Dick stepped down as Chair of NAS at the Group’s AGM in the
Community and Arts Centre on Wednesday night. During his time in the job plotting in Nairn
has gone from a state of near oblivion to be at the forefront of a resurgence of
the past-time in the Highlands. The group are also renowned for their approach
and have been a source of help and advice to others beyond the Highlands. From
those 18 plots at Sandown which faced extinction in a development scheme the
Society now administers over a hundred plots. At one point two thirds of all
plots in the Highlands were in Nairn.
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Dick Youngson addresses the 2014 AGM of NAS |
On Wednesday night Dick spoke of the days when the plots
were moved from Viewfield to Sandown in 1988 and he said that there were still
a few of those original Sandown plotters still in the group. He went on:
“It has been a very good year again for the Society. We’re
much admired in the allotment system. When I was down in the conference in June
in Dunblane they couldn’t get over the fact that we have a hundred plus plots,
independent really of Highland Council. We manage our own affairs, there’s been
no problem in doing things. Many of these other areas are fighting hard for
sites, many of those that are on the waiting list have been on the list years
and years with very little chance of getting a plot. We are right down to a
waiting list of thirteen or so and we’ve got a pretty rapid turnover of people
taking up plots. People really aren’t on the waiting list for very long. They
can’t really get over, here we are in Nairn – we had to fight like mad to keep
Sandown, because they wanted it for development, they wanted to sell the whole
of Sandown for development and that’s when we set up our Society.
Our Society isn’t a very long established group, we set it
up to make sure that we have a strong voice and we managed to keep the 18 plots
and then we managed to get Mill Road and then we managed to get the next bit of
Sandown. Hence the reason we have grown from 80 plots up to a 100 plus. The way
we have actually designed our different sites leads to a lot of the other sites
in the Highlands coming to us and seeing what we’ve done and how we’ve done it,
and they’ve picked up a lot of our rules and regulations and the way that we
actually manage our system. Unlike many of them we do everything from
allocating plots to setting the rentals and taking in fees for plots. They’re
also very interested to come and see our composting toilet because they are all
wanting toilets on their sites. They feel that having water in a toilet block
leads to all sorts of problems in the winter time and having to drain off, of
course with a composting toilet there’s no problem, it’s there throughout the
year. And with all these plots now with families and little ones, some of them
aren’t very close to home or close to public toilets and they have to have a
toilet and a composting toilet is one way round it. [...]
At the moment in Highland Region we’ve got 25% of the total number
of allotments. There are a lot of sites coming on stream That percentage will
shrink in the next few years. I’ve had Kinguissie on the phone quite a lot,
they’ve got a super site which they got through an enterprise company because
Highland Council’s land and it was part of the old heritage site. [...]There’s
a new site as well in Inverness coming up in Milton of Leys and it’s not
Highland Council’s ground it’s private ground and they’ve got 40 odd plots
coming on stream there. They’ve come to
see us as well about how to run it. It’s going to be again privately run
independently of Highland Council and they will keep a waiting list. We keep
all these records, the waiting list, a
list of plot holders and if they ask for it we can produce it similarly we’ve
got the annual revenue sheets absolutely nailed to the last penny. There’s a
lot going on North.
The SAGS (Scottish Allotments and Gardens) conference which was in Dunblane, it’s
always very well attended, it tells us a lot about what is going on on the
Scottish Scene. I was really speaking at it on experience on training and
having allotments in the community garden for groups of people, children as
well and people with all sorts of health problems or otherwise. Really this is
something that is coming into all the allotments no. There has to be provision
for disadvantaged groups coming in and getting the best out of plots or areas
within an allotment site. It was quite interesting and quite well received. A
chance down there to exchange information. Lesly Riddoch chaired it, she is
working along similar lines on areas for communities to get involved in all
sorts of things a bit like this.
And the last thing, is really the allotment legislation
which is slowly going through committee stages in parliament. It’s been run by
Derek MacKay MSP and he and his team have been gathering up a lot of
information and this is the bill which is the Community Empowerment Scotland
Bill and they’ve tacked on allotments for some reason. Sorting out all the
allotment legislation that went back to the 1880’s, 90’s. [...] Most of it
refers to Councils it doesn’t necessarily spell out what private allotment
sites have to do. [...]We’ll see before the autumn’s out what they’ve got for
us."
Dick concluded and then after a treasurer’s report officer
bearers were elected. The new Chair of NAS is Billy Milne who will be assisted
by a new Vice Chair, Mandy MacKenzie.
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Mandy MacKenzie makes a presentation to Dick |
Dick was presented with gifts and a selection of home-made
produce form the membership. His tenure of office has been remarkable; he has been
an incredible leader and an example to all the plotters. Under his stewardship
the plotting in Nairn has moved from near extinction, experienced remarkable
growth and has become an example of the way forward in the Highlands and
beyond.