First Minister’s Update 28th May

At today’s media briefing the First Minister said that there are signs that the situation in Glasgow is stabilising in the postcodes at the heart of the initial outbreak and across the city generally, and that, if that trend continues, the city can move to Level 2 from 00:01 on Saturday 5 June.

Further funding has been made available to Glasgow City Council to provide additional support for businesses in hospitality and leisure in Glasgow, with grants ranging from £250 to £750 per week.

Other areas of concern across Scotland continue to be monitored closely, including Renfrewshire, East Renfrewshire and Clackmannanshire. These areas will remain in Level 2 for now, although public health efforts will be intensified to tackle the increased prevalence.

Read the full statement here.

The Scottish Government’s timetable for easing restrictions has been published. The timetable sets out how and when we plan to lift the current coronavirus restrictions over the coming weeks and months.

The First Minister also covered the following (28.5.21):

  • Daily statistics: the First Minister confirmed that 641 new positive cases were identified in the past 24 hours, of which 234 were in the NHS Greater Glasgow and Clyde health board area, 132 in Lothian, and 104 in the Lanarkshire health board. The number of people in hospital had increased to 90 (+7), while 6 (+2) are also in ICUs, and 2 deaths were registered in the past 24 hours, taking the total number of deaths under that measurement to 7,668.
  • Vaccination statistics: 3,196,051 people received a first dose of the Covid vaccine, which was an increase of 21,244 since yesterday. 28,721 got a second dose of the vaccine yesterday, bringing the total number of those fully vaccinated to 1,971,006.
  • The First Minister provided an overview of the situation in Scotland, highlighting that case numbers were rising and had increased by more than a quarter in the past week. The Indian variant was now thought to be responsible for 50% or more of new cases in Scotland and the R number could be as high as 1.3.
  • In terms of Glasgow, due to “uncomfortably high cases”, the First Minister announced that the city will remain under Level 3 for another week and that affected businesses would be provided with the necessary support. However, she also said that the situation was stabilising that that she was hopeful that Glasgow could move to Level 2 by 5 June. She will make the decision by 2 June.
  • With mainland Scotland expected to move from Level 2 to Level 1 on 7 June, the First Minister said that she was planning to confirm to the Scottish Parliament on 1 June “whether and to what extent that move will proceed.”

Staycations: is Self-Catering Winning?

“For Scotland’s self-caterers, the immediate post-lockdown situation is very much a mixed bag; with rural and coastal operators enjoying high rates of bookings causing some limited availability while city centre properties continue to see lower than ideal numbers of guests.

“However, the rise in rural and coastal bookings may also be a result of conscientious proprietors honouring bookings made in 2020.

 “Tourist accommodation has been, sadly, decimated by the pandemic and we continue to struggle against the impact of local restrictions, often imposed without warning, and a severely disappointing lack of clarity and guidance especially for larger operators who serve guests from multiple households.

 “These larger properties have lost  an average of £73,000 in turnover during the pandemic and have only had ten weeks’ worth of trading to claw back their significant losses.

 “The ASSC has called, and will continue to call, for better, tailored advice from the Scottish Government as well as increased support well into level zero otherwise these valuable parts of Scotland’s unique tourism offering face the real risk of permanent closure.

“However, Scotland’s self-caterers can guarantee that our guests can enjoy a safe, relaxing, and well-deserved break with us and can do so knowing that we have the correct, government-backed, cleaning and hygiene protocols in place to back up our commitment.

“As we emerge from this harrowing time, many people across Scotland, and from elsewhere in the UK, will turn their attention to getting away for a while and Scotland’s self-catering sector stands ready, willing, and able to make it happen for them.”   

Fiona Campbell

Chief Executive

Association of Scotland’s Self-Caterers

URGENT CALL TO ACTION: Short-Term Let Licensing for Self-Caterers, B&Bs, Guest Houses, Glamping and other Short-Term Let Accommodation

PLEASE READ AND ACT: THIS WILL VERY SERIOUSLY AFFECT YOUR FUTURE BUSINESS IF NOT STOPPED

As you know, in February, the Scottish Government’s proposed self-catering licensing regulations were pulled at the last minute before the election in response to the high level of individual objections and by the reasoned concerns of the ASSC and other major tourism stakeholders.

The Scottish Government then promised to engage with, and listen to, our industry through the Short-Term Let Working Group involving the ASSC and other stakeholders, with a view to introducing amended regulations this summer. Through the Working Group, the ASSC, with unprecedented industry support, submitted detailed and practical proposals for meeting the Scottish Government’s policy objectives on short-term let regulation through setting up a robust mandatory registration scheme.

Sadly, this engagement only paid lip service to our industry. The Scottish Government rejected the ASSC’s proposals out of hand without any proper explanation. Now, in a new consultation – incidentally, their third in recent years – they have simply restated their original licensing proposals with a few amendments that, if anything, make the proposals worse for self-catering operators and the other tourism businesses that have now been caught in the legislation – this includes B&B’s, small guest houses and even yurts!

Scot Gov: Reference to excluded accommodation

Scot Gov: Reference to excluded accommodation Part 1. Guidance for Hosts and Operators

When the ASSC surveyed over 1000 members, nearly half of owners said they would close their businesses if licensing was introduced. Moreover, around two-thirds of those who would close said they would keep the property as a second home and for friends, no doubt with significantly reduced nightly occupancy rate relative to use for self-catering.

There are many reasons why owners will close –

  • Uncertainty over licence being granted: councils will have very subjective grounds to refuse licence – and could grant licence then refuse renewal. Appeals against refusal would involve substantial legal costs and more uncertainty.
  • Owners will have to make advance bookings made during the licence application period conditional on licence being granted (which will put off guests) or risk being sued if they don’t and licence not granted – and this will be repeated every 3 years when licence has to be renewed.
  • Increased bureaucracy and hassle: disproportionately affecting small business owners who are the backbone of Scotland’s tourist economy.
  • Investment uncertainty: owners will be reluctant to invest in major repairs, replacements and improvements as they won’t know whether licence will be granted or renewed.
  • Unknown and open-ended licensing costs, estimated as £1k plus – councils have to recover their costs from the scheme and operators will face additionally paying Council for inspections.

Introducing licensing will result in significant damage to Scotland’s tourist industry, including the businesses that provide services to property owners, and, in turn, to local economies. The irony is that the Scottish Government are pushing ahead with this when we are trying to recover from the economic damage of Covid-19 and for the longer term, and when staycations are being encouraged for sustainability/environmental reasons.

This will have unintended consequences reaching far into the supply chain, to cleaners and maintenance providers, restaurants and bars, activity providers and visitor attractions, thereby negatively impacting local communities.

But none of this is inevitable. The Scottish Government have in the past changed policies if there is enough public pressure. They temporarily withdrew the original Licensing Order because of a high level of negative responses. There is a chance they will do so again – but only if there is an unprecedented level of concern.

That is why, if you agree with the ASSC’s analysis and are concerned for the future of your business, we would kindly ask you to do 3 things:

  1. Respond to the Scottish Government’s consultation by Friday 13 August 2021 using the following link: https://consult.gov.scot/housing-and-social-justice/short-term-lets-draft-licensing-order-and-bria/consultation/subpage.2016-07-07.1474135251/
  2. Contact your regional and constituency MSPs in the first instance and then local authority councillors highlighting the problems with the regulations (copy and paste your consultation response) and explaining the likely impact on your business and local supply chain etc. You can find your MSPs using the postcode checker tool on the Scottish Parliament website:https://beta.parliament.scot/msps/current-and-previous-msps
  3. In the correspondence above, please copy us in: communications@assc.co.uk

If following the consultation, the Scottish Government decide to proceed with their regulations, an updated Licensing Order will be introduced in the Scottish Parliament and considered by a parliamentary committee before the Order is voted on by all MSPs. You will be invited to raise your concerns directly with the Committee – we will advise on the procedure and deadline when appropriate.

We have prepared a briefing paper providing a full background and explaining the issues in detail and concerns referred to above. We hope you find this useful.

Link to the Briefing Paper: Briefing on STL consultation – 19.7.21

Non-Members: If you’d like to be updated, subscribe here: http://eepurl.com/hhCXDv

Scottish Government Licensing Proposals for Self-Caterers, B&Bs, Guest Houses, Glamping and other Short-Term Lets: What You Need to Know Webinar

519 people registered to join a webinar on 20th July 2021.

Watch the recorded webinar.