Committee
Rural Affairs and Islands Committee 21 January 2026 [Draft]
21 Jan 2026 · S6 · Rural Affairs and Islands Committee
Item of business
Subordinate Legislation
Animal Health (Fixed Penalty Notices) (Scotland) Regulations 2026 [Draft]
I am pleased to appear before the committee to discuss the Animal Health (Fixed Penalty Notices) (Scotland) Regulations 2026. These regulations introduce a new enforcement tool for the relevant enforcement bodies to address specific breaches of animal and bee health legislation.Under the regulations, fixed-penalty notices are financial penalties that may be offered to a person believed to have committed a relevant offence under the Animal Health Act 1981 or the Bees Act 1980 by breaching a relevant requirement. They are intended as an alternative to referring the case to the Crown Office and Procurator Fiscal Service for consideration of criminal prosecution under the relevant legislation.We acknowledge that FPNs will not be appropriate in all circumstances, particularly where there has been repeat offending or a more serious breach of animal or bee health requirements. We have therefore consulted on and given careful consideration to the relevant requirements that have been included in the regulations. The intention is that FPNs will be issued by authorised officers in circumstances that might not merit prosecution but where enforcement action should still be taken in order to protect animal or bee health.It is important to note that the regulations introduce a power for authorised officers to issue an FPN when relevant requirements are believed to have been breached, but there is no obligation on the officer to do so. Instead, the authorised officer will be able to decide whether to issue an FPN in each case or whether other enforcement action might be more appropriate. For example, there might be circumstances in which the officer considers that verbal advice or a written warning is likely to be sufficient to resolve the issue. FPNs will therefore complement existing enforcement options rather than replace them. Prosecution will remain an option for more serious or repeat offending.There are several reasons why we are introducing FPNs. They provide a proportionate enforcement tool, ensuring that enforcement action is fair and balanced. They allow for quicker resolution of cases, reducing the burden on enforcement agencies and courts of cases taken forward for prosecution. They encourage compliance without imposing the stigma or resource demands of a criminal conviction. They also have the potential to act as an additional deterrent in support of enforcement bodies, correcting behaviour or encouraging compliance with regulations more quickly. Finally, they help to maintain consistency and fairness by offering a clear, structured alternative to prosecution. In short, FPNs strengthen the enforcement framework by providing an additional, flexible option that supports compliance while preserving the ability to take stronger action when necessary.The regulations set out the framework for how FPNs will operate. They identify the authorities that will be empowered to issue FPNs and explain the process for issuing them, as well as the circumstances in which an FPN cannot be issued. They detail how an FPN can be paid and the effect of payment, the process for appealing or withdrawing a notice, and the procedure for notifying an intention not to pay. They specify the relevant requirements and offences in relation to which a FPN can be issued, the relevant penalty levels and amounts, and the circumstances in which a penalty amount could be increased or decreased.In addition, the regulations create an offence of obstructing an authorised officer exercising functions in relation to FPNs. They also amend the Animal Health Act 1981 and the Bees Act 1980 to exclude the payment period for a FPN from the time limit for bringing criminal proceedings for an offence.I welcome the opportunity to answer any questions the committee may have.
In the same item of business
The Convener
Con
Welcome back. Our next agenda item is consideration of a draft Scottish statutory instrument. I welcome to the meeting Jim Fairlie, the Minister for Agricult...
The Minister for Agriculture and Connectivity (Jim Fairlie)
SNP
I am pleased to appear before the committee to discuss the Animal Health (Fixed Penalty Notices) (Scotland) Regulations 2026. These regulations introduce a n...
The Convener
Con
Thanks, minister. I put on the record that the Delegated Powers and Law Reform Committee considered the instrument yesterday and agreed that it had no recomm...
Tim Eagle
Con
I do not have a particularly big problem with the regulations, but I want to clarify a couple of things, if that is all right. There were a lot of individual...
Jim Fairlie
SNP
This is a health issue rather than a welfare one, and it should be clear that the two things are legislated for separately. The regulations relate directly t...
Tim Eagle
Con
I asked about that because it comes up in the consultation responses. Are you happy with the consultation’s reach?
Jim Fairlie
SNP
Yes. I get that some responses were not entirely supportive. We do not have all the details about why some people were not supportive of the regulations, alt...
Tim Eagle
Con
The consultation analysis says:“Several respondents disagreed with FPNs … commenting that ‘the introduction of an FPN process risks bringing in an enforcemen...
Jim Fairlie
SNP
I would always expect education to be the first port of call. If, for instance, somebody goes on to a farm and finds health-related issues, the first thing t...
Tim Eagle
Con
Fine. I am happy.
Ariane Burgess
Green
I am supportive of the SSI, but I have a number of questions that I would like to run through with you, minister.On deterrence and proportionality, do you co...
Jim Fairlie
SNP
Yes, the penalties are proportionate. By and large, people do not want to commit crime—they do not want to do anything wrong. There are any number of circums...
Ariane Burgess
Green
Do you intend to uprate the penalties over time?
Jim Fairlie
SNP
We will review that as we go along. I am looking at my officials, but I do not think that there is anything specific at the moment that says that we will loo...
Ariane Burgess
Green
My next question is why you think that there needs to be an early payment discount and whether you would consider removing it, or at least tightening its terms.
Jim Fairlie
SNP
I will turn the question around. Do you have a concern about the early payment discount?
Ariane Burgess
Green
There are concerns that discounting could undermine the deterrence and create a perception that breaches can be resolved quickly and quietly.
Jim Fairlie
SNP
Okay. I see your point, but, as I said at the start, I hope that we will get to a position in which FPNs will not be needed, because the issues will have bee...
Ariane Burgess
Green
I get the point that you are trying to provide a deterrent, but I have a couple more questions. On the discretion to extend the payment period, what criteria...
Jim Fairlie
SNP
I will turn to Eilidh Wallace to answer those questions.
Eilidh Wallace (Scottish Government)
Extensions will be considered on a case-by-case basis. We will provide information in the enforcement guidance that we are developing for enforcement agencie...
Ariane Burgess
Green
My point is that there is a sense that 28 days, which is almost a month, is a reasonable amount of time, but it is good to hear that—
Jim Fairlie
SNP
People might be in the guts of lambing and calving, so there will be circumstances in which people physically cannot make a payment.
Ariane Burgess
Green
Thanks for clarifying that.In relation to transparency and oversight, is the Scottish Government willing to commit to annual publication of the headline data...
Jim Fairlie
SNP
I know that we could do that, but I do not know the details. How would we do that?
Eilidh Wallace
Under section 81 of the Animal Health Act 1981, we can request information from enforcement agencies and gather that data, which we intend to publish. We alr...
Ariane Burgess
Green
That is very helpful. I am looking for reassurance that FPNs will not be used as a substitute for prosecution in cases in which the offences are serious, del...
The Convener
Con
I have a very quick question about appealing FPNs. Currently, appeals are reviewed by the relevant enforcement authority that issued the FPN. That could be t...
Jim Fairlie
SNP
Currently, you would appeal to the authority that issued the FPN, but you would be dealing with a different person. If you wanted to appeal a notice that you...
The Convener
Con
Thank you.As there are no further questions, we move to agenda item 4, which is formal consideration of the motion to approve the instrument. I invite the mi...