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Chamber

Meeting of the Parliament 28 October 2025 [Draft]

28 Oct 2025 · S6 · Meeting of the Parliament
Item of business
Land Reform (Scotland) Bill: Stage 3
Ruskell, Mark Green Mid Scotland and Fife Watch on SPTV

The key question at the heart of the bill is, does it address the battles over land rights, concentration of power, access and ownership across Scotland that so many communities find themselves struggling with? The amendments in this group are an early test for the Government at stage 3. The concern that I, David Torrance and many other MSPs have raised is a real one that is faced by a real community in Burntisland. Rights of access that have been asserted since Victorian times are being trampled over by Forth Ports, while Fife Council has been completely ineffective at upholding those rights.

That is happening in a green freeport area that we were told would deliver incredible economic opportunities for communities. However, so far, not only have the jobs not materialised in Burntisland, but people are now being fenced out of their own community. They have serious questions about the effectiveness of Fife Council in holding Forth Ports to account, given the deep pockets of Forth Ports and the economic power that it holds locally.

I welcome the fact that members of the community have come to the Parliament today and have engaged MSPs—including, I believe, the cabinet secretary—in conversation about the struggle that they face.

The bill could have been an opportunity to improve the enforcement of access rights, not only for the community of Burntisland but for many more communities across the country.

For example, I have constituents at the other end of my region, in Glen Lyon, who for years have been unreasonably denied access to the North Chesthill Estate. Again, a lack of consistent enforcement action by Perth and Kinross Council has been raised.

In its briefing for the debate, Ramblers Scotland highlights that there is

“a growing concern about a gap between Scotland’s access rights on paper and their effective application.”

Councils, in their roles as access and planning authorities, are, in some cases, proving ineffective at upholding and enforcing those rights, which are long established in common law.

We are now 20 years on from the production of guidance on part 1 of the 2003 act, which was designed to enable councils to operate effectively as access authorities. However, so far, no updated guidance has been produced, despite two decades of real-life experience in working with the act. I therefore ask the cabinet secretary to commit to finalising the review and publishing such updated guidance.

I welcome David Torrance’s amendment 321, which is an attempt to explicitly carve out access to Burntisland harbour in law. It makes an important point.

My amendments 234 and 264, together with amendment 238 in a later group, seek to put in place general requirements for all large landowners to help to facilitate public rights of way over their land and to engage with communities proactively on those specific rights of access. That engagement has been completely absent in the case of Burntisland. I understand from discussion with the cabinet secretary that there are concerns about those amendments and their potential consequences. For those reasons, I will not be moving them.

However, I would like to hear from the cabinet secretary about what commitment she can give to engage with Fife Council on the issue in order to ensure that it is upholding its responsibilities as an access authority and supporting the community, because it has manifestly failed to do so. The Scottish Government must help us to hold Fife Council to account. The amendments are a warning flag that access rights that appear world class on paper are being eroded in Scotland. We need to ensure that enforcement is resourced and that it is effective. In the case of Burntisland, it has not been, and that must change.

In the same item of business

The Deputy Presiding Officer (Annabelle Ewing) SNP
The next item of business is stage 3 proceedings on the Land Reform (Scotland) Bill. In dealing with the amendments, members should have the bill as amended ...
The Deputy Presiding Officer SNP
Group 1 is on public rights of way. Amendment 232, in the name of David Torrance, is grouped with amendments 234, 264 and 321. 15:15
David Torrance (Kirkcaldy) (SNP) SNP
Amendment 232 is the first of my two amendments to the bill that seek to enable a resolution to the issue of access to Burntisland harbour. The Land Reform (...
Mark Ruskell (Mid Scotland and Fife) (Green) Green
The key question at the heart of the bill is, does it address the battles over land rights, concentration of power, access and ownership across Scotland that...
Liz Smith (Mid Scotland and Fife) (Con) Con
On behalf of the Scottish Conservatives, I put on record our thanks to David Torrance for lodging his amendments, because there is an important point of prin...
Edward Mountain (Highlands and Islands) (Con) Con
I am interested in the points raised in Mark Ruskell’s amendments in relation to the Scottish outdoor access code. As he will well know, I have been trying t...
Claire Baker (Mid Scotland and Fife) (Lab) Lab
Through their amendments in this group, David Torrance and Mark Ruskell are trying to find a pragmatic way of addressing the current restrictions on public a...
The Deputy Presiding Officer SNP
Ms Baker, can you bring your remarks to a close, please?
Claire Baker Lab
I do not believe that the amendments are heavy handed or that they prejudge the outcome. Instead, they commission the proper review and determination that th...
The Cabinet Secretary for Rural Affairs, Land Reform and Islands (Mairi Gougeon) SNP
I will deal with amendments 232, 234 and 264 together, because they aim to achieve essentially the same thing, which is to place an obligation on landowners ...
David Torrance SNP
I welcome the cabinet secretary’s commitments and I recognise the legal issues around the amendments that I have proposed. Everything that the cabinet secret...
The Deputy Presiding Officer SNP
Group 2 is on the obligations to consider the public interest. Amendment 115, in the name of Rhoda Grant, is grouped with amendments 233, 129, 261, 43 to 45,...
Rhoda Grant (Highlands and Islands) (Lab) Lab
Amendment 129 would ensure that the public interest was at the forefront of land management plans. Acting in the public interest is a well-understood concept...
Edward Mountain Con
My amendments in the group are to do with lifting the prohibition order. Amendment 43, if enacted, would add a general public interest ground. That would mea...
Fergus Ewing (Inverness and Nairn) (Ind) Ind
Does Mr Mountain agree with me that, if Ariane Burgess’s amendment had existed in law some years ago, the aluminium smelter at Fort William would have been s...
Edward Mountain Con
I am not sure that I will quite go with Fergus Ewing on that point. There is a question about the agreements that were made with the foreign owner to keep th...
The Deputy Presiding Officer SNP
It is never a good idea to give the chair warning of the potential for incurring the chair’s wrath.
Ariane Burgess (Highlands and Islands) (Green) Green
This bill has been long in the making. Yet, after many hours of deliberation, it seems that it has not progressed much further from where it started. I remai...
Edward Mountain Con
Will the member take an intervention on that point?
Ariane Burgess Green
I will not take an intervention; I have a lot to get through and I think that we have time considerations. With increasing numbers of overseas investors loo...
Mercedes Villalba (North East Scotland) (Lab) Lab
I thank Community Land Scotland, which is here today, and the Scottish Parliament legislation team for their support in drafting my amendments in this group....
Mairi Gougeon SNP
I thank members for their contributions so far to the debate on this group. I will begin by responding directly to the amendments lodged by Ariane Burgess ...
Fergus Ewing Ind
Rather than creating division, bitterness, expense and bureaucracy with, one suspects, very little consequence if the bill passes in the end, would it not be...
Mairi Gougeon SNP
I must disagree with the case made by Fergus Ewing. He is absolutely right that some landowners do fantastic work. I know of some close to me who involve the...
Mercedes Villalba Lab
I will, of course, continue to engage, as I have already done, but I would like to hear the cabinet secretary explain what work she is committing the Scottis...
Mairi Gougeon SNP
I am sure the member recognises that this has been a long process. The focus has, quite rightly, been on delivering this legislation and the key measures wit...
Mercedes Villalba Lab
Will the cabinet secretary expand a little further on the threshold or bar for that evidence? I am hearing that, once the bill becomes an act, further eviden...
Mairi Gougeon SNP
That is not a fair assessment of what has been set out. The measures in the bill are an important step forward. Of course, when we introduce measures, we nee...
The Deputy Presiding Officer SNP
I call Rhoda Grant to wind up and to press or withdraw amendment 115.
Rhoda Grant Lab
I will wind up quickly. With regard to the public interest test, the aims that are highlighted in amendment 129 are the things that we desperately need for o...