The Official Report is a written record of public meetings of the Parliament and committees.
All Official Reports of meetings in the Debating Chamber of the Scottish Parliament.
All Official Reports of public meetings of committees.
Displaying 2839 contributions
Rural Affairs and Islands Committee [Draft]
Meeting date: 3 December 2025
Jim Fairlie
There is a solution to be found here, and, if we work together ahead of stage 3, we can find that solution. I take on board that there are potential safety issues with having two different sets of people going out with guns on a hill, unless there is some co-ordination.
Looking at amendment 39, I can see the benefits that it would have for tenants, notwithstanding the rights of the landowner, who may also be a sporting tenant or someone who has the right to take deer. I would not interpret amendment 39 as providing the right for crofters to harvest deer. It would be a method of allowing a crofter or a tenant to have a conversation with the landowner to say, “This is causing us a difficulty and we require you to do something about it. If you don’t, we have the right to do something about it.” At that point, they would then co-ordinate with the landowner to say, “We will be taking deer at this particular point.” I hope that there is no disagreement about that. There is an opportunity for us to come to a reasonable solution that will satisfy everybody’s desires.
Rural Affairs and Islands Committee [Draft]
Meeting date: 3 December 2025
Jim Fairlie
I am happy to do that.
Rural Affairs and Islands Committee [Draft]
Meeting date: 3 December 2025
Jim Fairlie
On capacity, I have been assured that there is more than enough capacity to process the number of deer, even if we got to the target of taking an extra 50,000 head of deer a year. However, I absolutely agree that, at the moment, we do not have a viable marketplace for that venison, which is why we want to build the market in a sustainable way. We want to market the produce in the same way that Scotch whisky was marketed, to make it something that is so valuable that people are going to want to pay money for it. That is what I would encourage to happen as a result of the debate.
Rural Affairs and Islands Committee [Draft]
Meeting date: 3 December 2025
Jim Fairlie
As happens in any consultation, NatureScot will consult widely across the sector, including with the people who carry out deer management at the moment. The results of the consultation will be brought back to the committee as an SSI. The full scrutiny process will enable us to find a scheme that works appropriately, given the concerns that have been raised.
Rural Affairs and Islands Committee [Draft]
Meeting date: 3 December 2025
Jim Fairlie
Does the member accept that, earlier today and this evening, we have talked consistently about our ability to make venison a product that people want to buy and can have absolute confidence in? A register of fit and competent persons will allow the public to be confident that, when they eat wild venison, they are eating venison that was produced properly by somebody who has gone through a process that is designed to give that confidence.
With regard to a lot of the things that the member just spoke about, it is already the case that people have to have that competence. Does he not accept that a register of fit and competent persons will add to our ability to sell the product as a valuable, premium product that has been produced to the highest of standards?
Rural Affairs and Islands Committee [Draft]
Meeting date: 3 December 2025
Jim Fairlie
I go back specifically to wounding rates. There is evidence through NatureScot’s reviews that wounding rates are much higher than we would like them to be. I do not have the figures in front of me, but I am happy to share those with the member after the evidence session, and the figures are definitely higher than we would like.
Rural Affairs and Islands Committee [Draft]
Meeting date: 3 December 2025
Jim Fairlie
With regard to Forestry and Land Scotland’s wounding and miss rates, is the member’s primary concern that they are too high or too low, or is it that the member does not know what the rates are? From the information that we get via NatureScot, we know that the wounding rates are higher than we would like them to be, which surely gives us cause to think that a register of fit and competent persons will be valuable to the sector.
Rural Affairs and Islands Committee [Draft]
Meeting date: 3 December 2025
Jim Fairlie
That does not have implications for what we are trying to do here.
Rural Affairs and Islands Committee [Draft]
Meeting date: 3 December 2025
Jim Fairlie
Police Scotland will still make the decision as to whether a licence should be given to somebody that it believes to be a fit person to have a firearms licence.
Rural Affairs and Islands Committee [Draft]
Meeting date: 3 December 2025
Jim Fairlie
That is not something that NatureScot could do on a whim—it must go through a whole process in order to get to that position in the first place.
Section 12(2) merely adds an additional part that NatureScot can then intervene in. However, that would not take away from all the things that NatureScot has to do in order to get to a control order, if it ever gets to that stage. My hope and expectation would be that NatureScot would work with the land managers and the deer managers to find solutions to issues as and when they arise. Surely that is something that the member would agree with.