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Chamber

Meeting of the Parliament 17 March 2016

17 Mar 2016 · S4 · Meeting of the Parliament
Item of business
Food
Chisholm, Malcolm Lab Edinburgh Northern and Leith Watch on SPTV

I congratulate Alison Johnstone on her motion and I congratulate all the local groups that are mentioned in it, especially those that are based in my constituency, which I will talk about shortly. I also congratulate the Scottish food coalition on its excellent report, which rightly emphasises the need to have the right to food in legislation. I hope that that will be taken on board in the next session of the Scottish Parliament. The Scottish food coalition report also emphasises that the core principles of environmental awareness and sustainability should be at the heart of production.

Unfortunately, the reality is very different. Instead of a right to food, we have an increasing number of food banks and unacceptable food poverty, which has been highlighted in a recent report by the Pilton Community Health Project, which is mentioned in the motion. Its report, “Good Food for All”, found that poverty and food poverty are intrinsically linked, and that securing a fairer food system is very difficult in the light of very deeply rooted and persistent poverty. That is why that excellent project, which I have known for more than a quarter of a century, has always emphasised the importance of dealing with the broader determinants of poor health and health inequalities. It has also had excellent initiatives specifically on food and other lifestyle factors.

The Pilton Community Health Project’s report, which is certainly worth reading, also notes the rise in voluntary activity to help people to eat, and to eat well. I want to highlight two excellent projects in my constituency that do precisely that. The Granton community gardeners, to whom Alison Johnstone referred, work in north Edinburgh, not far from the Pilton Community Health Project. They are local residents who are growing fruit and vegetables in several garden plots, some of which are on street corners in Granton.

The Scottish food coalition makes an interesting point in its report, to which Alison Johnstone’s motion refers, when it highlights the power of planning to ensure that vacant land is safeguarded for growing crops. That is an important part of the subject.

A great many positives are coming out of the food-growing project in Granton. There is an educational dimension, with many people learning how to grow food and acquiring information about food. Indeed, the group ran a 10-week course for local people to encourage such knowledge. There is the opportunity to taste new fruit and vegetables, and the project builds community cohesion, as people talk to neighbours to whom they might not have talked before, as they garden—which, of course, is an intrinsically healthy activity. Meals are made from the produce and are then shared and distributed to a large number of families and volunteers. The project also has a strong environmental dimension, which is crucial. Its aims include encouraging care for the environment and an awareness of local wildlife and biodiversity.

The environmental dimension is also extremely important for Leith Community Crops in Pots, which is also mentioned in the motion. Crops in Pots educates people about the interaction between food and the environment and, more important, puts environmental sustainability into practice by growing food, planting trees, helping to reduce food waste and encouraging dietary change in order to reduce environmental impacts and improve health. The charity is grateful for the climate challenge funding that it received in the most recent round—and, I think, the previous round—which has enabled it to build up a great team, to establish infrastructure including raised beds, sheds and a tree nursery, and to build close relationships with the community. Crops in Pots has put in another bid, and I hope that the minister will look favourably on it, because funding is crucial to the next stage of the charity’s development, if it is to expand its community outreach, create habitats and, of course, continue to save carbon. The charity works in local schools, holds community events and is involving more and more local people, but it needs a further round of climate challenge funding if it is to keep its excellent work going.

12:47  

In the same item of business

The Deputy Presiding Officer (John Scott) Con
The next item of business is a members’ business debate on motion S4M-15826, in the name of Alison Johnstone, on Scotland’s food future. The debate will be c...
Alison Johnstone (Lothian) (Green) Green
I welcome the opportunity to debate in Parliament Scotland’s food future, and I thank colleagues who have made that possible by supporting my motion. My mot...
Bruce Crawford (Stirling) (SNP) SNP
On Monday, I visited a fantastic project in Balfron in my constituency. It is a Food Connections project, the aim of which is to encourage pupils to understa...
Alison Johnstone Green
I thank Bruce Crawford for mentioning that project because it is a fantastic example of making the best use of land everywhere. If we can engage pupils in ou...
The Deputy Presiding Officer Con
You must draw to a close, please.
Alison Johnstone Green
I will. Nourish Scotland would like to tender for work, but it turns out that the only tender that is available to it is one that wraps up a massive amount ...
The Deputy Presiding Officer Con
Many thanks. We are tight for time today, so speeches should be of four minutes. 12:43
Malcolm Chisholm (Edinburgh Northern and Leith) (Lab) Lab
I congratulate Alison Johnstone on her motion and I congratulate all the local groups that are mentioned in it, especially those that are based in my constit...
Christian Allard (North East Scotland) (SNP) SNP
I did not sign the motion, because although I read the report and thought that it was very good, I think that something is missing: it needs a stronger empha...
Alex Johnstone (North East Scotland) (Con) Con
I come to the debate from a slightly different point of view, having spent most of my life in the food production industry or the farming industry prior to b...
Alison Johnstone Green
I am sure that Alex Johnstone will agree that organic farming is traditional and that it could do with greater support in Scotland than it receives.
Alex Johnstone Con
It is important to realise that, if a particular method is productive and worthwhile, it should compete in a competitive environment with other methods of fa...
John Finnie (Highlands and Islands) (Ind) Ind
Will Alex Johnstone give way?
Alex Johnstone Con
I ask Mr Finnie to let me carry on. I have only four minutes. Food is produced and it gets to the shops where people can buy it. The problem is that not all...
Sarah Boyack (Lothian) (Lab) Lab
I welcome the Scottish food coalition’s important set of policy asks in advance of the Scottish Parliament elections. The fact that the group is a coalition ...
Christian Allard SNP
Will the member take an intervention?
Sarah Boyack Lab
No, thank you. That is why Scottish Labour has campaigned so strongly for the Scottish Agricultural Wages Board to be retained. The board is crucial to prev...
The Deputy Presiding Officer Con
Can you draw to a close, please?
Sarah Boyack Lab
I also welcome the sustainable food cities initiative and I want to link in the work that is being done by our allotment-growing networks. Let us look at cha...
The Deputy Presiding Officer Con
You must close, please.
Sarah Boyack Lab
It is the interconnection between that range of issues that will deliver on the fantastic work that is being done by the food coalition. 13:01
John Wilson (Central Scotland) (Ind) Ind
I congratulate Alison Johnstone on bringing this important debate to the chamber. I spoke recently in the chamber about the amount of food that is wasted and...
The Deputy Presiding Officer Con
The member should draw to a close, please.
John Wilson Ind
We must be bolder in delivering opportunities for communities to have the resources to produce food locally. We need to work together to ensure that that wor...
The Cabinet Secretary for Rural Affairs, Food and Environment (Richard Lochhead) SNP
I congratulate Alison Johnstone on bringing the debate to the chamber. It is a welcome, topical and timely debate, and it illustrates the growing importance ...
John Finnie Ind
The cabinet secretary mentions all those small community projects; they are tremendous, and the aggregate effect can be very impressive. However, what part s...
Richard Lochhead SNP
Planning policy should play a role. I welcomed the fact that many of the initiatives that members mentioned in the debate originated from and have been suppo...
Alison Johnstone Green
Will the cabinet secretary give way?
The Deputy Presiding Officer Con
The cabinet secretary is in his last minute.
Richard Lochhead SNP
Food education, which some members mentioned, is also crucial. It is not good enough that our young people do not know where the food on their plate comes fr...