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IT is very difficult to have a conversation with friends and family, to watch the news, or to listen to daily coronavirus updates without a growing sense of dread. The overwhelming feeling seems to be one of our respective governments reacting to events and making up their plans on the hoof which in turn lowers the confidence of the public in finding a way out of this car crash of a situation. Not once have I heard someone in authority saying we have already planned for this . Before I retired having spent a number of years working in the private sector as well as more than 10 years in the Civil Service, I would regularly participate in workshops where heads of discipline were brought together, presented with a disaster scenario – national power outage, catastrophic telecommunications failure and more – and asked to work through the steps needed to be taken in order for the business/department to be able to continue to trade. The output from these workshops was vetted by
THEY are predominantly unspoilt but increasingly being blighted by waste washed upon their shores. Now, 12 Scottish islands are becoming greener thanks to a pioneering shopping scheme that will dramatically reduce waste from single-use items. The islands have been awarded more than £250,000 covering 20 local retailers. Grant funding provided by the Scottish Government and European Regional Development Fund will empower the outlets to take the next steps in the war on waste by offering shoppers more reusable options. In addition to seeing waste frequently washing up on the shores around them, island communities bear the double burden of dealing with imported single-use items and then having to shipping-off the waste.