A1Sailor
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Here's the Management Team:
https://www.scottishcanals.co.uk/corporate/about-us/meet-the-management-team/
https://www.scottishcanals.co.uk/corporate/about-us/meet-the-management-team/
In Fridays Daily Express front page is reporting that due to lack of investment in the Scottish canal system there may be closures and a great deal of disruption for users.
Lack of investment has left parts of the canals unsafe to use. Funnily enough they were taken over by the Scottish government SNP only a few years ago and it would appear that they see no advantages in investing enough to keep them running.
There isn’t enough money to repair the pot-holes on the roads let alone the pot-holes in the canals. If there are too many pot-holes in the canals they’ll be no water end of problem.
The Forth and Clyde is no longer open all the way from Grangemouth to Bowling due to safety issues.
"Our focus will always be on ensuring that assets are safe, protecting the wider public, local infrastructure, our staff and visitors, while also aiming, when funds allow, to maintain operational functionality."
So that sums it up well. The primary function of a canal in Scotland is NOT navigation by boat.
Anyone find a similar statement by the Canal and River Trust in England or Wales to either confirm they have the same view, or if they place navigation as a higher priority?
Yes it does seem the CRT in E&W do seem to regard maintaining a navigable waterway as a primary function.
It is a sad state of affairs that Scottish Canals don't share that goal. Whoever is in charge needs to be persuaded to change that view.
There is a guy operating two large barges as adventure holiday hotels that travel the canal weekly from end to end.
If depths at the Neptune flight is restricted, how will all this affect his business? What about that of the one or two canal boat operators that hire holiday craft on the canal? How will they fair?
IThere is a guy operating two large barges as adventure holiday hotels that travel the canal weekly from end to end.
If depths at the Neptune flight is restricted, how will all this affect his business? What about that of the one or two canal boat operators that hire holiday craft on the canal? How will they fare?
But if Scotland was not obsessed with taking everything "in house"(because they think they can do it better on their own) it would all still have been part of "British Waterways" and the vision to actually keep the canals open for navigation might still be there.The only way that's going to change is if there is a financial case.
Why should a small number of yachts be subsidised by spending millions a year on the canals?
It's not as if we are primarily canal boaters.
I don't think the restricted draft would stop a dutch barge, but from what I understand it is stopping some larger commercial (fishing boats for example) from transiting through.There is a guy operating two large barges as adventure holiday hotels that travel the canal weekly from end to end.
If depths at the Neptune flight is restricted, how will all this affect his business? What about that of the one or two canal boat operators that hire holiday craft on the canal? How will they fair?
But if Scotland was not obsessed with taking everything "in house"(because they think they can do it better on their own) it would all still have been part of "British Waterways" and the vision to actually keep the canals open for navigation might still be there.
There is a guy operating two large barges as adventure holiday hotels that travel the canal weekly from end to end.
If depths at the Neptune flight is restricted, how will all this affect his business? What about that of the one or two canal boat operators that hire holiday craft on the canal? How will they fair?
But if Scotland was not obsessed with taking everything "in house"(because they think they can do it better on their own) it would all still have been part of "British Waterways" and the vision to actually keep the canals open for navigation might still be there.