4-5 and veering W to NW’ly.

Sea State: Mostly slight becoming slight to moderate, with a 1 metre SW to W’ly wind-swell increasing 1 to 2 metres.

SATURDAY 13th: Any early mist and drizzle soon clearing to leave a dry morning with some sunny spells developing, more so over Shetland. Cloud then thickening with outbreaks of rain spreading from the west later in the afternoon. F4 W’ly winds backing F5 SW’ly.

Sea State: Moderate to slight, with a 1 to 2 metre SW to W’ly wind-swell. Becoming moderate in the west later, with a 2 metre W’ly wind-swell.

SUNDAY 14th: Mainly dry though rather cloudy with some brightness. Perhaps an occasional shower across Shetland. F4-5 SW to W’ly winds.

Sea State: Moderate to rough in the west, with a 2 to 3 metre SW to W’ly wind-swell. Mainly moderate in the east, with a 2 metre SW to W’ly wind-swell.

 

10-DAY OUTLOOK

Confidence level: Weather type – medium/low. Timing – low/medium.

Temperatures 14° to 16° Celsius by day, perhaps 17° or 18° Celsius in any sunshine. Overnight lows down to about 9° Celsius.

 

MONDAY 15th: Cloudy with outbreaks of rain and fresh SW’ly winds.

Sea State: Moderate to rough in the west, with a 2 to 3 metre SW’ly wind-swell. Mainly moderate in the east, with a 2 metre SW’ly wind-swell.

TUESDAY 16th: Cloudy with outbreaks of rain. Turning showery later as fresh SW’ly winds veer W’ly.

Sea State: Perhaps moderate to slight, with a 1 to 2 metre SW’ly wind-swell.

WEDNESDAY 17th – MONDAY 22nd: Brighter on Wednesday with scattered showers. Moderate or fresh W’ly winds. Perhaps a drier spell with lighter winds for the end of the week and into the following weekend before unsettled and windy conditions return.

Sea State on Wednesday: Possibly moderate to slight, with a 1 to 2 metre W’ly wind-swell.

 

:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

DISCLAIMER

Be aware that the weather over north-west Europe – and especially around the Northern Isles – is part of an ever-changing and dynamic system. Therefore regard the ’10-Day Outlook’ as a guide only – there are times when any outlook going beyond about 36 to 48 hours is likely to prove
unreliable.

Always check the latest forecast from the UK Met Office before undertaking any weather-dependent activity.

All forecasts are for planning purposes only.

Neither Dave Wheeler, nor any employee of Fair Isle Weather Services, accepts any liability for the accuracy of this forecast.

Dave Wheeler MBE FRMetS

Field

Fair Isle

Shetland, ZE2 9JU

Telephone: +44 (0)1595760224

Mobile: 07545822376

E-mail: dave@davewheelerphotography.com or dave.wheeler@fairisle.org.uk

Photography: www.davewheelerphotography.com

Weather: www.northisles-weather.co.uk

Fair Isle: www.fairisle.org.uk
Facebook: www.facebook.com/dave.wheeler3

Twitter: twitter.com/dawadderman

Chance to quiz Salmond and his cabinet

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Scottish government ministers will be quizzed on their vision for the country’s constitutional future when they hold a cabinet meeting in the isles for the first time this month.

Senior Nationalist MSPs are conducting a summer tour of the country to discover more about what matters to people in communities.

Ministers will host a public discussion session, focusing on the government’s vision for Scotland, at Mareel on 25th July.

They will answer questions from audience members about Scotland and its future.

Speaking to The Shetland Times ahead of the cabinet visit, First Minister Alex Salmond said: “I am delighted to be bringing the cabinet to Shetland for the first time.

“On my last visit I had a chance to meet students, staff and trustees at the fisheries college marine centre at Scalloway, and to visit the old library centre in Lerwick, as well as chairing the Convention of the Highlands and Islands.

Alex Salmond during his last visit to Shetland.

Alex Salmond during his last visit to Shetland.

“Our visit to Shetland this month marks the start of our fifth annual summer cabinet programme, bringing ministers to communities across the country – with other events planned for Hawick, Campbeltown and Fraserburgh.

“As in previous years, we want to engage with the public directly in their own communities and give the public opportunities to ‘buttonhole’ ministers on the issues that matter most to them.

“We want to talk about, and hear the public’s views on how the Scottish government, our agencies and public sector partners, are working to meet their needs, how our policies are improving education, healthcare and other services, strengthening commun­ities, supporting regeneration and supporting key sectors of the economy such as fishing, farming, energy and tourism.

“And, of course, we want to discuss our future vision for Scotland, including people’s views on the constitutional debate and next year’s referendum.

“For more than a decade, the task facing MSPs has been deciding how to allocate resources given to us by Westminster. But now, we have a real chance in deciding Scotland’s future and making sure that all decisions on our future are taken by those who care most about Scotland – those who choose to live and work in Scotland.

“This is an exciting time and as a government we want to join communities across Scotland in a positive debate on the future of our country. We want to outline to you why we believe it’s important for Scotland to have the same economic and financial powers as other nations.

“As we look forward to the year ahead sustainable economic recovery, investment with jobs for our young people will remain our absolute priority. We want to hear what the people of Shetland have to say about what and how we invest in the future. I would encourage readers of The Shetland Times to join with us as we discuss that future.”

The public discussion event is being held from 12.30pm to 2.15pm.

Attendance is free but spaces are limited, so those who wish to attend are asked to register by calling 0131 244 2262 or emailing visitsandevents@scotland.gsi.gov.uk.

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New schools plan would see Whalsay pupils stay in island until end of S3

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SIC convener Malcolm Bell

SIC convener Malcolm Bell

School pupils in Yell, Unst and Whalsay could continue receiving secondary education until the end of S3 before transferring to the Anderson High under revised SIC proposals.

The new idea will be considered by councillors at next month’s education and families committee meeting. It has already been welcomed in Whalsay, which had faced the possibility of losing its secondary department altogether. 

However, unpopular plans to shut secondaries in Aith and Sandwick remain set to go to consultation, while Skerries’s small three-pupil secondary is facing imminent threat of closure.

Whalsay Parent Council chairman Pete Gaines said most parents in the island were “pleased” that, should the fresh plan be agreed, their children would only be sent to Lerwick aged 14 or 15, rather than 11 or 12.

Islanders had been lobbying for the status quo at Symbister, but it “became clear that wasn’t going to happen”.

“I understand that not everybody in Whalsay will be happy with that scenario,” Mr Gaines told this newspaper, “but it’s the best we’re going to get, I believe. 14 is an easier age, and we think they’d be ready for that.”

Councillors will decide whether to adopt Hayfield’s revised plan on 7th August, and Mr Gaines said “the word we’re getting back is it’s likely to go through”.

“Then it will go to consultation after that and we’ll get islanders’ opinion,” he said. “From the information I’m getting so far, the majority [of parents] are happy with the offer.”

If approved, the change of tack will have wider consequences: it raises the fresh prospect of changes in Mid Yell and Baltasound, which had been spared the threat of closure in a “refreshed” blueprint for education document agreed following last year’s council elections.

It is also thought likely that parents of secondary pupils attending closure-threatened schools on the West Side and in the South Mainland will push for a similar rethink.

The SIC still intends to press ahead with consultations on shutting secondary departments at Aith and Sandwick, transferring the pupils to the Anderson High School when they finish primary school. Construction of a new school in Lerwick is due to get underway in the first half of 2014.

Mr Gaines said he thought it was probable Aith and Sandwick would now campaign to keep their departments open from S1 to S3. He added Whalsay parents “are still supporting them, and will actively support them”. 

Council convener Malcolm Bell told The Shetland Times the appetite to reconsider certain closure proposals demonstrated that “we are listening, we are taking into account what people are saying”.

While it would be better to have “no transition at all”, moving pupils at the end of S3 is seen as attractive because it fits in with nationwide alterations to how secondary education is delivered under the Curriculum for Excellence.

“We’re trying to find something that fits our very particular circumstances in terms of geography, trying to balance that with the need to deliver as high-quality as we can,” Mr Bell said.

Asked whether the same treatment ought to apply to the two mainland secondaries facing closure, Mr Bell replied: “No doubt that will come up at the committee. This is the islands – we have to try and accommodate people’s fears about very young children travelling on ferries or living in hostels.

“We have to change the style or means of delivery for a whole host of reasons. But at the same time we want to listen and take into account what people are saying, if we can tweak things to find a balance.”

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