Gillian Henshaw exhibition comes to Gleneagles Townhouse

Renowned Edinburgh-based artist Gillian Henshaw will open her first solo exhibition of 2023 at  Gleneagles Townhouse, St Andrew Square in Edinburgh on Monday 1 May.

“Colourful Impressions” showcases still life florals and some landscapes of the Gascony and Provence regions of France which, she believes, ‘evoke a happiness and allure that will leave you smiling’.

Having studied language at university, Gillian has spent many happy times in France. However, it is flowers and her garden which is her main pastime after painting. She has enjoyed designing and nurturing her own garden from scratch and gains much inspiration from the changing seasons in the gardens around her.

The exhibition is available to view from 1st-30 May daily between 9am-7pm for the public and for members and hotel guests throughout their visit to the Townhouse.

Meet Gillian in situ at the exhibition each Friday morning from 10 – 12 throughout the duration of the show.

There are 24 paintings to view or to buy in Lobby 37 at Gleneagles Townhouse. To view online visit www.gillianhenshaw.com




River City stars go on tour with The Stamping Ground

River City stars Juliet Cadzow and Jenny Hulse are set to go on tour in The Stamping Ground, including dates at the Festival Theatre.

The Stamping Ground, Eden Court.
PHOTO Ewen Weatherspoon

Juliet Cadzow is one of Scotland’s best loved actors, known for starring as Suzie Frazer in River City, Edie McCredie in Balamory, Coronation Street, and The Bill.  

Jenny Hulse is best known for playing Amber Murdoch in River City, out of this she appeared as Mary McLaughlan in ITV’s ‘In Plain Sight’, as Doris in Morag Fullerton’s ‘Doris, Dolly and the Dressing Room Divas’ and as Aine Macdonald in David McKenzie’s ‘Outlaw King’ for Netflix.

The Stamping Ground is the must-see new stage musical featuring the hits of Runrig, one of Scotland’s most beloved and iconic bands, is set to hit the road on a Scotland-wide tour later this year.

The heart of their community, the local pub, is for sale and tensions are rising about the future of this place they call home. As relationships ignite and smoulder, Euan and Annie find themselves swept into a battle to save the heart of the community. But can they save each other?

Featuring exciting new arrangements of some of Runrig’s most iconic hit songs, including The Greatest Flame, All Things Must Change, and of course The Stamping Ground, the musical shares the soaring power and beating heart of some of the band’s most celebrated music. All of the songs in the show are written by Runrig’s founding members Calum and Rory MacDonald, with 2023 also marking 50 years since the brothers formed the band on the Isle of Skye in 1973.

Margaret-Anne O’Donnell and Gillian Garrity, Raw Material, said: “Scottish based independent production company, Raw Material are delighted to be touring their hit, feel-good musical, The Stamping Ground, across Scotland in 2023. Audiences in the highlands, both those new to Runrig and lifelong fans of the band united in their appreciation with standing ovations when the show premiered at Eden Court in Summer 2022. If you are a fan of musicals, a fan of live theatre or just looking for a great night out then this is definitely one not to miss!”

Calum MacDonald and Rory MacDonald of Runrig said: “It is so good to see that The Stamping Ground is not only returning to Eden Court but going on a Nationwide Tour. There has been such a positive reaction from fans and public alike, with still so many that have not had the opportunity to see it first time around.”

The Stamping Ground will run from 23-27 May at Festival Theatre, Edinburgh. Tickets on sale now.

[youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EjNROVg_E4U?feature=oembed&w=696&h=392]



Edinburgh and Berwick hit the skids

Edinburgh Monarchs skidded out of the Championship Knockout Cup as expected after their disappointing first-leg defeat in midweek at Oxford Cheetahs left them with too much to do.

They drew 45-45 at Armadale in the return but Oxford win 99-81 on aggregate.

Richie Worrall top scored for the home side with ten points while Scott Nicholls collected 12 for the visitors.

In the BSN Series, Scottish Group, Glasgow Tigers mauled Berwick Bandits 58-32 in the West of Scotland.

Tom Brennan top scored for the home side with 15 points while Berwick’s best was Thomas Jorgensen with 11. Glasgow win the aggregate bonus point.

PICTURE: The full squad




Roadworks in Edinburgh next week

The report which is reproduced for you below is prepared by the council’s EdinTravel team to advise of any traffic hotspots in the city in the coming week.

There will be some minor restrictions for four weeks on the footway and cycle path at Pinkhill in Corstorphine, and some off-peak temporary traffic lights on Templeland Road for BT to access manholes on the road.

On Ravelston Dykes between Succoth Avenue and Garscube Terrace there is an eastbound lane closure, priority boards with priority for westbound traffic.

On St John’s Road there are 2-way temporary traffic lights, and St Ninian’s Road is closed until 2 May.

There are temporary traffic lights in Musselburgh outside the library.

Gillsland Road will be closed between Spylaw Road and Polwarth Terrace between 1 and 5 May.

The Leith Connections Project continues at East Hermitage Place – temporary traffic lights will be in place until the end of the month.

There will be a contraflow on Potterrow at Marshall Place.

Fountainhall Road will be closed on 13 May between 10am and 6pm for the Grange Fair.

On 6 May there will be road closures around the Royal Mile for the May Day parade between 11.30 and 1.00pm.

These are only some of the road closures and places where roadworks are being carried out.

But the good news for motorists is that North Bridge reopened to two-way traffic last week and now York Place has opened to traffic travelling west.

If you see anything on the roads which is not on the list then let the travel team know on Twitter @EdinTravel

Updated versions of the listings are posted to the website most weekday afternoons, these can be found by going to https://www.edinburgh.gov.uk/edintravel


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Scottish Conservatives Conference – Ross is focused on the priorities

At the Scottish Conservatives conference in Glasgow today, leader Douglas Ross said that the Scottish Conservatives is the only party focused on the country’s real priorities. 

He used the speech to unveil a series of new policies including a new energy strategy paper. You can read that at the foot of the article.

This is the text of his speech:

“Conference, I want to start by congratulating you all.  

For years, in election after election, we were told that Nicola Sturgeon was unstoppable. That it was a question of when, not if, she would deliver independence.  

How many times did we see newspaper headlines saying that Scotland was on the cusp of Indyref2 – one particular paper ran that story every other day.  

Often it seemed like we were the lone voice of criticism. The only party opposing her demands for a second independence referendum. The only party challenging her handling of the pandemic. The only party standing up to her gender reforms.  

We knew that her government and her party, shrouded in secrecy, was not as squeaky clean as they liked to portray. And we were criticised again and again for going against the Holyrood consensus who heaped praise her. But no one is saying we are wrong, now.  

Nicola Sturgeon’s legacy lies in tatters. Her political career ended in failure. And all of you deserve credit for seeing her off.  

As the Prime Minister said this morning, it was the Scottish Conservative & Unionist Party that stopped the SNP from winning a majority just two years ago.  

It was Scottish Conservative & Unionist MSPs that fought her dangerous Gender Reform Bill every step of the way. And it was our Scottish Conservative Secretary of State for Scotland, my friend Alister Jack, who stood up for the rights of women and girls by sending this flawed Bill back to the SNP Government.  

Nicola Sturgeon kept talking about wiping out the Tories. Yet because of all of your hard work, it is her that is gone.  

Without Nicola Sturgeon, the SNP have entered into total meltdown. The formerly legendary discipline has evaporated, the unity has now totally broken down. Former colleagues have become bitter rivals, the party has run out of cash, the police have arrested senior officials.  

And to top it all off Humza Yousaf has become First Minister. I can’t think of a more obvious sign of a party in crisis than that.  

As Kate Forbes so memorably said, when he was transport minister the trains were never on time. When he was justice minister, the police were strained to breaking point. And when he was health minister there were record high waiting times. Thank you Kate, for that Highland honesty and for doing our work for us.  

We’ve been saying that for years! Now clearly those in the SNP also agree – the result of the SNP election proved that. Almost half of his own party didn’t think he was up to the job either. 

During the leadership contest Humza Yousaf proudly proclaimed himself the continuity candidate, a comment that must haunt him now.  

But it’s true – as SNP Leader he has continued the same divisive approach as his predecessor.  

Continuing to campaign for independence, continuing to engineer constitutional conflicts with the UK Government, continuing to ignore the real priorities of the Scottish people.  

In another one of his ill-advised self-proclamations, Humza Yousaf called himself the First Activist, and that pretty much sums up his whole approach to government.  

He is more interested in being the “First Activist” than First Minister – in obsessing over splitting up communities than he is on appealing to the country, in uniting the SNP rather than uniting Scotland, in being a nationalist cheerleader than a national leader.  

He even appointed a Minister for Independence in his government solely to drive forward the SNP’s political obsession. That is taxpayer’s money shamefully being taken away from our public services to pay the wages of a nationalist campaigner.  

In yet another claim, Humza Yousaf said that he would shift independence into “fifth gear”. Yet instead, with this famously uninsured driver at the wheel, the campaign is going into reverse. The campervan has stalled.  

If Ash Regan’s independence thermometer was in operation, the mercury would have fallen out the bottom.  

The SNP’s financial troubles have blown a huge hole in their economic case for independence. Remember, the SNP wanted to hold an independence referendum in just six months’ time – they can’t even find an auditor in the same timeframe.  

They wanted to set up a central bank – when they can’t even submit their own accounts.  

They would borrow billions of pounds from the taxpayer to finance a new country – when they still owe tens of thousands of pounds to Peter Murrell.  

And just for Greg Hands, I’m surprised the police haven’t found a note from Nicola Sturgeon saying that there is no money left.  

If I’d known the real state her party was in, I’d have bet Nicola Sturgeon a lot more than £100 that I would outlast her. I’d make the same bet with Humza Yousaf– but I’m not sure he can afford it.  

But seriously, the SNP cannot even manage their own accounts, how could they be trusted with the finances of an independent Scotland? 

Nobody will ever believe a nationalist on currency, pensions or balancing the books ever again.  

We’ve always known that our arguments on trade, currency and jobs were stronger, and the 2014 referendum proved that. But now the SNP lack any credibility. Through their own blunders, the nationalists have crashed the case for independence.  

Yet incredibly, despite all the damage that has been done, Humza Yousaf still won’t put the blame on his predecessor for the state of his party. Even with an ongoing police investigation, he is so indebted to his puppet masters that he can’t cut the strings from Nicola Sturgeon and Peter Murrell.  

The most powerful couple in the ruling party of government were running the show as a private affair. Well, together they have smashed to pieces any notion that the SNP are of a higher standard than other parties.  

And because Humza Yousaf can’t bring himself to cut the former leadership loose, this scandal just continues to get worse.  

However, we can’t afford to be complacent. The SNP are down, yes, but they are not out.  

We need to work hard to seize the opportunity we’ve been presented rather than reveling in their misery. Because the SNP are the party of government, responsible for managing our vital public services and supporting our economy.  

At a time when families across Scotland are worried about the state of our country, worried about whether they can make ends meet, worried about their relatives stuck on an NHS waiting list for months and years, worried about their job in a changing economy.  

This SNP Government is too distracted by their internal scandals and their obsession with independence to focus on the big challenges Scotland faces today.  

We saw that during Humza Yousaf’s attempt at a relaunch last week – just 20 days into the job. We were boldly promised that he would set out his ‘priorities for government’.  

Yet instead, what we got was the First Minister defending more scandal with one of his MSPs arrested by the police.  

For years we’ve said that the SNP were unwilling to get on with the day job but they are now becoming increasingly incapable of delivering the leadership Scotland needs.  

And all the while the real priorities of the Scottish people are being ignored.  

The SNP Government aren’t talking about how we rebuild our health service from the pandemic and Humza Yousaf’s mismanagement.  

It’s from our benches that people hear Sandesh Gulhane standing up for his healthcare colleagues and patients.  

The SNP aren’t talking about the state of our economy and the damage the Greens in government are doing to it. But people can see Liz Smith campaigning for rates relief and reform for Scottish businesses.  

The Nationalists aren’t talking about how 16 years of an SNP government has devastated Scottish education and let down a generation of young people, so it’s left to Stephen Kerr to set out plans to restore Scottish educational standards.  

Right across Scotland people of all political backgrounds – right and left, unionist and nationalist, are looking for a party to focus on the issues and services that matter to them.  

In Anas Sarwar’s Labour, they see a party more interested in soundbites and playing politics – than standing up for the views of a majority of Scots.  

He whipped his MSPs to back the SNP’s gender reform bill and supports Humza Yousaf’s legal challenge against the UK Government. No party focused on Scotland’s real priorities would support the nationalists in playing their constitutional games in these challenging times. 

Anas Sarwar has given Humza Yousaf’s government a free pass to pursue their political obsession. Instead of opposing the SNP. he is opposing the views of a majority of Scots and even a majority of Labour voters.  

And in supporting the SNP, he is only helping them to keep the Scottish Parliament from focusing on the issues that really matter to the Scottish public.  

So it’s the Scottish Conservatives that are the only party voters can trust to always stand up to the SNP Government when they refuse to prioritise the issues that really matter.  

We are focused on the real priorities of the Scottish people.  

And we offer them a vision of a better Scotland with credible plans to deliver it.  

We know one of the biggest issues of concern to them is rising household bills. Vladimir Putin has been using global energy markets as a weapon in his illegal war against Ukraine, driving up heating costs for ordinary working families and endangering our supply.  

Rishi Sunak and the UK Government have already taken decisive action to cap bills to protect households from the worst of these rises.  

But as a longer term fix we need to ensure that we back Scotland’s energy sector to secure our supply. However, under the influence of their Green coalition partners, the SNP continue to fail Scotland’s oil and gas sector.  

Ironically the former party of ‘Scotland’s oil’ now wants to shut down North Sea production as soon as possible – putting tens of thousands of Scottish jobs at risk. And Labour backs that position wholeheartedly.  

Under my leadership the Scottish Conservatives will always stand up for North East workers and the sector that employs them. We will always put their jobs first. Through the hard work of our strong team of North East MPs and MSPs we are now the only party standing up for Scotland’s oil.  

But that doesn’t mean that we are opposed to delivering Net Zero, because achieving our climate goals will also help us to cut bills for families through reducing demand.  

The majority of Scottish families live in housing that doesn’t meet modern energy efficiency standards. Hundreds of thousands of households are seeing hundreds of pounds of their money seeping through old windows, walls and roofs every month.  

Yet many cannot afford the thousands or even tens of thousands of pounds required to better insulate their homes.  

The SNP Government has set out plans for the social rented sector, but homeowners shouldn’t be forced to help deliver a government target without government support.  

That is why the Scottish Conservatives would introduce a Help to Renovate Scheme. This would ensure that every Scottish homeowner has access to grants and loans for energy efficiency improvements.  

Net Zero must also be delivered with community consent and benefit at its heart. Yet SNP Ministers have overturned local planning objections in favour of wind farm developers. That is a Holyrood power grab on our communities.  

I experienced this when I chaired the Planning Committee on Moray Council several years ago, and it continues today.  

At the same time, communities receive a pittance in contributions from developers and operators. Those communities deserve to benefit directly from local projects that we are all reliant on for our energy security.  

That is why I am announcing today that we will bring forward a Community Energy Benefit Law.  

This would ensure that those communities, not the SNP Government, have the final say on energy developments in their local area and it would force developers and operators to negotiate deals that make meaningful financial payments to communities – which could be used directly for cutting energy bills.  

When I was out in the Western Isles last year and up in Shetland just a couple of weeks ago this was an issue raised and a request made by many. The Scottish Conservatives have listened, and this proposal would not only create an incentive to unblock planning barriers to energy infrastructure. 

It would also ensure that families and communities always benefit directly from those developments. Taken together, these plans that we’re publishing in a policy paper today, will deliver lower bills for Scottish families have the final say on Scotland’s energy future.  

Another big challenge we face is the state of Scotland’s NHS.  

It is unbelievable that the SNP were so impressed by Humza Yousaf’s running of our health service that they decided to make him First Minister.  

Even he thought he had done such an awful job, that he had to appoint a Cabinet Secretary for NHS recovery – and boy is it needed.  

The worst A&E waiting times in history – with 53,000 patients stuck for more than half a day last year and one in seven Scots on an NHS treatment list – some of whom have been waiting for years.  

Our NHS is in crisis.  

For months the Scottish Conservatives alongside healthcare professionals have said that the SNP’s flimsy recovery plan is not cutting it.  

And we set out our own plans to help the NHS cope with the worst of the winter crisis – including allowing patients to see live A&E waiting times, expanding same day operations and introducing maximum waiting times.  

Yet this tin-eared government ignored our plan and the concerns of patients and professionals.  

The Scottish Conservatives know that more than anything else Scots just want an NHS that is there for them and their loved ones when they need it most.  

We know that one area under threat is the future of local GP services. The SNP are still failing to deliver on their funding promises to general practice.  

The Remote and Rural General Practice Working Group delivered their recommendations in January 2020 to ensure that GP surgeries have the funding and staff they need to continue. Yet those recommendations have been gathering dust on the shelf rather than being implemented.  

So the Scottish Conservatives would implement those plans as a matter of urgency to save our surgeries – not just in rural areas – but right across the country.  

We also need to focus on the substantial health challenges that Scotland faces.  

We are holding this conference in the fantastic city of Glasgow, but 311 Glaswegians died of drugs in 2021 – the highest number in the country, every one a life that could have been saved. A family mourning a loved one failed by a system that doesn’t work.  

For years Nicola Sturgeon’s eye was off the ball and it seems that Humza Yousaf will be no different. The SNP are letting some of the most vulnerable people in Scotland die by not giving them access to the treatment options they deserve.  

That is why we’re continuing the work to pass the Right to Recovery Bill that would give Scots legal access to the addiction recovery treatment they need.  

Yet we need to go further in tackling the big public health killers that blight our country. For example, a recent Public Health Scotland report found that over the last decade suicide was the biggest killer of young people in our country.  

Sadly that is the experience of 753 families in Scotland last year.  

We have to do more.  

That is why we would roll out mental health ambulances to ensure there is a dedicated responder for mental health emergencies. and we would give mental health crisis centres the funding they deserve.  

If we tackle the big public health challenges facing Scotland, we also save our NHS resources in the long-term – and put the relentless decline in standards into reverse.  

That is what we can achieve with a government that is focused on the task of leading our health service instead of one that is content to manage decline while its attention is elsewhere.  

Our NHS is Scotland’s most treasured institution, it needs a government that gives it the focus it deserves.  

Speaking of top priorities, I’m long enough in the tooth to remember the SNP Government saying that education was their number one priority. I wonder if even Humza Yousaf believes that anymore.  

When I was growing up Scottish education was the envy of the world, yet, over the last 16 years, our schools have fallen to record lows in international league tables and Nicola Sturgeon completely failed in her goal of closing the attainment gap.  

The next generation of Scots, my children and yours, are being left poorer because of the actions of this SNP Government. That for me is the greatest failure of their time in office.  

When I look at my two boys, Alistair and James, I know that one of the biggest reasons I’m in politics is to deliver better life opportunities for them and children like them up and down the country. What kind of a society are we if we don’t prioritise that?  

My own parents – my mum a school cook and my dad a farm labourer – didn’t have much but they worked as hard as they could to give me and my sisters the best start in life.  

We in this party know that a good education is the best way to deliver no matter where people live.  

So even in these times of stretched resources, we must prioritise restoring Scotland’s education for the next generation. It means giving teachers the support and even more importantly the trust to teach.  

Firstly, we need to attract good teachers to come to the profession and crucially to stay in it. Teachers are burnt out, they feel like this SNP Government is asking more and more of them but not upholding its end of the bargain by tackling the issues that make their job more difficult. 

That’s why the Scottish Conservatives discussed plans this morning on a ‘New Deal’ for teachers.  

Our Deal would cut down on paperwork, give teachers more time to prepare high quality lessons and reward them for extra classes and after school teaching. This would incentivise teachers to go above and beyond to help every pupil to achieve their potential.  

We would also increase the powers of headteachers to take decisions over the running and priorities of their school and improve the teaching of essential life skills, so that teaching is more aligned with needs of pupils rather than national targets set by Holyrood.  

Taken together – with our existing plans for a National Tutoring and Mentoring Service, increased subject choice and improved STEM teaching, the Scottish Conservatives have a plan to restore Scottish education.  

Where the SNP have failed, we would make giving the next generation the best start in life our number one priority.  

But we know that learning and skills development can’t just be for children and young people. As our economy changes, people will have to change careers. Yet in Scotland we don’t do anywhere near enough to support those workers.  

Some of the most dynamic economies in the world have strong support for adult learning and re-skilling. It needs to be at the core of how we tackle the fourth industrial revolution and the productivity challenge.  

That is why the Scottish Conservatives have proposed the creation of a National College and why we would give every Scot a Right to Retrain through use it or lose it skills funding.  

So that wherever people live, and whatever their ability, they can access high quality education and training for upskilling and reskilling.  

And so that we can deliver growth today and, in the future.  

We heard earlier in his remarks and his answers to questions just how passionate Rishi Sunak and the UK Government are to see Scotland’s economy thrive and grow.  

But the SNP and their Green partners see growth as an evil. They believe that wealth, business and enterprise are dirty words. Supporting businesses for them means hiking taxes and introducing a botched Deposit Return Scheme, a scheme Lorna Slater was humiliatingly forced to delay.  

You’d hope the most knowledgeable voice in Parliament on this issue would be the Minister in charge, but it wasn’t. Maurice Golden has been all over the detail on this, warning the government for months about the problems they were creating.  

Through his persistent campaigning we now have a delay to the scheme, but it needs an overhaul if it is actually going to work.  

The Scottish Government is clearly anti-business but we in the Scottish Conservatives are unashamedly pro-business, pro-growth and pro-worker.  

We were the only party holding the government to account over its slow payment of grants and lifting of restrictions, during the pandemic.  

We are the only party challenging anti-business policies like the rent freeze and short-term let controls. And we are the only party that is opposed to the raising of taxes on 1.4 million Scottish workers.  

Where other parties pretend to be false friends to the business community it is the Scottish Conservatives that actually stands up for their interests. For people of all political backgrounds, who believe in a competitive, Scottish economy, this party is your natural home. 

Yet it is not just economic growth that the SNP and the Greens have put at risk but rural and coastal livelihoods too.  

Humza Yousaf’s government – propped up by the wine bar revolutionaries Patrick Harvie and Lorna Slater – is intent on making it harder for farmers to farm and fishermen to fish. 

As someone who studied at agriculture college and represents so many coastal areas, those sectors and communities will always be at the heart of this party’s agenda.  

One issue they face is rural theft – which costs our farmers millions of pounds each year. That is why I can announce that Rachael Hamilton will bring forward a bill in the Scottish Parliament to better protect farm equipment from being stolen and sold on.  

We will also deliver a Rural Development Bank to invest in rural projects and businesses and change procurement rules to ensure that public bodies, like schools, use good local food, so that the Scottish public sector backs Scottish farmers.  

And for Scotland’s coastal communities we will oppose the blanket introduction of Highly Protected Marine areas every step of the way.  

Under my leadership, the Scottish Conservatives will always be the champion of rural Scotland and our food producers.  

Another area in which the Scottish Conservatives are challenging the Holyrood consensus and representing the majority of Scots is justice.  

The SNP have watered down sentencing so far that even rape is no longer considered an automatic jail sentence.  

Let that sink in, in Scotland we are giving community sentences to rapists.  

This SNP Government is attacking women’s safe spaces and protections through the Gender Reform Bill, while also taking a soft stance on the men who commit horrendous crimes.  

On justice, Humza Yousaf’s government has all of the wrong priorities and values. The rights and protections of criminals are being put above victims whose lives have been devastated.  

The Scottish Conservatives are the only party demanding a wholesale change in how justice is delivered in Scotland and backing our police to tackle crime.  

We want to see whole life sentences introduced for the worst crimes and at this conference we have set out plans to toughen up Community Payback Orders. And through Jamie Greene’s Victims Law we have a plan to put victims first in our justice system.  

While the other parties all support a soft-touch approach to justice, the Scottish Conservatives are the only party who believe that crime should be properly punished by the law.  

One such crime not being properly tackled is spiking. Imagine just going for a drink at the local pub and vomiting and passing out after just a single drink.  

Well, that is the experience of one in ten women across the UK. In the last year there were 444 incidents reported to Police Scotland.  

Spiking is a significant risk to both women and men across Scotland. That is why I was delighted to see my colleague Russell Findlay announce on STV last night Scottish Conservative plans to tackle this awful crime.  

This Bill would ensure that testing kits and trained staff are available at premises as a condition of licensing.  

This would mean that anyone who suspects their drink has been spiked can get it immediately tested, ensuring that the victim is protected and there is a significantly higher chance of catching the culprit. And we can tackle the scourge of spiking.  

Throughout this conference we are bringing forward the policies that matter to people across Scotland.  

A Community Benefit Law and a Help to Renovate Scheme to cut family bills.  

Protecting GPs and delivering better mental health emergency response.  

Offering teachers, a new deal to restore Scotland’s education system for the next generation.  

Investing in a Right to Retrain to build the skills we need to grow Scotland’s economy and create good jobs.  

Tackling spiking and toughening up community sentencing to put our justice system on the side of the victims.  

Those are just some of the policies we are taking forward to tackle the real priorities of the Scottish people.  

We will hold the SNP Government to account. We will represent the views of the majority of our country who feel that the Holyrood consensus does not speak for them.  

But we will also take forward our own positive ideas and solutions, to show that the Scottish Conservative Party have an optimistic and ambitious vision for our country’s future.  

This failing SNP Government, mired in scandal and sleaze, cannot focus on governing our country. They cannot tackle the big challenges Scotland faces.  

It is painfully obvious that Humza Yousaf is not up to the job of being First Minister.  

At the general election next year, people across Scotland have a choice. They can give Humza Yousaf a blank cheque – the thumbs up to continue to lead an incompetent government and to focus on the priorities of the SNP.  

Or they can unseat SNP MPs and their referendum obsession, and send a strong signal to Humza Yousaf’s government to focus on the real priorities of Scotland.  

And the best way that Scots can do this in seats right across our country is to vote for the Scottish Conservatives.  

We’ve made a strong start at this conference, but this can only be the beginning of our mission.  

We need to re-earn the trust of people who have supported us in the past and reach out to people who have never considered us before.  

The vast majority of Scots, of all political backgrounds, are just looking for a party to focus on the bread-and-butter issues that matter to them.  

We need to be that party.  

As the Nicola Sturgeon-era of Scottish politics comes crashing down we enter into a new chapter in our nation’s history.  

The SNP are losing the trust of the Scottish people, but no party has yet filled that vacuum. All bets are off, Scotland stands at a crossroad.  

If we want the country to take a fresh look at our party, then we need to offer the positive vision Scotland needs.  

We need to be a party for all of Scotland – focused on improving the lives of people up and down the country. We need to rise above partisan interest to tackle the big challenges we all face.  

And show the Scottish people – in every community across our country – that the Scottish Conservatives are focused on Scotland’s real priorities.  

Thank you.” 


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New boss appointed to Scottish National Investment Bank

A new Chief Executive has been appointed at Scottish National Investment Bank.

The new boss, Al Denholm, has more than 36 years of asset management experience in the UK, Europe, Asia, and America, he was most recently CIO of the £100 billion Aviva Investment Solutions Business.

The bank has so far enabled more than £1 billion of investment into Scottish business with £415 million of its captial and enabling more than £680 million of capital from other lenders and investors.

Denholm, originally from Edinburgh, said: “I’m incredibly excited to pick up and build upon what has been achieved so far. 

“The Bank is ambitious, and I want to help further establish it as one of the best impact investors in the industry. 

“I believe we can generate great social and environmental  impact and great returns for the people of Scotland.

“I’m impressed to see how much work has been put in by the team and how far the Bank has come in such a short space of time.

“It is inspirational to be delivering impact for our communities through investments and I want us to look back in the decades to come with pride.

“Our discipline around impact investing provides us with expertise that institutional investors will be interested in.”

Welcoming him to the Bank, Chair Willie Watt said: “Al brings a wealth of experience to the role, and I am confident he can continue to develop and grow the Bank on behalf of the people of Scotland.

“The Bank has made excellent progress in a short period of time, and I’d like to thank interim CEO Sarah Roughead and her Executive Team for their commitment.

“I look forward to Al’s leadership and continuing investment that will have a transformative impact on the economy of Scotland.”

Neil Gray, Cabinet Secretary for Wellbeing Economy, Fair Work and Energy commented:

“The Bank has firmly established itself within Scotland’s investment landscape, and I am delighted that they have secured someone of Al’s considerable experience to support them on the next stage of their growth, particularly as the Bank continues to invest in projects and businesses which support our transition to a net zero economy.”

Scottish Liberal Democrat economy spokesperson, Willie Rennie MSP, said:  “The Scottish National Investment Bank lacked a steady hand on the tiller for more than a year, so it’s a relief to see that the government have finally got the basics together and sorted out a boss.  

“This SNP-Green government has long been out of its depth when it comes to the needs of business and industry.

“I would like to congratulate Mr Denholm on his appointment and express my hope that under his leadership the bank can deliver a robust investment plan for the country.  Specifically, that means building a high wage, a highly skilled economy and securing a place for Scotland at the forefront of the renewables revolution.

“We will also need to see impeccable standards of openness and transparency. This has not always been the case during the bank’s short life to date.”




EV charging available at Marie Curie hospice

The Marie Curie hospice in Edinburgh is one of several in the UK which is introducing EV charging points thanks to some funding from Arnold Clark.

This is part of a sustainability plan which the end of life charity is committed to following, emulating NHS plans, but also to coincide with Earth Month. The hope is that they can reach Net Zero emissions by 2045 in Scotland. The way to do this is by reducing their energy consumption, moving to green energy suppliers, reducing waste and switching to electric vehicles including their company cars, community pool cars and fleet vehicles.

The first step is to instal EV charging on site.

Georgina Bushell, Partnerships Manager at Marie Curie, said:

“As part of Marie Curie’s ambitions to become more sustainable, we are delighted that each of our nine hospices now has electric vehicle charging points. This will be of great benefit to our hospice staff, especially to our Nurses who visit patients in their own homes, as well as to people visiting loved ones in our hospices.

“Having Arnold Clark’s support has been invaluable as its donation has covered a fifth of the installation costs. The company has been a long term supporter of Marie Curie and we’re grateful for the funding we have received towards these nine charging points.”

An Arnold Clark spokesperson said: “Marie Curie is a wonderful charity that provides support to so many people throughout the UK and we’re delighted to have helped with this project. 

“We recognise that the automotive industry is evolving, and the number of EV drivers on the roads will continue to grow. Therefore, having EV chargers at each of their nine hospices in the UK will be a huge benefit for any visitors, patients and staff.”

L to R: Dr Mike MacFarlane (Marie Curie); Georgina Bushell (Marie Curie); Pablo Levi (Arnold Clark) and Lindsay Wilkins (Marie Curie).



Modern Two opens again on Saturday

Modern Two at The Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art has been closed for a while, but hip, hip hooray, it is reopening on Saturday with a new exhibition Decades: The Art of Change 1900-1980.

This explores the relatively modern art scene during the first decades of the last century. The mood and atmosphere of the work reflects each changing decade, and the artworks have been specially selected to represent the mood of each period.

The exhibition fills all of Modern Two in six rooms with Matisse and André Derain beginning the journey in 1900. Their brightly coloured landscape paintings were so radically different that the artists were given the derogatory label ‘Fauves’ – meaning ‘wild beasts’. The term stuck and Fauvism had a major impact on British and particularly Scottish art.

Two new acquisitions, by Scottish Colourists FCB Cadell and JD Fergusson, feature in this room. JD Fergusson, who was born in Leith but lived in Paris before the First World War, was one of the key Scottish artists of the twentieth century. Painted in 1911, Flowers and Pink Box, has bright bold colour and confident, energetic brushwork. Fergusson’s work of this time often had sexual overtones and covert erotic references. In this painting, the pink box depicted is believed to have been used to store his condoms. This is the first still life by Fergusson to enter the national collection. The Rose and the Lacquer Screen, by FCB Cadell, combines several of his favourite still-life props: a rose in a transparent vase, a black fan and its trailing ribbon and a detail of the lacquered screen that dominated the drawing room of his house in Edinburgh’s New Town.

Director-General of the National Galleries of Scotland, Sir John Leighton, said: “National Galleries of Scotland is delighted to reopen Modern Two with an exhibition that celebrates the strength of the national collection. Featuring a fascinating range of works by many of Scotland and the world’s greatest artists, Decades: The Art of Change 1900-1980 encourages visitors to think about how art can both reflect and change the way we see the world around us. We welcome you to join us on a voyage of discovery through 80 years of bold artistic achievement.”

Simon Groom, Director of Modern & Contemporary Art, said: “Decades is an amazing opportunity to discover the rich range and depth of art from the national collection in the 20th century. Arranged by decades – starting with the beautiful paintings of Henri Matisse, Pablo Picasso, and the Scottish Colourists, the show takes us on fascinating journey to see how artists as diverse as Francis Bacon, Joan Eardley, Eduardo Paolozzi, Yayoi Kusama, Bridget Riley, David Hockney, and Joseph Beuys reflected and gave shape to our experience of the 20th century.”

https://www.nationalgalleries.org/visit/scottish-national-gallery-modern-art

PHOTO Neil Hanna Photography
Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art 1 & 2, Dean Road, Edinburgh. National Galleries of Scotland.PHOTO Keith Hunter



Five things you need to know today

Critical Mass Edinburgh

If you are driving in the city centre on Saturday then do not be alarmed if you meet hundreds of cyclists riding together as one group.

They are a friendly bunch, waving and smiling to all drivers – and they love the ones who peep their horns.

It is a good-natured gathering of cyclists calling out for safer cycling, and takes place every last Saturday of the month, meeting at Middle Meadow Walk, and setting off from there on a different route each month. This week it is going to be the Stockbridge Saunter and The Bike Station will be there from 1pm offering some advice on bike maintenance before the start.

There will be loud music adding to the fun for the cyclists and hopefully also the passers by.

Critical Mass is a worldwide movement which began in San Francisco and it is a way of cycling safely through the city’s streets – there is safety in numbers after all. The group will ride as if they are one vehicle – so marshalls hold back other traffic at junctions until all cyclists pass through. But it does not take too long.

The idea is to highlight that some of the people who take part would not normally cycle that route on their own, and is a call to councils and governments that safe infrastructure is needed.

If you would like to join then get on your bike and meet others at Middle Meadow Walk anytime after 1 and then join the ride which will set off at 2pm.

And in case you think it was last week that was Pedal on Parliament which always goes on the shorter route from Chambers Street to Holyrood.

Photo © 2023 Martin P. McAdam www.martinmcadam.com

Beltane

If you have a strong enough constitution to get up onto Calton Hill then Sunday night would be a colourful experience for you. There will be glowing bright fires, the pounding of drums, and a cavalcade of characters emerging onto the hill to bring about the end of the long nights. And it all goes on until the early hours of the morning.

Read more here.

Letter from Scotland

In his pithy look back at the week in politics, John Knox casts his eye at what is happening at Holyrood in his Letter from Scotland.

Read more here.

Local Bike Shop Day

It is Local Bike Shop Day on Saturday when you are encouraged to go and visit your local bike whop which sells you your bikes and looks after them for you – and tell them how much you love them.

It is the one day a year when independent bike shops can come together to celebrate their distinctive culture. It follows Record Store Day only last weekend and is of course an idea born in Brooklyn.

It may be a fledgling day here but there should be some social media action. Follow @LBSDayUK on Twitter.

More information here.

Please subscribe to our newspaper

Our May issue has gone to press and will be sent out in the post to subscribers later today.

Our newspaper includes many stories that may or may not be included on our website, but they are always presented a little differently.

Sign up here to have your own copy delivered. Our subscribers help us to keep the rest of our news free to access (and we love them a little bit more…)




Letter from Scotland

The nearest we come to May Day parades in Scotland is the Beltane Festival on Calton Hill in Edinburgh. 

Beltane Fire Festival 2022, Calton Hill, Edinburgh, 30th April 2022
© 2022 J.L. Preece

It’s a burlesque version of the celebrations of spring in English cities, with their maypole dancing and hobby horse parades.  It’s not to do with International Labour Day, celebrated by workers across the world, from America to China, and certainly nothing to do with lines of soldiers, tanks and weapons of mass destructions in Putin’s Russia. Instead it’s about nature and Celtic tradition.

Beltane harks back to the fire ceremonies of Druid times. The death and rebirth of the Green Man is re-enacted, symbolising the end of winter and the new beginning of spring. It’s a powerful idea, captured by most of the world’s religions, the idea of death and resurrection, the cycle of life, the cycle of the stars. 

The ceremony on Calton Hill starts at 8pm on Sunday night and continues into the small hours of May Day morning. There’s a May Queen, lots of fires and drumming, some 250 performers – actors, acrobats, clowns, puppeteers and 10,000 people, all standing and moving about, blurring the lines between performer and audience.

May blossom and blue skies. The end of winter gloom?

It’s a far cry from what’s been happening this week, here on Earth. 130,000 pupils have begun the exam season. Food prices have gone up by 17 per cent in the last year. We’ve said goodbye to the boxing legend Ken Buchanan.

For our first minister Humza Yousaf, it’s meant a trip to London for his first face-to-face meeting with the prime minister Rishi Sunak.  It was a polite meeting, of course. They are both polite men. But there were plenty of differences –  over an independence referendum, the drinks bottle recycling scheme, the  gender recognition bill, the 10 per cent rise in whisky tax. 

Back home, Mr Yousaf is still struggling to unite his party after the departure of Nicola Sturgeon. She appeared in parliament for the first time as an ordinary MSP on Tuesday. She said the events of the past few weeks have been her “worst nightmare”.  Unease and frustration was written all over her face as she said the police inquires did not allow her to explain the arrest of her husband and the SNP party treasurer over the “lost £600,000” and the purchase of a £100,000 campervan.       

Meanwhile the “normal” business of parliament trundled on with the publication of the government’s plans to abolish the “Not Proven” verdict in the Scottish courts. This alternative to “Guilty” or “Not Guilty” has existed in Scots Law since the 1600s but it’s come in for criticism in recent years for relieving the jury of their responsibility and satisfying neither the victim nor the accused.  

The plans also include reducing the number of jurors from 15 to 12 and requiring at least 8 to reach a verdict instead of a simple majority. Even more controversially it’s also suggested that rape cases should not be tried by a jury at all but by a judge sitting alone.  We can expect a long and heated argument over all of this.

Pedal on Parliament

Out on the streets, the minister for active travel, the Green MSP Patrick Harvie has been announcing big plans for cycling. It’s part of his increased budget for active travel, up from £200 million to £320 milion or 10 per cent of the total transport budget. He appeared on his bike at the “Pedal on Parliament” parade on Saturday, riding upright in his tweed suit and open necked shirt, he could have been a farmer on his way to market in the 1920s. His message to the rally was that the Greens were holding the government to its commitment to take cycling seriously.

Pedal on Parliament from Chambers Street to Holyrood The campaign began in 2012 PHOTO ©2023 The Edinburgh Reporter

The festival next weekend will be for the King’s coronation. It’s going to be a largely local and private affair, with the odd street party and coronation ball. Big screens are going up in Edinburgh’s Princes Street Gardens and at Glasgow Cathedral.  But the celebrations are likely to be less enthusiastic than in England, with Scottish views on the monarchy decidedly mixed. An Ipsos opinion poll at the end of last year found 28 per cent of Scots thought the nation would be better off with a monarch and 26 per cent though it would be worse off. The rest were undecided.

Then in the summer, the biggest festival of all takes to the stage. The programme for the 76th Edinburgh International Festival was rehearsed on Monday like a vigorous cadenza by the new director, the violinist Nicola Benedetti. For three weeks in August, we will be treated to a zany collection of performances to rival the madness of the Beltane. Shows like Kurt Weill’s “Threepenny Opera”, a National Theatre play about women wrestlers at the Highland Games, Bartok’s “Bluebeard’s Castle”, along with traditional material from Mozart, Wagner and Dvorak. There will be plenty of shows for children among the 252 events, a “youth-take-over-day at the Hub and more concerts in local community centres and hospitals.   

And all this from our own Nicola Benedetti, the first Scot and the first woman to be festival director.  The festival slogan she’s chosen echoes Martin Luther King by asking: “Where do we go from here?”    The immediate answer is we go to the Fringe, which is an even bigger festival.   

 

Nicola Benedetti, CBE, the Director of Edinburgh International Festival announcing her first programme for the 2023 Edinburgh International Festival PHOTO ©2023 The Edinburgh Reporter

    




National Lottery funding for Coronation festivities in Edinburgh

The National Lottery has granted funding to several organisations in Edinburgh to help them celebrate the King’s Coronation in May.

The sum of £9,950 is awarded to Children’s Health Scotland to run two events for up to 80 children and young people with long term health conditions, a picnic in an Edinburgh park for the Coronation and an online Eurovision party.

The sum of £8,150 is awarded to Greyfriars Charteris Centre to host a Coronation Lunch for 50 people and organise 15 coffee mornings over the year for Southside residents.

The sum of £10,000 is awarded to Milan Senior Welfare Organisation to hold two events to celebrate the Coronation as well as one event later in the year and two coach trips.

The sum of £875 is awarded to Oxgangs Neighbourhood Centre SCIO where a celebratory afternoon event will be put on for people living in Oxgangs, Firrhill and Colinton Mains with live music and a bouncy castle.

The sum of £2,220 is awarded to Queensferry Sea Cadets to provide a coronation celebration day for 340 young people from Queensferry. This will include Sea, Army and Air Cadets along with local Scout groups, Girl Guides, Boys Brigade and Girls Brigade groups.

The sum of £2,250 is awarded to Royal Mile Primary School to provide a coronation celebration day for children and families with the theme of a village fete. The day will include the full roll of children from nursery to primary seven. The activities will include games, a float, a dressing- up box, and pictures and videos to commemorate the day.

The sum of £5,379 is awarded to The Dhammapadipa Temple who will use the funding to hold a ceilidh to celebrate the King’s Coronation. The event will be open to the whole community.

This is part of a larger pot of £480,000 which is awarded to 121 projects in Scotland. The funding, which ranges from grants of £300 up to £10,000, is supporting a range of activities across the weekend of 6 – 8 May, with an emphasis on events and activities that bring people together and have a positive and lasting impact on community engagement.

Dominic Heslop. Manager, Oxgangs Neighbourhood Centre, said:” This will be a great occasion for the community with a traditional street party, but with the added advantage of it being held in the garden and grounds of the Centre. Free food and drinks, live music, Highland dancing and of course the infamous bouncy castle!

“I know Oxgangs Neighbourhood Centre will provide a great event for local people and in return local people will be supporting our valued Centre. I am sure the King will be proud.”

Kate Still, Scotland Chair, The National Lottery Community Fund said“Thanks to National Lottery players, these events and activities will help to promote community cohesion and engage people from different generations and cultures to get to know one another and share experiences. By helping communities celebrate such a historic occasion, we hope to inspire a legacy of positive change that allows people to thrive together.”




Safe Slow Stockbridge campaign is launched

Pupils at Stockbridge Primary School will unveil the banner which they are using in their new road safety campaign ‘Safe, Slow, Stockbridge’ on Friday.

The banner is to be placed outside their school to remind drivers to stick to a 20 mph limit.

A class of 9 and 10-year-old primary school children were inspired to become Junior Road Safety Officers this year after being shocked to see a class member knocked over by a motorist while walking home from school.

The 22 safety officers in the Primary 6/5 class lead on road safety education in the school and help to teach younger classes about walking to school. The children have written to politicians and local councillors to share their campaign for safer streets. 

#SafeSlowStockbridge is a friendly reminder for drivers:

• to stick to the 20 mile per hour speed limit 

• to take extra care around the school

• and encourage more walking to school to reduce traffic 

The children, and their teacher Miss Julia Devine, invited fellow pupils across the school to design posters and banners as part of a school competition on road safety. 

The winning posters are now displayed in shops and businesses around Stockbridge and one design has been transformed into a striking road safety banner thanks to funding from Stockbridge and Inverleith Community Council. 

Martha, aged 8 at the time of the accident, bravely shared her story from the beginning of the school year. She said: “I tried to look left and right from between the parked cars and couldn’t see anything. I assumed I would be ok, so I stepped out into the road – but the minute I crossed the car was there.

“It’s one of those things that you always assume will happen to someone else, but you are someone else to someone else.

“I now say to my friends, don’t cross without need, make sure you cross in safe places, be patient, don’t get distracted and be aware of the roads.”

Parent, Kirstie Warren, said: It was a heart-stopping moment when I was told that my daughter had been knocked down by a car. 

“We teach our kids road safety from a young age but they can still make mistakes. I am so incredibly grateful that the driver was driving slowly. That’s why I am supporting their campaign to encourage drivers to observe the 20 mile per hour limit.”

Head teacher, Caroline Ashbrook, said: “We have been blown away by the enthusiasm and leadership of the children designing their own road safety campaign and the art work is a creative and eye-catching reminder for everyone. 

“We are excited to launch ‘Safe Slow, Stockbridge’ and we hope it gets everyone in the community on board and ultimately make Stockbridge’s roads safer for all.”

Edinburgh’s Transport and Environment Convener Cllr Scott Arthur, said: “It’s really inspiring that pupils at Stockbridge Primary School have taken on this road safety campaign so enthusiastically. I was quite concerned to hear that a child at the school was recently hit by a driver, but I was moved when I heard that her whole class have responded to this by becoming Junior Road Safety Officers. 

“As a Council, we’ve committed to significantly improving road safety across the city through a range of measures, from speed reductions to improved pedestrian crossings. To have the youngest generation of road users championing safer streets will really help raise awareness of the issue.”

Local MSP Angus Robertson said: “The Slow, Safe Stockbridge campaign is an example of the critical need for our cities to cater more to our children, pedestrians, cyclists and local communities. 

I am really impressed at the passion and activism shown by pupils, parents and teachers at Stockbridge Primary. Together they are ensuring drivers do their bit to protect the lives of School children and Stockbridge residents. I look forward to working with them and local Councillors to make sure as many drivers as possible are aware of the campaign.”

You can see all the possible designs created by pupils by clicking on the winning poster below.




Harkess warning to misfiring Monarchs

Stellar Monarchs boss Alex Harkess told his misfiring men ahead of Friday’s Knockout Cup, quarter-final, second-leg: “I will be demanding an improvement.”

The Armadale combine need something special if they are to make progress having lost the first-leg at Oxford Cheetahs 54-36 on Wednesday.
Only Craig Cook and Kyle Bickley earned pass marks for the Monarchs septet and Cheetahs travel north top Armadale practitioners Sam Masters, Monarchs former skipper, and Scott Nicholls.

Cheetahs’ Lewis Kerr was injured when he crashed into Cook in the first-leg and another Armadale specialist, Justin Sedgmen, has been called in as a guest.

Cook took a hard fall as well but recovered to give an excellent performance. Monarchs skipper Josh Pickering is still missing (and awaiting definite news on his shoulder injury) and he will be replaced by Richie Worrall.

Disappointed Harkess (pictured in the blue jacket by Nigel Duncan), who watched the BSN coverage in midweek from Oxford, said: “I expected a lot more from our team. We’ve certainly made it tough.”

He added: “We are so inconsistent. We were OK on our opening weekend and at Berwick, but very poor last week at home and at Oxford.”

Friday’s match will be live streamed and details are on www.edinburghmonarchs.co.uk.

DATE: Friday 28 April: Edinburgh Monarchs v Oxford Cheetahs (Knockout Cup), Armadale, 7:30pm

STELLAR MONARCHS: Richie Worrall (guest), Lasse Fredriksen, Kye Thomson, Paco Castagna, Craig Cook (captain), Kyle Bickley, Jacob Hook.

MONARCH CHEETAHS: Sam Masters, Cameron Heeps, Scott Nicholls (captain), Jordan Jenkins, Justin Sedgmen (guest), Henry Atkins, Luke Killeen.




Hockey- Grange and Watsonians hoping to add to Premiership triumphs

Grange take the first step towards a Premiership and play-off double on Saturday at Glasgow’s National Hockey Centre.

The Edinburgh side, who won the league last weekend with a 4-1 win over Capital rivals, Watsonians, clash with Clydesdale in the play-off semi-final at 2pm.

The other semi features Western Wildcats, who finished runners-up in the league, against Edinburgh University who were third. Push back 4pm.

The final is at Glasgow’s National Hockey Centre on Sunday (4pm) and Martin Shepherdson, Grange’s team manager, confirmed that they have injury worries ahead of the clash.

He did not name the injured players but said: “The bulk of the squad is available.”

Shepherdson (pictured in the blue top by Nigel Duncan) added: “We are looking forward to the weekend and we know we have a real chance of progressing.”

And coach Stevie Grubb added: “We have worked on a few areas we would like to improve on and hope this work stands in good stead for what will be a tough semi-final against Clydesdale.

“This is our third game against them this year and we now both have a good idea of what each other are capable of.”

Grange topped the table at the end of the regular season with 44 points from 16 games and were the only unbeaten side in the division, winning 14 games and drawing two.

They scored 85 goals, the third highest total, and let in 19, the lowest total in the league.

Clydesdale finished fourth with 25 points from their 16 outings, winning seven, drawing four and losing five, and they scored 48 goals and conceded 40.

Western finished with 43 points, winning 14 of their games, drawing one and losing one to Grange, and they scored 100 goals and let in 22. Edinburgh University were third with 51 points accumulated from ten wins, three draws and three defeats. They scored 87 goals and let in 36. This game is at 4pm.

The women’s Premiership play-offs are also on Saturday and Watsonians, who won their second straight title last weekend, face Clydesdale at 10am for the fourth time this season having won 4-2 and 3-0 in the league and 1-0 in the Scottish Cup.

Coach Keith Smith confirmed that Scotland international Ellie Wilson is still sidelined with a foot injury and there are a couple of minor niggles but Watsonians will be “pretty much” at full strength.

Edinburgh University square-up to Western Wildcats and the students have held the upper hand in matches this season and results include a 6-1 victory over Wildcats last weekend in Glasgow (push off noon).




Charity works towards global standard for ageing at home

Edinburgh-based housing charity puts innovation at its heart.

The launch of Bield Housing and Care’s new five-year corporate strategy signals the beginning of a period of significant change and innovation for one of the country’s leading housing providers.

Tech-driven solutions are a key focus in the new strategy, which has been launched to drive the organisation’s growth and maximise independence among its tenants.

These solutions will be at the heart of Bield’s vision for medium-term growth and will help to tackle external challenges faced by the sector such as climate change, the cost-of-living crisis and an ageing population.

The new strategy aims to position Bield tenants, customers and staff at the centre of the organisation’s decision-making, design and adapt homes to meet customer needs, simplify its services, strengthen its financial performance, support its staff to improve their skills and efficiency, and secure UK-wide recognition for its innovative and leading approaches.

Dr Lynne Douglas, CEO at Bield, said: “Our new five-year corporate strategy will guide us along the way as we focus on achieving our vision and ambitions and ultimately make a positive impact.

“Our strategy will measure whether we are delivering to meet our customers’ desires, rather than just ticking boxes. This new outcome-based approach will expand our influence in the sector, as we look to set and deliver the standard for ageing at home.”

It comes at a pivotal time for the housing specialist which recently opened a new digital hub, showcasing housing technology of the future, at its West Port development in Linlithgow.  This was possible thanks to funding from the Technology for our Ageing Population: Panel for Innovation (TAPPI) project which aims to improve the way technology is used in housing and care for older people. The hub provides a variety of preventative care technologies to support individuals to live independently, in their own homes, for longer, and is available for tenants, staff and other stakeholders to trial.

Bield will implement its strategy in three distinct phases – strengthen, grow and lead – to ensure it is delivered in a planned and coordinated way.

  • This phased growth will allow Bield to meet its key priorities which are broken down into five main subsets: facing challenges, improving efficiency, harnessing strengths, enhancing impact and leading the way.

Lynne added: “At Bield, we’re always striving to improve customer experience and satisfaction whilst growing our use of modern, in-home technologies to support independent living. Our new strategy will enable us to develop a personalised and proactive approach to delivering our services, develop and test new innovative digital solutions and share our experience and expertise for the benefit of wider society.

“It is estimated that by 2030 more than 600,00 people in Scotland will be aged 75 or over so now more than ever is the time to be ambitious.”

Bield is a housing and care charity committed to providing innovative, flexible and high-quality housing solutions and support for older people. Bield Housing and Care has around 180 developments which facilitate independent living across Scotland.

The charity currently operates in 22 local authority areas and works with 24 health and social care partnerships in Scotland.

https://www.bield.co.uk/ 




Beltane Fire Festival – traditional tales to mark the beginning of summer

Edinburgh’s Beltane Fire Festival returns to Calton Hill on Sunday 30 April. Although the current weather is not at all springlike never mind summer, the festival is intended to celebrate the beginning of summer.

Beltane Fire Festival is a living, breathing re-interpretation and modernisation of an ancient Iron Age Celtic ritual and is the largest of its kind, bringing people from all over the world to join and revel in the birth of Summer and the fertility of the land since 1988. Join us for an immersive Celtic experience, more spectacular and expansive than ever before!

This year’s festival will tell the traditional tales of The Procession of the May Queen and The Death and Re-Birth of The Green Man from a unique and exciting perspective; revellers will be surrounded by fire-play, acrobatics, drummers, dancers, clowns, musicians, actors, puppeteers, artists, poets, crafters, curious and mysterious characters and even cats.

Edinburgh’s Beltane celebrations are the largest of their kind and have attracted crowds of around 10,000 people from all across the globe.

Festival Co-ordinator Tom Watton said: “It is an honour to facilitate all of the hard work and dedication of the Beltane volunteers; who over the last ten weeks, have been busy preparing for another spectacular one of a kind fire festival. Come and join us this year as raise the Beltane toast: to the earth our mother and the fire our host!”

Join us at the end of the month, celebrate the turning of the wheel.

Tickets for the Beltane Fire Festival are available from Citizen Tickets here.

Beltane Fire Festival 2022, Calton Hill, Edinburgh, 30th April 2022
© 2022 J.L. Preece



Community Centre buyout is welcome news

The Corstorphine Community Centre at 5 Kirk Loan is to be transferred in a Community Asset Transfer as confirmed by councillors earlier this week.

On Tuesday The City of Edinburgh Council approved the sale of Westfield House to the local charity Corstorphine Community Centre (CCC).

Cllr Mandy Watt, Finance and Resources Convener for the City of Edinburgh Council, said: “It’s great that we agreed the community asset transfer of Westfield House to Corstorphine Community Centre yesterday. As a Council we are always looking to support and encourage community empowerment and this latest transfer is one of a number we have carried out in the past couple of years.

“The Community Centre put forward a really detailed and community-focused bid for the building which will now be brought back into use and offer a wide range of activities, promote health-wellbeing and ensure social interaction for local disadvantaged groups. This is a real win for the area and will be an important community hub for the citizens of Corstorphine.”

The application for the sale of the site was made under The Scottish Government’s Community Asset Transfer Scheme.

CCC has been based in the building and operating a community Hub since June last year, with a lease granted by the Council, but the welcome decision means that plans to make the whole building accessible, and a flexible resource for the community to use are much nearer.

Chairperson, Shulah Allan, said “We are delighted that the council sees the benefit to the community of a local Hub. By agreeing to the sale the council is helping to bring to fruition our plans to develop Westfield House and its grounds. It’s been a ten-year journey to get to this point, and our thanks go to the community for all the support given to CCC in so many ways since the fire in 2013”.

The next step is a decision by the Scottish Land Fund on an award towards the £1.1 million purchase of the premises. This will be added to the funds that CCC have raised and will spend on the purchase and necessary refurbishment of the building. A decision on this grant is expected by the end of May.

www.corstorphinecommunitycentre.org.uk




Formal talks begin about new Fringe Festival hub

Plans for a new Edinburgh Fringe ‘hub’ have taken a step forward as the council enters formal discussions with festival bosses about leasing out a city centre building.

The Old Town’s South Bridge Resource Centre is set to be repurposed as a “year-round Fringe community hub” for artists using £7 million awarded by the UK Government’s capital investment fund.

The former school – which comes with a “considerable repair bill” – will undergo a major refurbishment using the funds, if plans are progressed further, and the council said arrangements would be made to accommodate groups who currently use the centre.

A decision to enter “formal and more detailed discussions” about the project with the Edinburgh Festival Fringe Society was taken by the council’s finance committee on Tuesday (April 25) however a report said a “considerable amount of work” is still required before a long lease can be signed. This includes the council relocating adult education services which are currently provided there and the Fringe Society (EFFS) drawing up a business plan and financial feasibility study.

There is some controversy over the substantial funding being ring-fenced for the hub project, with some arguing that part of the funds should be available to support struggling Fringe companies and venues. The Fringe Society CE Shona McArthy has recently warned about the “existential threat” to the festival caused by rising costs.

The Scottish Government’s Culture Minister Christina McKelvie, said in response to a question from Conservative MSP Jamie Green that “although such funding is welcome, the UK Government needs to engage with us in advance to ensure that support is aligned and its impact maximised.”

Work will now commence to assess what changes are needed to “maximise the space” and make it more accessible and sustainable. Its use as a resource centre and Fringe venue during the summer will not be interrupted during this initial phase.

EFFS said the Infirmary Street building had been identified as the ideal location for the new arts base due for “a variety of reasons” with a key consideration being its “proximity to the existing footprint of the Fringe”. 

Canongate Youth, which supports and runs activities for youngsters at the centre, would remain a tenant, EFFS said, adding: “Other small arts and cultural organisations may also be offered the opportunity to co-exist there, creating a vibrant, mixed-use community space for all and a hub for the Fringe Society’s services and team during August and year-round.”

Senior estates officer Graeme McGartland told the finance committee the South Bridge Resource Centre has a “considerable repair bill”. The report said the minimum amount required to get it up to scratch was estimated at £1.13m in 2019 and that “this will have increased in the intervening period”.

The establishment of a “space for artists and creatives across the Fringe landscape” was first mooted in 2017 and became a reality after funding was announced in Chancellor Jeremy Hunt’s spring budget.

The Fringe Society said this came following meetings with ministers and officials where they “advocated for a range of support across several key areas”.

However money for the community hub has been ring-fenced, meaning it can’t be spend on anything else – and there has been “no indication” that part of the investment could go to other areas of the Fringe “in crucial need of support”.

Edinburgh Greens co-convenor Alys Mumford said at the meeting the Fringe has “positive and negative” impacts on the city and that the grant did not address financial pressures faced by artists and lack of sustainable and affordable accommodation for performers during the festival.

She said: “Time and time again we see that large organisations like the Fringe talk about broadening their aims and working with communities and often that ignores the brilliant community work which is already happening, whether supported by council-funded organisations or voluntary, grass routes community groups.”

Shona McCarthy, chief executive of the Fringe Society, said: “The conversion of this space into a year-round Fringe community hub will allow local cultural organisations, artists and our community partners the opportunity to utilise this space too.

“In the long-term it will allow a permanent home for our August participants’ hub, known as Fringe Central, which artists, arts industry, media and international delegates access each summer for a range of workshops, networking and industry events.”

by Donald Turvill Local Democracy Reporter

The Local Democracy Reporting Service (LDRS) is a public service news agency. It is funded by the BBC, provided by the local news sector (in Edinburgh that is Reach plc (the publisher behind Edinburgh Live and The Daily Record) and used by many qualifying partners. Local Democracy Reporters cover news about top-tier local authorities and other public service organisations.

By Greatal386 at English Wikipedia, CC BY 2.5, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=7760042



Controversial Leith Walk development gets go ahead

A controversial student housing development has been given the green light for Edinburgh’s Leith Walk following a knife edge vote by councillors.

Developers behind the plans were accused of ignoring the wishes of the local community and failing to address a huge social housing shortage, with their proposals for the vacant site predominantly student accommodation.

The council also came under fire for supporting the plans as objectors described the designs as “crap” and said the new buildings would create a “very unpleasant environment” for neighbours due to daylight being blocked out.

Objectors also argued that the proposals were “at odds” with the Halmyre Street Place Brief, a council document drawn up to shape the future development of the site.

The approved bid by CW Properties will see a large warehouse situated on the plot between Leith Walk and Halmrye Street, to the east of 139 Leith Walk, demolished and replaced with a six-storey block to house 230 students, with three commercial units on the ground floor.

In addition, there will be two five-storey blocks, one with 27 affordable flats and the other with 27 build to rent flats.

Plans received 172 public objections and just one letter of support and were supported by six votes to five by members of the planning sub-committee on Wednesday (April 26).

Leith Central Community Council were among the groups to oppose the development going ahead, with members attending the meeting in a last-ditch attempt to persuade councillors to refuse the application.

John Wilkinson said: “The proposal to build 230 student beds and only 27 affordable flats plus 27 build to rent flats fundamentally misinterprets the Halmyre Place Brief which emphasises the need in Leith for environmentally sustainable, social and affordable housing rather than student accommodations.

“The Edinburgh Urban Design Panel has expressed strong concerns since the early stage of the proposal with respect to the proposed level of student accommodation, general land use, layout, height, materials and security.”

Mr Wilkinson said the buildings would block sunlight from residents’ windows – leaving some with less than “minimum daylight requirements”.

And he said the development would result in “an excessive concentration of student accommodation that would be detrimental to the balance of the community”.

He added: “This is not what is wanted in Leith.

“We want quality. If you’re going to build this, it is going to last for 30 or 40 years, are you happy looking at this for the next 30 years? That’s all we really want to know. If you want to keep building crap, carry on.”

David Walliker, from the Save Leith Walk campaign, said the “over dominant student housing block” would create a “very unpleasant environment” around the site.

He said:  “There was a consultation, and in that consultation people were asked and there was a specific section about housing in there, it said: ‘what would you want to have on this site’.

“There were 120 people wanting social and affordable housing out of 230. There was one who said we would like student housing. This development is the complete opposite to what people wanted. It flies in the face of reality.”

Also highlighting that residents had clearly signalled their wishes for the site, Leith Walk Cllr Susan Rae (Greens) told the committee the place brief gave a “very clear mandate” for affordable housing.

She said: “We feel that there’s been serious compromise made to affordable housing to accommodate student accommodation here.

“In Leith Walk, as you’re all aware, it’s the most densely populated ward in the city.

“Quite a large number of those builds are already student housing.”

“The community doesn’t want to accept this continual overbuild of student accommodation without helping us with the housing and the social housing we desperately need; we have 13 per cent social housing in my ward, only 13 per cent, and 9,000 people on a housing waiting list – and yet we still persist with building not enough social housing and overcompensate student housing – and people are very distressed about that.”

Taking a different view, Cllr Jo Mowat, Conservatives, described it as “quite a solid application”.

She said: “It is really difficult to develop sites in densely populated areas, this is a large piece of what is a lot of car parking and an empty warehouse at the moment.

“You will always get a lot fewer traditional residential properties that you will get student bed spaces simply because of what we ask developers to put in for amenity reasons.”

by Donald Turvill Local Democracy Reporter

The Local Democracy Reporting Service (LDRS) is a public service news agency. It is funded by the BBC, provided by the local news sector (in Edinburgh that is Reach plc (the publisher behind Edinburgh Live and The Daily Record) and used by many qualifying partners. Local Democracy Reporters cover news about top-tier local authorities and other public service organisations.




Counter Sessions – a neighbourhood gathering place

At the Counter at Native Edinburgh there is food all day long, but now in a new move the evenings will be full of music, performances and all kinds of creative workshops such as Flower Art therapy and Wild Life Drawing.

To find out more about Counter at Native Edinburgh, to see What’s On, and to book click here.

The menu changes during the day from the breakfast menu served from 7am until noon, followed by lunch from noon until 4pm and then the evening menu offering up night nibbles such as East Coast cured saucisson sec pickles on toasted bread. Alternatives include Traditional Dunlop from George Mewes with Arran flame roasted tomato chutney.

Specially curated, the wine menu includes a fine selection of White, Red, Rose and Orange wines – with a highlighted wine of the month available monthly. Signature cocktails include the likes of Monsoon, Old Fashioned, Margarita, Negroni and Elderflower Spritz.

To find out more about Counter at Native Edinburgh, to see What’s On, and to book, please visit native.counteredinburgh.com. Follow @counterplaces and @nativeplacesuk on Instagram for the latest updates.

Located above Counter is Native Edinburgh, a fully serviced aparthotel offering stylish Studio and One Bedroom apartments. All housed in the Neoclassical and Georgian architecture in the heart of Edinburgh’s New Town, Native Edinburgh and its ground-floor neighbourhood space Counter offer a boutique aparthotel living paired with a side of community and a slice of cultural happenings.




Council workers reject latest pay deal

Members of the largest union for local government workers, Unison Scotland, overwhelmingly voted to reject COSLA’s latest pay offer, with 90% of those who voted backing strike action.

In the ballot of Unison members, covering a range of local government roles including cleaners, refuse workers, carers and school staff, 87% rejected the pay offer, with 90% of them backing action to secure an improved deal.

The pay offer on the table depends on salary bands but was on average around 5.5%, going up to 7% into the next financial year. This falls short of the 12% being asked by the unions.

Unison’s local government committee has written to COSLA outlining the reasons for rejecting the deal. The union says the offer amounts to a real terms pay cut for their members, given the rate of inflation, and for those on the lowest pay, it falls short of the offer made to local government workers in other parts of the UK. The rejection comes shortly after members of another union, GMB Scotland, also turned down the pay deal.

COSLA leaders are meeting on Friday and are being urged to make an improved offer to prevent strike action.

Unison Scotland’s head of local government, Johanna Baxter, said: “Local government workers have overwhelmingly voted to reject COSLA’s  pay offer and made it clear that they are willing to take strike action to get a better offer.  It is disappointing that yet again UNISON members are having to consider withdrawing their labour in order to secure a decent pay rise – it’s the last thing they want to do but they continue to face a cost of living crisis and they have understandably had enough of being treated like the poor relations of the public sector.”

In response to the decision of the union ballots, COSLA Resources Spokesperson, Cllr Katie Hagmann said: “This strong offer clearly illustrates the value Councils place on their workforce, and it compares well to other sectors. It recognises the cost-of-living pressures on our workforce and critically, it seeks to protect jobs and services. This is a point that I will be reiterating to Council Leaders at our meeting tomorrow.

“While the offer value in year is 5.5%, the average uplift on salaries going into the next financial year is 7%.  Those on the Scottish Local Government Living Wage would get 9.12% and those at higher grades, where Councils are experiencing severe recruitment challenges, would see 6.05%.

“It is an offer which recognises both the vital role of the people who deliver our essential services across Councils every day and the value that we, as employers, place on them.  Crucially, it also raises the Scottish Local Government Living Wage by 99p to £11.84 per hour and sets out a commitment to work with our Trade Unions to develop a road map to £15 per hour in a way that protects our workforce and services we deliver.”




Parliament daubed with red paint by protesters

The Scottish Parliament was daubed with red paint this morning by protesters whose identity is as yet unconfirmed, but rumoured to be climate protesters,This is Rigged.

Staff at the parliament were working hard to remove it after the damage was caused around the time of First Minister’s Questions on Thursday.

UPDATE: This is Rigged have confirmed it was some of their members who took the action.

Speaking about why they took action, Lindsey from the climate protest group explained:

“There is no such thing as being “neutral” when it comes to new oil and gas developments. Our first minister can either do everything in his power to stick up for life and oppose all new oil and gas, or he can pander to the oil and gas industry. Right now, he, and others in government and in parliament are choosing the latter. I don’t want Humza Yousaf or any other politician in Holyrood to feel comfortable with their current position on oil and gas.”

“This Is Rigged defied new bans brought in to curb disruptions in the Public Gallery during First Minister’s Questions when they protested last week. In a statement released by This is Rigged, the group explain that the change of tactics has nothing to do with the bans but instead an understanding that talking to politicians has not worked. 

“Banning us from parliament is not going to stop the disruption.” 

All photos Alan Simpson Photography.

Red paint daubed over Scottish Parliament building
Red paint daubed over Scottish Parliament building
Red paint daubed over Scottish Parliament building
Red paint daubed over Scottish Parliament building
Red paint daubed over Scottish Parliament building
Red paint daubed over Scottish Parliament building



Employment and Training Boost for South West Edinburgh 

Space at The Broomhouse Hub appoints a new Employability Manager to oversee projects which help people into paid work

Broomhouse and the surrounding areas will be getting a boost in training opportunities as Joyce Juma-Phiri is appointed the new Employability Manager at community development charity Space at the Broomhouse Hub. This role will oversee the development of two Training Academy projects, dedicated to supporting people into volunteer opportunities, work placements, and paid employment.

A Broomie at heart, Joyce has always been committed to supporting the local community and was previously involved with The Broomhouse Empowerment project, which inspired the development of the play area and green space on Broomhouse Grove. 

Joyce comes to Space at The Broomhouse Hub armed with a wealth of knowledge on employability and how people are affected by a lack of access to job opportunities. Her previous work includes an 8-year project at Four Square, working as a practitioner and heading up employability programmes for young people aged 16 – 25.  

Joyce’s new role focuses on overseeing two of Space’s Training Academy projects, Pick ‘n’ Mix to Employment and Space Station: Catering & Hospitality.

Complementing the Space team, Joyce is passionate about helping people into employment and explained some key areas that are crucial to making this happen: 

“The first is to maintain our person-centered approach to support – allowing people to take charge of their progress while staff walk alongside them on their way to employment. This includes developing a 1-to-1 support service for our project members, allowing those who do not thrive in group settings to explore their employability skills at a pace that suits them. 

“It’s important to let people identify their journey. A lot of the time, we focus too much on the negatives and not the positives of our circumstances. We are actively looking to work with more people, school leavers and those of any age looking to get into work over the coming year. We are also keen to hear from any employers who might be able to offer talks, placements or other support to people who are looking to get into work.” 

The Pick ‘n’ Mix to Employment programme runs regularly throughout the year, and Space are keen to hear from anyone who might be interested in taking part.

Backed by a Young Start grant from The National Lottery Community Fund, the project runs three group activities each week – a wellbeing workshop on Tuesdays, job taster sessions on Thursdays, and an employability skills session on Fridays. The project name – Pick ‘n’ Mix – comes from a flexibility for each individual to pick and choose the sessions that suit their needs. 

Each block is eight weeks long, and 100% of the young people that took part in the latest group said that it had massively increased their sense of wellbeing. The Space Training Academy has supported many young people into further opportunities, such as paid employment, work placements, and further training courses.

If you are looking to kick start a career or get back in to employment, or want to support our work, contact joyce.juma-phiri@spacescot.org or phone 0131 455 7731. You can find out more about other projects on the Space website, https://www.spacescot.org/




Scottish youth charity secures support from global powersports leader BRP

The partnership will help Polar Academy expand its mission to give vulnerable young people a chance to redefine their physical and mental limits.

Scottish transformational youth charity, The Polar Academy, today announces its partnership with BRP, a global leader in the world of powersports products, propulsion systems and boats.

In collaboration with BRP and its ‘Ride Out Intimidation’ programme, The Polar Academy will expand the programmes mission to transform bullied young people into leaders and role models and help them in reaching their full potential. 

The Polar Academy is the first charity they have partnered with in the UK as part of ‘Ride out Intimidation’. This will see the charity gain support over the next three years. The backing will ensure that The Polar Academy continues its work to help vulnerable children develop both physical and mental agility to combat significant life challenges including bullying and intimidation’ 

The Polar Academy identifies 14-17 years old secondary school children impacted by bullying, abuse and/or bereavement and gives them the chance to redefine their physical and mental limits. Participants from Monifieth High School & Arbroath Academy have recently completed a rigorous ten-month training program before being immersed in the remote terrain of the wild and extreme environment of Arctic Greenland. 

The 2023-2024 program will see 30 children from Dundee Braeview and Bucksburn Academy in Aberdeen commence their training program, starting in later this month. 

On their return to Scotland, the annual cohort of graduates share their experiences with their peer groups and speak to more than 90,000 individuals in their regions. They are living, breathing proof that inspiration through exploration changes the potential of a young person in the most extraordinary way. 

Craig Mathieson, Head of The Polar Academy said “We are a charity that relies fully on the support and donations from the public, corporates, grants and foundations. This significant partnership with BRP cements our commitment to helping young people facing the challenges and implications of bullying which has become so prevalent amongst the youth society of today. Since engaging with BRP in 2022, there is significant alignment in our goals, culture and objectives to address these issues and I and the Board of Trustees are extremely excited about this long-term partnership that will enable us to support more children in the future as part of our growth strategy.” 

Christine Babkine, CSR Director at BRP said ‘We are very proud to collaborate with The Polar Academy who develops successful programs that have a major impact on the lives of young bullied people in schools. At BRP, through our ‘Ride Out Intimidation’ program, we want to support more of these initiatives to ensure that children grow up in an environment that encourages learning, confidence and good social relationships. This partnership and the actions deployed by The Polar Academy gets us one step closer to that goal.‘’ 

The Polar Academy partners with BRP



Eclectic new neighbourhood hangout set to open in Bruntsfield

A new bar and restaurant, Patron Saint promises to be a ‘home away from home’, when it opens in Bruntsfield this May.

The all-day dining menu overseen by head chef Francesco Castro, previously of the Glentress Hotel, will feature casual dishes and brunch items that showcase hyperlocal suppliers like Modern Standard and La Barantine which are a stone’s throw away from the venue.

The drinks menu includes classic cocktails, rotational beers, wines and spirits from Royal Mile Whiskies, Inverarity Morton and New Wave Beer. The expert team have also curated an ingenious Bloody Mary menu, to run alongside their range of alcohol and alcohol-free drinks.

The owners of the 58-cover site have taken a maximalist approach to the interiors, with clashing patterns, colours and textures that are reminiscent of someone stepping into an Alice in Wonderland tea party. The family and dog-friendly space has little nooks and alcoves for customers to relax in. On top of this, it features an outdoor 20-cover courtyard to enjoy in the warmer weather.

Nick Madigan, Managing Director of Lucky Number Seven Holdings, said,
“I love Bruntsfield, it is one of my favourite places in the city, so it made sense to open our third venue in the area. Our aim for Patron Saint is for it to be a home away from home, a place to bring your family, friends and pets for a casual, relaxed dining or drinking experience. We look forward to meeting the locals and becoming part of the community”.

“I wanted the bar to be warm and comfortable but also stylish and exciting. When we decided on the name Patron Saint which takes its namesake from the church next door, we sourced antique pieces that we thought would fit well with the vibrant modern style.”

Patron Saint is owned by Lucky Number Seven Holdings, the brains behind two of Edinburgh’s most popular bars The Cocktail Mafia and The Raging Bull.

To celebrate the opening, Patron Saint will be offering 50% discount on food until the end of June, to be the first to know when the booking lines open, sign up to the newsletter on the website: https://patronsaintedinburgh.co.uk/




Cottages & Creels – first Edinburgh solo exhibition by Ingrid Mayes

The opening of Ingrid Mayes’ first Edinburgh solo exhibition takes place on Saturday 29 April at 2.30 pm at Art & Craft Collective.

Originally from Kent, Ingrid relocated to Fife in 2007 and now paints full time from her studio in Dalgety Bay.

She generally works in acrylics or oils and prefers to imagine her own village scenes rather than be too close to reality.

Ingrid will be at the gallery for the opening, ready to chat about art, her inspiration and her fascinating process.  Everyone is invited to go along and enjoy a glass of fizz with the art.

Art & Craft Collective, 93 Causewayside, EH9 1QG.




Edinburgh writers Val McDermid & Doug Johnstone in the running for best crime novel award

Public vote will help choose the winner of the UK’s most prestigious crime writing prize, Theakston Old Peculier Crime Novel of the Year 2023

The search for the best crime novel of 2023 is now underway – with two Edinburgh authors in the starting line-up.

Now in its nineteenth year, the Theakston Old Peculier Crime Novel of the Year is a hugely sought-after accolade celebrating crime fiction at its very best. There are twenty outstanding authors in the longlist for the award this year. This includes the doyenne of crime writing world Val McDermid, a previous winner who is back in contention for her scintillating second instalment of the Allie Burns series, 1989. Also representing Edinburgh is Val’s bandmate in the Fun Lovin’ Crime Writers, Doug Johnstone, for his explosive thriller Black Hearts which follows the Skelf women’s struggles with increasingly unnerving cases.

Readers from across the UK are now being asked to choose the six authors who will reach the shortlist, which will be revealed on Thursday 15 June. The eventual winner will be announced on the opening night of Theakston Old Peculier Crime Writing Festival on Thursday 20 July. They will receive £3,000 and a handmade, engraved beer barrel provided by T&R Theakston Ltd.

Simon Theakston, Executive Director of Theakston, said: “Each year I eagerly await the long list announcement for the Theakston Old Peculier Crime Novel of the Year and every year I’m reminded of the phenomenal talent in the crime fiction writing world, whether a returning icon or a rising star. I’m looking forward to a celebratory toast of Old Peculier in July, but for now, we raise a glass to all the exceptional nominees as the shortlist vote is taken to the public.”

Chief Executive of Harrogate International Festivals, Sharon Canavar, commented: “We are delighted to announce the 2023 longlist for the Theakston Old Peculier Crime Novel of the Year, with an exceptional collection of the UK and Ireland’s best crime fiction novels from the past year. The Award is an integral part of the Festival and with a gripping mix of subgenres nominated, from psychological thrillers to murder mysteries, we can’t wait to see how the public vote this year.”

The fate of this year’s leading crime fiction authors is now in the bloody hands of the public – let’s make sure Val and Doug make the cut!

Vote here: https://harrogatetheakstoncrimeaward.com/

The full Theakston Old Peculier Crime Novel of the Year 2023 longlist is:

·        The Murder Book by Mark Billingham (Little, Brown Book Group; Little Brown)

·        The Botanist by M.W. Craven (Little, Brown Book Group; Constable)

·        Into The Dark by Fiona Cummins (Pan Macmillan; Macmillan/Pan)

·        The Paris Apartment by Lucy Foley (HarperCollins; HarperFiction)

·        The Locked Room by Elly Griffiths (Quercus)

·        The Twyford Code by Janice Hallett (Profile Books; Viper)

·        Bad Actors by Mick Herron (John Murray Press; Baskerville)

·        The Family Remains by Lisa Jewell (Cornerstone; Century Fiction)

·        Black Hearts by Doug Johnstone (Orenda Books)

·        The Lost Man of Bombay by Vaseem Khan (Hodder & Stoughton)

·        The Last Party by Clare Mackintosh (Little, Brown Book Group; Sphere)

·        All I Said Was True by Imran Mahmood (Bloomsbury Publishing; Raven Books)

·        Wrong Place Wrong Time by Gillian McAllister (Penguin Random House; Michael Joseph)

·        1989 by Val McDermid (Little, Brown Book Group; Little Brown)

·        The Heretic by Liam McIlvanney (HarperCollins; HarperFiction)

·        Blue Water by Leonora Nattrass (Profile Books; Viper)

·        May God Forgive by Alan Parks (Canongate Books)

·        Truly Darkly Deeply by Victoria Selman (Quercus)

·        Reputation by Sarah Vaughan (Simon & Schuster)

·        The It Girl by Ruth Ware (Simon & Schuster)

Val McDermid at The Theakston Old Peculier Crime Writing Festival. Saturday 24th July 2021. Picture Credit Charlotte Graham
Author Doug Johnstone, longlisted for the Theakston Old Peculier Crime Novel of the Year 2023
Black Hearts by Doug Johnstone
1989 by Val McDermid



Five things you need to know today

Edinburgh International Festival

It is clear that there is some paring down of finances at Edinburgh International Festival (EIF) HQ. There are to be no fireworks at the end of August to mark the end of one of the biggest cultural events anywhere in the world. The last time the fireworks were staged after the festival was in 2019. Virgin Money ended their sponsorship deal with the festival in 2020, and until a big name sponsor is found there will be no fireworks.

Read more here.

Virgin Money Fireworks 2019 – Edinburgh International Festival. Photo: Martin P. McAdam www.martinmcadam.com

Bangladeshi celebration

Foysol Choudhury, MBE, is the first person born in Bangladesh to be elected as an MSP. He uses the position to its full extent to celebrate all anniversaries and even welcomed the Prime Minister of Bangladesh, H.E. Sheikh Hasina, to the parliament during COP26.

He told us his thoughts after the celebration held at Holyrood on Tuesday night.

Read more here.

Council blunder

The council is having to restart a consultation on making Spaces for People measures permanent. The Local Democracy Reporting Service was shown a councillor briefing note and wrote the story which you can read here.

It’s all Greek to me

A new Greek restaurant will open on Friday in the New Town.

Kuzina at 18 Howe Street is described as an ‘Authentic Taste of Greece with a Modern Twist’.  The restaurant (Kuzina in English means Kitchen) will produce and present the finest Greek food and flavours.

Read more here.

Please subscribe to our newspaper

The April issue of our paper has been out for a while and we are just about to send the May issue to press later today.

Our newspaper includes many stories that may or may not be included on our website, but they are always presented a little differently.

Sign up here to have your own copy delivered. Our subscribers help us to keep the rest of our news free to access (and we love them a little bit more…)




Permission granted for care home in Davidson’s Mains despite opposition

A council decision to grant planning permission for a care home in a former Edinburgh village centre has been described as a “really bad outcome” by local residents who called on the site to be used for “much needed houses” instead. 

A planning meeting heard that the “vast majority” of people in Davidson’s Mains were opposed to the development.

Despite this, councillors unanimously approved the proposals which will will deliver a 48-bed care home specialising in dementia and end of life care. 

One local councillor objecting to the plans said the area’s high street was “fragile” as residents argued that “elderly and frail” people moving in would not have the same economic impact on local businesses as an influx of new residents would.
Developers making their case before the planning sub committee said the vacant brownfield plot on Main Street was “ideal” for a new care home and would “add to the vitality and vibrance of the local centre”.
And they pointed out the site – which objectors said was the “only available development site” in the area – was not designated for new housing in the council’s local development plan. 
Also appearing at the meeting on Wednesday were members of Davidson’s Mains and Silverknowes Association who mounted an argument against the bid.
Chairperson Rod Alexander said granting permission would be “a really bad outcome for the local area and extremely detrimental to the viability of the village centre”. 
He said: “The vast majority of people are completely opposed to this application, not because they’re against care homes but because they expected that new housing would be developed on this site – and there was unanimous local support for the benefits that new provide for Davidsons Mains village. 
“It’s the only available development site in Davidsons Mains.
“We’re fortunate to have greenspace and lots of nice environment but this is the only potential site where new housing could be built – and new housing is what the local residents want.
“It’s a unique opportunity to build much needed houses.” 

He continued: “The prospect of 40 or 50 new homes with perhaps 100 to 120 people who actually live in the community and use local shops and services would be so important.
“With respect, I’m not anti-care homes, but a care home with 48 elderly and frail residents specialising in very specialist needs for elderly people with medical problems and other limitations are just not going to engage with local services in the same way.”
Local councillor Kevin Lang, Lib Dems, joined calls for the committee to refuse the application. He said: “This site is ideal for development. The local community want it developed, I as a councillor want it developed, the business association want it developed. 
“A lot has been said about the appropriateness of a care home and I am very sympathetic that you need to look at this application on its own merits. 
“This site is very different to almost every other site in my ward where a care home has been approved in the time I’ve been a councillor.
“This is a heavily constrained site – I would challenge the assertion that there is high levels of public transport in the area.”

Cllr Lang said he was concerned it would result in “very intense over-development”.
He said: “It’s a fragile high street because of that it is important to think about the sensitivity of the development on the site and how it will fit in with the character of the local area.”

Speaking on behalf of developers Linemann Healthcare, Derek Scott argued the home could “free up” properties occupied by residents in need of care locally.
He said: “The application site is not zoned for housing purposes in either the adopted local development plan or your proposed local development plan.
“The application site is from operational and logistical perspectives, ideally located for a care home facility. It will be positioned at the heart of the local community within the local centre.
“It benefits from excellent public transport links and it will contribute to Davidson’s Mains role as the beating heart of the surrounding 20 minute neighbourhood.
“Local shops and other facilities will benefit from the patronage derived from residents within the care home, from staff working in it and from those visiting friends and relatives.
“In that respect, it will add to the vitality and vibrance of the local centre rather than detracting from it.”
A report which recommended councillors to give the go ahead said: “The proposals will deliver a sustainable and well-designed care home scheme that will contribute to climate mitigation and adaptation and the restoration and enhancement of biodiversity.
“The design draws on the character of the surrounding area to create a strong sense of place.”

by Donald Turvill, Local Democracy Reporter.

The Local Democracy Reporting Service (LDRS) is a public service news agency. It is funded by the BBC, provided by the local news sector (in Edinburgh that is Reach plc (the publisher behind Edinburgh Live and The Daily Record) and used by many qualifying partners. Local Democracy Reporters cover news about top-tier local authorities and other public service organisations.




Care home’s cooking class proves better than sliced bread

Bread making masterclass inspires creativity amongst the residents.

Residents at an Edinburgh care home have enjoyed a series of cooking classes as part of their events calendar, with the programme starting off with a bread making masterclass.

The sessions held at Cramond Residence, courtesy of the home’s Chef Paul Cowley, hope to inspire creativity and reignite a passion for cooking amongst the residents.

This month’s masterclass focused on bread making with future sessions set to feature foods from all over the globe – following residents’ wishes.

Cooking is just one of the activities the home provides as part of its events calendar which is tailored to residents’ interests, with the aim of improving their wellbeing and independence. Other activities include exercises classes, arts and craft as well as frequent day trips.

Paul, who alongside the head chef leads the catering department at the 74-bedroom home, said: “I love seeing the smiling faces of our residents as they take part in activities that remind them of home comforts such as cooking.

“Residents enjoyed a step by step session on how to make bread from scratch. We sampled the bread, tasting the different types and comparing it to shop bought bread

“Many of our residents already have a passion for cooking so we wanted to introduce the classes to continue that enjoyment while allowing some of the group to learn new skills and try different cuisines.

“As well as the pleasure of cooking, the class also provides a fun setting where residents can enjoy socialising with others in the class. The buzz of happy chatter in the dining room is ample pay back for the work we do.”

This month’s activities include garden archery and golf sessions, spa and relaxation mornings and physio classes, organised by Cramond Residence’s dedicated Lifestyle Coordinators who are committed to providing fun and engaging activities for the residents to enjoy.

Len Skelton, a resident at the home said: “I always enjoy the meals cooked up by chefs at Cramond, however it is really nice to be given the opportunity to get back in the kitchen again.  Who doesn’t love the taste of fresh bread out of the oven…”

In addition to freshly prepared nutritious meals and a robust excursions and activities calendar, residents are provided with deluxe accommodation, best-of-class facilities and a wide range of entertainment.

The medication and care provided is based on a detailed personal care plan, which is continually assessed and revised by health care professionals and other experts to ensure that the best possible care is being delivered.

Facilities provided include a cinema and function room, a dedicated games room and also a sensory experience which offers therapeutic activities for those with dementia.

Cramond Residence offer tours of their quality accommodation and facilities, allowing potential residents and loved ones to see the residence for themselves, meet the team and discuss requirements.

https://cramondresidence.co.uk/