A large turnout tonight up at Cawdor All the spaces were taken up in the
car park and folk had to park creatively. The meeting actually took
place in the main school hall as the community centre room would have
been too small and it looked pretty full anyway with a Fisheries meeting under way. The subject awaiting debate inside - how best to form a Trust to manage the £60,000 per annum that the community will receive from the Tom nan Clach wind farm from 2019 onwards.
Fiona Milligan
representing Infinergy sat up on a slightly raised platform with
Sandy Park in the chair and on his left his colleague from the
Auldearn Trust Will Downie. Fiona did the introduction, outlining the
purpose of the meeting and the necessity of forming a Trust to deal
with the money that will be coming to the community.
This was the first step
in the community forming whatever type of body they feel appropriate
to administer the cash windfall that will come their way in future
years. Legislation excludes the community council from running such a
fund so something has to be worked out and set up by a seperate body.
The money can be spent on anything the community wishes apart from
three areas of that will be excluded from the terms of the deal and
they are anti-wind farm campaigning, religious bodies and political
campaigns. There was some discussion later on on whether that would
exclude say a church building that provides a venue for community
groups – there will be clarification about that at a future
meeting. So into the realms of the benefits of a development trust or
an organisation limited by public guarantee – echoes there of the
early days of NICE when there was much debate of how to make the
first steps.
The meeting heard about
the successful Auldearn Trust that enjoys a cross over membership of
many of the community council members in the village. A problem that can
emerge is that people come to the fund with ideas and expect the fund
to oraginise them but really it is a fund's job to simply give out
the cash to “oven-ready” projects and not to do the work on
things that could need planning and other permissions etc. A very
good range of advice dispensed from the top table by Sandy and Will
and some very good interventions from the floor too. Also the
experiences of the Davidson Trust were touched upon by Iain Bain who
was at the meeting in his Leopold Street capacity.
Just what type of trust
do you need to meet the modern changing circumstances that include
ongoing community empowerment measures and land reform possibilities, and the trials and tribulations of seeking "matching funding"?
Then there are the “planning gain” opportunities that can occur
as in Auldearn where £6,000 found it's way into community coffers
from development in Auldearn. Someone pointed out that Delnies is in
the Cawdor and West Nairnshire area and there could be development
there in the future.
So a successful initial
meeting and more bones and perhaps bit of flesh to put on the way
forward at the next meeting. There seems to be massive interest and
folk there in the hall perhaps with some of the relevant skills to
take it all forward and help a Trust materialise. And then it was
tea, coffee and cakes and a bit of a blether before everyone set off
into the cool Cawdor night.
Amazing how the mere mention of money gets people out in their droves
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