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Item 3 on the agenda is the Highlands and Islands agricultural business improvement scheme. I can advise the committee that we have with us Mr Dave Fergusson, the audit adviser to the Parliament. As witnesses, we have the Minister for Rural Affairs, Ross Finnie, who is accompanied by Andrew Robertson, the chief agricultural officer and Jan Polley, the head of the agricultural policy co-ordination and rural development division of the Scottish Executive.
Good morning. I am pleased, as are my officials, to have this opportunity to discuss ABIS.
Thank you very much, minister. I would like to take this opportunity to welcome Fergus Ewing and Jamie McGrigor: they are ³ÉÈË¿ìÊÖ who have joined committee members today to look after what they see as their interests as Highland members.
I would like to begin by asking about the history of the scheme. What do you think may have caused the upsurge in demand for the scheme?
If there had been a more even flow, it would be easier to say. I have to say that it is quite difficult for me to understand what was in the minds of the applicants. Jan Polley might want to elaborate on the history and the committee's lengthy deliberations before arriving at the decision to make changes but, as I understand it, the intention of those who revised the scheme and published the revised literature might have been to come up with a more attractive scheme.
All the applications that we received as part of the upsurge following the new measures that the minister has just mentioned come to a value of only £1.5 million. It is clear that the bulk of the outstanding £23 million or £24 million of applications is not due to the measures that we introduced per se.
What appears to be coming through is that there was perhaps not significant publicity about the scheme prior to the consultation. Could the scheme have been made available to people who had found out about it because of the consultation, thus leading to the upsurge?
There was a lot of publicity when the scheme was launched in 1994. There are always strong contacts between farmers and our area office staff. Farmers and crofters would have been well aware of the original scheme through that medium.
Are you not concerned about the apparent lack of ability to detect what is going on in farming communities? Jan Polley talked of speculation when she was asked about the upsurge in applications. What does that say about the liaison between the rural affairs department and its main client group? If we are discussing the present situation in terms of speculation, what does that say about any future scheme, the estimates that can be made for it and the reliance that we put on such estimates?
I will ask Jan Polley or Andrew Robertson to deal with the scheme and the flow of applications, but I direct your attention, Alasdair, to the tables that have been provided for this meeting. If you look at the figures for the applications received by area offices, you will see that the value of applications increased after March, but their number was up only to perhaps 700 in any month.
The question is fair and we asked it ourselves. ABIS is only one of a number of schemes that we operate. We wanted to see whether there was anything particular about the scheme because, by and large, this kind of problem has not happened on any other scheme and, as far as we know, it is not happening anywhere else.
It is always easy to talk with the benefit of hindsight, but I believe that there may have been a warning. In his letter of 18 February to Jim Wallace, now the Deputy First Minister, Lord Sewel said:
Constitutionally, I have some difficulty with that question. As a UK civil servant, I am not able to speak on behalf of Lord Sewel. I can represent only the minister for whom I work. I will try to pick my way through the question.
Nonetheless, do you accept that there was a pointer to quite a significant increase in the number of applications at the close of the previous scheme?
At the close of the previous scheme? I am sorry. I misunderstood. I thought you meant at the time the letter was written.
When the letter was written, it stated quite clearly that there was an increase.
When Lord Sewel wrote the letter, there had been an increase. Annexe E of the papers that we have provided to the committee suggests that there were more than 100 applications in January and in February, whereas in November and December of the previous year there had been 36 and 27 respectively. However, the numbers have tended to be fairly cyclical. At the beginning of 1998, there were more than 100 applications in January and in February. Lord Sewel was, I think, trying to offer an assurance that the fact that 36 and 27 applications had been received was not evidence of an increasingly downward trend.
Did you say that only £1.5 million could be attributed to the new scheme?
No, to the new measures.
So is only £1.5 million of the backlog attributable to the new measures?
Yes.
So where do the rest come from? Are they claims that were submitted prior to the new measures being introduced that had not been dealt with?
No. The new measures were additional. They did not exclude previous schemes.
Is it not the case, however, that some farmers withdrew applications and resubmitted them because of the suggestion that the new measures might be more favourable than previous ones?
New measures were added to the existing scheme. The £1.5 million relates to things that were not available under the previous scheme. Farmers carried on applying for other things that previously had been available under the scheme.
Why were the new measures added so late? The scheme was to end at the end of the year. Was not it rather late in the scheme's life—just a few months before its demise—to bring in new measures? Given that some farmers would not have known what the new circumstances would be, surely it was fair to assume that there would be a rush of applications? Surely farmers would have thought that they were as well to take advantage of what they knew as to take pot luck with the new scheme.
We had assumed in the calculations that there would be a bit of a rush. You asked why the changes came in only in March. I cannot speak on Lord Sewel's behalf, but the consultation proposal for new measures had started long before then, in 1997. A number of things took over, including the fact that the whole of the Highlands and Islands programme was being reviewed. It was not technically possible for us to introduce new measures before that process was complete. The comprehensive spending review had also been initiated by the incoming Labour Government. It was therefore not possible for us to introduce any new spending commitments at that stage. The earliest we could get moving on the programme was September 1998, when we got the final agreements from the Commission and so on. That was when we were able to start drawing up the statutory instrument and putting everything in place. It did take a long time, but there were reasons for that, many of which were outwith our control.
Could the increase have had something to do with the extra carrots, so to speak, that were thrown in to encourage people to take up ABIS, combined with the fact that the countryside premium scheme, which was running at the same time, was difficult to get into and had a lot of failings? Many people who failed to get on to the countryside premium scheme reapplied for ABIS, particularly as it was the only grant that was any good for getting work done to buildings. When people saw that ABIS was more attractive, they also had to arrange to get money to match the scheme funding. They therefore had to go to banks to get that first. All those factors contributed.
There are two issues there. As well as the countryside premium scheme, the crofting counties agricultural grants scheme in the Highlands and Islands is open to applications for certain building projects.
The surge resulted from a combination of inducements and the fact that many people failed to get on to the CPS scheme. This was an alternative.
Mr Robertson, would you like to deal with that technical point before I address the last issue that Jamie McGrigor raised?
The countryside premium scheme has a rather different objective from ABIS. It is an environmental scheme that involves our paying people to manage areas of land for environmental good. ABIS is a capital grants scheme, through which we provide assistance for capital projects.
Can people be on both schemes at once?
Yes, but they have rather different aims and objectives. I do not think that it necessarily follows that failure to get on the countryside premium scheme would push people towards ABIS.
Some time ago I spoke to the Scottish Agricultural College, where I discovered that applications to ABIS had declined, in part, because the countryside premium scheme had gone on offer. Farmers saw that as a more attractive scheme than the old ABIS. Only when the extra carrots were thrown in to ABIS 2 did people change their minds. It takes quite a long time for news of that sort to filter through to farmers. They do not have time to read everything that is issued—especially, as Mr Fergusson was saying, during the busy times of the year. Only when the nights start drawing in do they start to study the application forms.
That is absolutely right, except that the facts make it more difficult than even you are suggesting to speculate about how this situation arose. If your thesis is correct, that would suggest that the majority of the applications that are associated with this surge were stimulated by the new carrots. I agree that the rates have gone up and that the inducements may be responsible for the difference but, as we told Elaine Murray, from the purposes for which the vast majority of the applications were made, it is evident that these applications could have been made at any time over the five years of the scheme. I take your point—people might have found it easier to get on to the countryside premium scheme. However, as Andrew Robertson has just said, that is a very different scheme, for a very different purpose.
Minister, I want to take you back to the question of predicting and managing the band, both for ABIS and for son of ABIS. In paragraphs 30 and 31 of the paper that you have submitted to the committee, you discuss the various warning signals that alerted your staff and officials in the department to the fact that there was going to be an overrun. I want to ask you about resource audits in particular. As I understand the scheme, a resource audit has to be completed before an application can be made. However, the alarming rise in the number of applications that occurred in September and October does not seem to have been preceded by an equivalent rise in the number of applications for resource audits. Is there an obvious explanation for that?
There are two issues here. A resource audit could be carried out at any time from the start of the scheme. If it identified that a particular investment was needed, the application for that investment could be made at any time following the approval of the resource audit. However, if a new resource audit showed that the business would benefit from different investments, that second audit would show up as a new resource audit prior to a new application. Applications are not, therefore, entirely dependent on new resource audits being carried out.
Does that mean that a large number of completed resource audits were in existence for which applications had not yet been made? If so, could those have formed the basis for predicting the maximum number of possible applications?
The resource audits would identify the investments from which the business might benefit, but they would not in any way commit the business to making those investments. Given the financial plight of the industry at the time, people might have decided not to go ahead with applications for items that had been identified in the resource audits because they could not afford to do so.
However, the department would have a record of those businesses that had completed resource audits and had not made applications on the back of them.
Yes.
When managing and predicting demand in the future, would that be one place to start?
We could consider that.
Could you also consider the approved resource audits, which began to alert you to the problem?
Yes.
I have a supplementary question. If you were to add together all the projects within the resource audits that are on file, you would have a maximum potential exposure, which I presume would be many times in excess of what you thought the total would be. You could have made a risk assessment of the applications that might be in the pipeline. Has anyone totalled those figures?
No. As you rightly point out, the resource audit gives an absolute maximum number of projects, but it is very unlikely that any farmer would have been able—or even have wanted—to have undertaken all the projects identified in a resource audit which had, perhaps, been carried out two or three years before the fall in income had taken place. It would not have been financially possible for a farmer to do that, particularly given the plight of the industry at the time.
We should consider that issue in future. If an application is made following a resource audit, one might want to inquire whether the outstanding projects would be likely to form part of a future claim. That is applying hindsight to a problem that we only now find ourselves in, which I think is your point, Alasdair.
As a supplementary question to Alasdair's point, is it fair to ask you, minister, to estimate the true shortfall in the scheme, given that the £20 million that the press refer to may be an overestimate?
No, I do not think that it is an overestimate. Given that the deadline for applications has passed, the value of the true shortfall is, technically, £23.133 million, which was calculated on the basis of the applications lodged by the due date.
Is it likely that grant applicants will still seek that money, or are there applications that might not be carried out?
You are asking me to speculate about whether there were frivolous applications. I am not sure that I am in a position to enter into the minds of applicants. We must take it that applications were made in good faith. We do not know, and cannot be sure, whether, having submitted applications, farmers were able to raise funds themselves. I have to deal with the facts that are before me.
Thank you, convener, for welcoming me to this committee meeting.
I take it that you are suggesting that every farmer read, in full, Jim Wallace's letter, Lord Sewel's letter and the scheme's regulations, before they arrived at that conclusion.
That is not what I am suggesting. However, I do not believe that it would be necessary for citizens to be aware, personally, of a Government minister's promise for that promise to be binding. If a Scottish Office minister made a promise as recently as February 1999, surely, as a matter of constitutional law, that promise must be binding on the minister who succeeds him or her? With respect, that is the specific question to which my constituents would like an answer.
I am trying to answer your question but I am in difficulties because I am not responsible for Lord Sewel—I must make that absolutely clear. There is a constitutional problem. It does not seem to me to be unreasonable that what you construe as a promise—and you are a lawyer, Fergus—must be seen in the context of Mr Wallace's question. Therefore, one must read Mr Wallace's and Lord Sewel's letters, both in full and in the context of the explanatory leaflet that sets out the scheme's rules.
I understand that the pledge—the promise, the undertaking, the assurance—given by Lord Sewel in the letter of 18 February was repeated by him at a subsequent National Farmers Union meeting.
I am not aware of that. That is a very difficult question for me, convener. I am not Lord Sewel.
I wish to take up that point, as I was going to come on to it later and it is the nub of this issue.
That is obviously a difficult question—it is not as simple as you imply, Mike. There is always the prospect, or possibility, of overshooting in any scheme that operates within its rules. That is why the initial explanatory leaflet contained warnings to that effect.
Although I am not trying to imply that the plight of farmers and crofters in the Highlands and Islands is any more deserving than that of those suffering from the other farming crises, the difference is the promise made by Lord Sewel on behalf of the previous Administration that
I have some difficulties with this. The question that Mr Wallace asked was in the context of a discussion about whether further funds should be taken from ABIS and applied elsewhere, as it was likely that ABIS would not use them. That had happened before when £2.5 million was removed from the scheme and applied to crofting township schemes. It was decided that, having revamped the scheme, the balance of the £23 million available should remain with the scheme.
So you do not believe that the Government has a moral obligation.
What was done was both within the scheme's rules and regulations and within the context of funds remaining within ABIS not being misapplied or applied to such schemes as crofting township schemes. However, I cannot answer for what Lord Sewel had in mind.
Are you saying that some applicants who are eligible for ABIS will not be paid?
Although I have scraped the barrel of the very limited amount of money available to the rural affairs department and have found £1 million to add to the scheme, clearly a substantial proportion of the £21 million of outstanding applications to ABIS cannot be paid.
Who are those unpaid applicants likely to be?
I am sorry—I do not follow your question.
Do you know yet what priorities will be applied when the decision is made about who will and will not be paid?
In an attempt under very difficult circumstances to use our limited funds, we consulted the industry—admittedly very late—about applying such priorities and came up with six potential categories of prioritisation. Only the first three categories can be contained within the £2.2 million available; the applications that come under the other three categories cannot be met.
I have a supplementary question. A second point that arises from Fergus Ewing's question is why Lord Sewel made these statements not once, but twice. A guarantee to pay every application from a fixed fund is either a reckless statement or is backed up with a guarantee that the money can be topped up from another source. Can we find out why Lord Sewel made this statement and whether he was given any advice that enabled him to repeat it?
I would like to make a point about that. Lord Sewel will not have made this statement off the top of his head. It is likely that he put his signature to a letter that had been written by someone else, which, if his promise cannot be fulfilled, makes me concerned about whether he was receiving appropriate advice. Perhaps we can learn some lessons from that for future schemes, as it raises an issue about the availability of resources as one scheme ends and a new scheme begins.
Obviously, I do not think that Alasdair Morgan was directing his comments at me. I now read letters three times before I sign them.
Given that committee members obviously have an interest in this issue, which of the witnesses can answer that question?
Although, as officials, we are not able to talk on behalf of Lord Sewel or to explain the advice that we did or did not give him, we might be able to recall what was happening at the time that the letter was written to help to explain matters to the committee.
To some extent, looking for someone to blame is a blind alley. At the end of the day, the minister, Lord Sewel, was responsible for his decision. There is no point exploring which civil servant advised each part of the policy. Similarly, the current minister, Ross Finnie, is responsible and the Executive is responsible for the position in which the previous Administration has left them.
Hear, hear.
I have some responsibilities to the farmers in Scotland in discharging those parts of my job that relate to rural affairs: agriculture and fisheries and so on. The use of the word "moral" seems to—
I am sorry to interrupt, minister, but I did not mean you, personally. I meant the Executive.
We have to argue the matter in a way that can be applied both to this case and to future situations. Having seen what has happened in this case, the prospect of any fund overrunning causes me great concern. Does that mean that we have an obligation to find funds in all cases, even if there is an overrun? My difficulty is that I do not know.
You miss my point, minister. I am not talking about any scheme, I am talking about the letter in which a specific commitment was given in relation to ABIS. That is a unique commitment. I am not aware of any other case in which such a commitment was made. I accept that any scheme could overrun. In general, funds are limited and farmers and crofters must accept that. However, when a specific promise is made, it is a different matter. That was my point.
I apologise to the members of the committee who have been forming a long and orderly queue to ask questions. John Farquhar Munro has been waiting the longest.
I support much of what has been said by my committee colleagues. The Scottish Executive has a moral responsibility to go back to the Treasury and make it aware of the commitment that Lord Sewel gave in his letter. It was not an idle statement. I am sure that Jim Wallace accepted it as a serious commitment and would have communicated that to his constituents. The farmers of the Highlands and Islands were encouraged to become involved in ABIS, and I am sure that they accepted the statement as a genuine commitment, which is why there was a rise in uptake.
You suggested a means of prioritisation. Those who have rejected that have done so purely because they want the whole scheme to be paid. Someone is also bound to ask whether the officials of the rural affairs department reminded all applicants at the point of the approval of resource audits, as they are required to do when processing applications, that there is no commitment by the department to approve any subsequent application. It might also be asked whether we stated clearly the way in which the scheme was operated, and whether there was a guarantee that an application for financial assistance would be approved, which the rules of the scheme do not give.
Many of my questions have already been asked, and answers have been given. I am concerned that people have spent a great deal of money, but find themselves in an impossible situation. Minister, you are saying that the programme is closed. Although we are talking about a new programme, it seems that it will be difficult to deal with this problem, because of the time scale.
Do you want to react to that at all, minister?
I fully agree with the latter point. Clearly, we all benefit from the wisdom of hindsight.
The original overall funding for the agricultural programme in the Highlands and Islands is cited as £23 million in annexe B of the papers that you circulated to the committee, which has intriguing implications for the matter that we are discussing. We are told that £2.5 million was lost through exchange rate fluctuations, between 1995 and 1999. I presume that a significant element of that £2.5 million was ABIS money. Therefore, ABIS suffered due to the exchange rate mechanism during those years.
There are two points there, and I shall have to ask for some technical backup.
The point that you are making applies to all European funding, whether it is another type of structural funding or grant schemes for mainstream agriculture. Under the structural fund schemes, as currencies fluctuate over the period of the programme, allowance is made for that in a couple of tranches. Perhaps two or three times, over the five years, the Commission will provide more money. It is then up to the monitoring committee to decide how to allocate that money.
As 10 per cent of the budget was wiped out by those fluctuations—which is a significant amount—did any cash come back into ABIS?
No. The monitoring committee is responsible for that aspect. The last time it received any cash back in respect of fluctuations was 1998. The money did not go into ABIS. I do not honestly know where it went. It went into some of the other schemes in the Highlands and Islands structure plan. The decision was made by the monitoring committee to put the money into the areas that were experiencing most difficulty.
Is it possible for a department to make a request of the Commission? When the money comes from the Commission, can there be more input from your department to make up for the exchange rate fluctuations? I presume that the Commission does not make that money available of its own free will; a request must come from your department.
Ms Polley is saying that we received money in compensation for the exchange rate, but that, when it was received in 1998, the decision of the Highlands and Islands monitoring committee was that, as that scheme was way under in terms of its requests, the money was applied to other Highlands and Islands objective 1 schemes, which were already under pressure. We are using hindsight again, I am afraid. I would like to think that the monitoring committee made a reasonable decision on the basis of the information that was available to it.
Do you have figures to show how much has been lost by your whole department?
I am not sure that we have lost money.
I am referring to European funding.
We got money back from Europe; I am not sure that there has been a loss. There has been a loss to this scheme because of circumstances elsewhere when the scheme was applied. I am not sure that there has been a loss from the total.
Is any more cash due to come back from the Commission?
No, because that last tranche was the final payment.
That is what we have been told.
In mid-June, the principal agriculture officers in the Highlands noticed an upsurge in demand for the scheme. Is there a potential communication problem? Perhaps that information did not reach the rural affairs department.
The information reached the department. If I remember correctly, there was an increase in the number of resource audits, but—as we explained earlier—such an increase does not necessarily mean that the number of applications will increase. We rely heavily on information from the area offices to tell us what is happening on the ground, but at that point the increase in audits was not translating into an increase in applications.
I will return to the argument about what farmers believed that they would receive from the scheme. While I can understand that not everyone would have seen the letter to Jim Wallace, its contents would have been reflected in the feeling in the department at that time. That would have been passed on to the farmers who hoped to benefit from the scheme.
That comment is intended to be helpful and constructive, and I take it in that spirit. If I were able to write the European rules, that is more or less what I would want to do. However, my difficulty is that I cannot do that; I cannot commit myself in advance to adding an amount to a scheme, the specific purpose of which I have not yet fully agreed with Europe. As you know, Europe has the strict view that funds should not be committed in advance. Your suggestion that I underwrite the funds and then move things around might be construed as a commitment in advance of a new scheme. It would be dishonest of me to give an underwriting commitment, when my budget demonstrably does not contain the £22 million needed to meet such a commitment.
I am not proposing that you use money from your budget. Like Mike Rumbles, I am suggesting that you could ask the Treasury to underwrite this scheme. I am not suggesting that you give a commitment that applicants will be considered under the new scheme, because you are obviously unable to do that. I am saying that the new scheme might be able to take some of the applicants, while other grant schemes that are available in rural areas could pick up others. It is a case of underwriting the schemes, bearing in mind that nearly half the applicants might drop out and others might be able to get the funding that they seek from other schemes.
The maximum amount must still be underwritten. The principle of underwriting—whether in insurance or any other industry—is that one must, at the outset, at least cover what the maximum exposure might be. Perhaps some of those applications would not be able to find matched funding, but I do not know. If any form of finance were sought, I suspect that at the outset we would, as a contingency, at least require access to the maximum amount that would be required. Any principle of insurance would demand that, and this issue is no different. Therefore, if the question is whether that position was made public, the answer is that it was indicated that any excess would be met. We are back to the same difficult argument about Lord Sewel's exchange of correspondence with Jim Wallace, the rules of the scheme, and what applicants were told when they made or received their resource audits.
Some of the present applicants will not, however, be eligible under the scheme. As far as I understand it, there has been no audit of those applications. Is it correct that you do not know whether they are eligible for funding under ABIS?
We have examined in detail only the priority applications, but it is true that some of the present applications might exceed the expenditure ceiling. When that is examined in detail, those applications might total less than £22 million.
You have said that you do not know what caused the sudden upsurge of applications towards the end of the scheme. However, it is clear that the delay in relaunching the scheme must have been a contributory factor. Are you happy about the length of time it took to develop the new scheme and get it going?
The bulk of the delay was because we got caught up in the review of the bigger Highlands and Islands programme, which was agreed in September 1998. After that, if I remember correctly, the statutory instrument was laid at the beginning of March. The 21-day rule and so on must also be taken into account. What happened in the period in between—and we explained this publicly at the time—was that the branch that was involved was also negotiating the new rural development regulation in Brussels, as part of Agenda 2000. That branch, therefore, had to spend a lot of time in Brussels. The same branch was involved when—and some of you may recall this—the local authorities in Orkney and Shetland wanted to help some of their farmers to transport some of their livestock to the mainland that winter. In order to do so, that branch had to get round the European Commission state aid rules, which, on the face of it, it could not. The staff concerned had put a huge amount of effort into that. The same one and a half people—I say half because there was a part-timer—were trying to do all three of those things.
Given that such problems are always going to crop up, as will other schemes and other emergencies, are we always going to be late?
I cannot possibly comment on that.
We certainly hope not. Apart from the enormous amount of time spent examining why this scheme has got into this difficulty, and considering staff resources and other schemes, we are concerned—within the rural affairs department—about ensuring that what we do is done on time. I cannot act on behalf of others who have difficulties in processing much of Agenda 2000. I am satisfied that those delays are not being caused within the rural affairs department. They often result from delays in processing in the European Commission.
On the question of resource audits, when the relaunch of the scheme is being considered, have you discussed what might and might not be possible in terms of negotiation with Europe? Is it possible that, in relaunching the scheme, you could identify applicants who have had their resource audits approved and give them priority when making allocations? Is it possible to have prioritisation when relaunching the scheme?
I will deal with the first part of the question. There is an issue of expenditure and the time involved in the resource audit. In constructing the rules for access to the new scheme—which will be discussed in the rural affairs department and in this committee—it seems that it will be possible to devise ways of accessing the new scheme that would take account of those who have already been through the resource audit process.
The intention is to draw up the detailed rules of the plan through the plan team, which has already been set up in the Highlands and Islands, and which includes farming representatives, local enterprise companies and local authorities. That group must make a number of decisions, including whether it prioritises and, if so, how it prioritises. The point that you are making will have to be taken into account.
Will any priorities be set in consultation with the industry?
Yes.
I will return to the point that Rhoda Grant raised. In part 4—on internal targets—of document LTL10611 you state that the value
Parts of that would be quite easy to do as there is a grant ceiling, so people cannot be granted more than £40,000. On the other aspects, it would be necessary to examine each application on the ground to decide whether it is eligible and, in that way, arrive at the final cost. That would involve a lot of work.
Area offices have, presumably, a record of the applications that they have rejected.
If an application has been rejected as ineligible, it will have been taken out of the calculation.
That is not what it says in your document.
Sorry, Elaine. What page are you talking about?
I am talking about part 4, which talks about internal targets. The document indicates that the figure includes ineligible applications.
Which paragraph is that?
Paragraph 3.
What we are saying there is that we have not been able to work out exactly what is ineligible, particularly with regard to outstanding applications. When I said that ineligible applications had been deducted, I meant that they had been deducted from those that had been processed.
The committee sympathises with Mr Finnie, in that he has inherited this situation. The fact that it was inherited makes the issue unique.
My reluctance to do so arises from the way in which such negotiations are conducted. This situation might be unique, but any call on the reserves of the Scottish Executive would result in that case being regarded as our absolute priority.
We have heard that this is a different Administration, but as far as the chancellor is concerned, it is the same one. It was his Administration, which was in charge of the Scottish Office, through Lord Sewel, which entered into the commitment. We can say to the chancellor, "Your Administration entered into the commitment and we expect you to fulfil it".
That point was put to me earlier. Although in no way diminishing what Fergus Ewing and Mike Rumbles have said about the contents of Lord Sewel's letter, I am certain that they will want to take account of the letter from Mr Wallace, the full context of the letter from Lord Sewel and of the explanatory leaflet, in order to establish that Administration's commitment. There is a clear conflict between those elements in terms of the total commitment of the scheme. We cannot read the two documents and come to a single conclusion.
I have to disagree because Lord Sewel makes it clear in his letter that it is difficult to estimate the amount of money that the scheme will require, yet he makes a clear and open-ended commitment.
The programme's monitoring committee was mentioned and, according to your notes, its membership includes local authorities, enterprise companies, voluntary organisations and environmental organisations. Were there any agricultural interests represented on that committee?
Not directly. Local authorities, especially the island ones, link up closely with the agriculture industry and we get their views through that. The committee was set up in 1994, but we established a sub-group for the new scheme. The plan committee is the one designed by the Highlands and Islands special programme. However, we set up a sub-group formed of the agricultural interests, the local enterprise companies and the local authorities in order to gain more input from those people with an interest.
Does the minister think that it would be appropriate for agricultural interests to be directly represented on the main committee?
It is not my committee. That is a question that I can raise with Mr McConnell. It seems to be a fair question, but I am not in a position to answer it.
You said earlier that the people who have spent money—that is what they were asked to do, after all—would be taken into the new scheme if the original money did not come through. Is the new scheme the son of ABIS?
I was using the phrase rather loosely. The new scheme is part of the Highlands and Islands special programme. As at least one member has pointed out, the scope of the new scheme is not identical to that of ABIS. That is the second reason that I will not and cannot give you an undertaking that every person who has applied to ABIS will be eligible. However, from the regulations for the new scheme it seems that there is every likelihood that a substantial number of those who have applied will fall within the ambit of what I have loosely described as son of ABIS.
Do you take on board that the agricultural sector is not the only one affected? This also has an impact on the building firms and contractors that would have implemented these schemes. It runs all the way through Highlands and Islands life.
I understand that. That is true of any capital grants scheme.
At this stage, I would like to clear up a couple of specific points that have been put to me by farmers.
It has always been a very strict rule of the European schemes that it is not possible to start work before an application for funding has been accepted. That means that if people do the work, they will not be able to get money for it retrospectively.
So none of the work that we are describing can be initiated until a new scheme has been developed and applications have been processed in the normal manner?
Yes, unless it is possible to use some of the other departmental grant schemes or schemes run by the local enterprise companies for tourism and so on. I know that some people will go ahead anyway.
Farmers and applicants have informed me that there is a concern about the deadline of 31 December this year. They fear that if the applications are not processed to a sufficient extent before that date, they may be left outwith the scope of any solution to this problem. Is there a loophole there that needs to be closed?
That is subject to European rules and has been a matter for negotiation over the past few months. The rules are very strict, but I am sure that Andy Robertson's people will be looking to establish whether the issue that you raise can be taken into account, as it is a potential problem. However, we have to work within the European straitjacket when doing that.
Can you say at this point that any application that was received by a SERAD office on 31 October or earlier will be processed and included in the broad scope of any subsequent arrangements that may be made?
At the moment we are processing those applications that fall into the priority categories, so that we can get them approved under ABIS by 31 December. That has to be the first thing that we do. We are not processing any other applications in that way, because they will not be processed under ABIS. We must wait to see whether the same things could be included as part of an application under a future scheme and whether, for example, some use could be made of the resource audit that was carried out under ABIS.
Is there a danger that if we manage, by whatever means, to develop some method of extending the scope of the scheme as currently constituted, some applications will not be processed and that they will, as a consequence, be missed out?
The date of 31 December is critical as far as ABIS is concerned. If applications are to be approved under ABIS, they must be approved by 31 December. All the applications that are in priority categories will have been approved by that date.
Are you saying that those applications that are not considered to be in the priority categories are likely not to have been processed by that date?
Because we are not processing them under ABIS and do not have the funds to do that, there would be no point in trying to get approval by 31 December.
Does that mean that, on 31 December, the problem will cease to exist as far as you are concerned?
On 31 December, ABIS will close. However, many people will have an interest in the terms of the new scheme that will be negotiated with Brussels over the coming months as part of the Highlands and Islands special programme. The forms that people have submitted to Andrew Robertson's office have been submitted under ABIS. Because of European rules, the applicants may have to fill in new forms and resubmit them on the basis of the rules that are devised in conjunction with the plan team.
That still leaves the question that Lewis Macdonald raised about what the application is and to what extent we have decided to take account of initial audits. That point still remains. There may be another form to fill in, but there is still scope for discussing how we can take account of previous audits as part of that process.
Would it be fair to say that applications that are considered on your criteria to be of low priority will effectively lapse on 31 December?
As far as ABIS is concerned, yes, but it does not get rid of the problem.
Does that mean that those applications will go in the bucket on 31 December?
We will not be throwing them in the bucket—that is rather an emotional way of putting it. If the new rules, arrived at with proper consultation with the various interested bodies and with this committee, can take account of previous work, we will have to find a way of ensuring that we can refer back to that.
One can never be absolutely sure how much money will be paid out on each application. All that one has is a maximum. Is that correct?
When we approve an individual application for a building, for instance, we study the estimated costs supplied by the contractor. In that situation, we can be sure of the maximum amount, because the total cost is never less than the estimate.
On 31 December, will the total amount of those approved match the total amount of the fund?
Yes.
Will there be a shortfall?
I should not think so.
Will the claims also match that figure?
The claims may match that figure or they may not because I understand that they sometimes vary, but that is a feature of any grant scheme.
What we are giving is an approval to carry out the work. If the applicant does not carry out the work, there will be no claim.
We will try to do what has been suggested so that there is no further spending.
Is there any indication from the previous years of the scheme of the number of approved applications that do not proceed?
I cannot put a figure on it. There is always a drop-out rate.
Is it significant?
I am afraid that I cannot put a figure on it.
That is an issue that we have been wondering about. We thought that we might be able to make some assumptions about the drop-out rate and increase the level of grant that we paid out. We have been told firmly by lawyers that we would be in breach of EU law if we did that.
Even though you know that you will not spend the entire fund, because there will be drop-out, you cannot over-commit.
It is one of the irritating features. All that we can say is that the money that is not used will probably be available for the new scheme.
As an extra?
In the sense that we will have assumed that it was not there and then it will appear.
Quite often approval is given to carry out work during the course of which hidden or unforeseen extra costs might be discovered. We can vary the approval to take account of extra costs. That might compensate to an extent.
Even after the scheme closes on 31 December?
That would be within reason. One has always to check such things with lawyers, but that would be the practical operation of the scheme.
What are the priorities for the applications that you are approving?
The first priority is, as it always was, resource audits. The second priority was to take in the new measures that we had specifically included in the new scheme. Those measures included the mobile fanks and dippers, information technology equipment, alternative agriculture and horticulture, and residential letting. The third priority was to deal with the storage and disposal of farm waste. The fourth priority was cattle-handling facilities, the fifth was cattle buildings and the sixth was other housing for livestock.
Although I have some sympathy for the minister in his personal predicament, which is not of his own making, I have no sympathy for the apparent view of the Executive as expressed at this meeting. The Executive refuses to honour the clear assurance that was given by Lord Sewel. The farmers in the Highlands who are affected will meet today's news with outrage. I hope that the minister will consider making a ministerial statement next week so that this matter can be debated fully in our Parliament.
The pressures on me since I took office have been such that neither the budgetary allocations nor European money have met the needs of many parts of the rural community.
I know that resource audits are the first priority. Are we still approving new resource audits? It is my understanding that they could not possibly lead to applications.
I think that I am right in saying that all the resource audits are now approved. The reason for continuing to regard them as a priority is that they have a self-standing benefit, in that they are a sort of slot analysis of the business. Therefore, they can be used in future, not just in relation to a grant scheme, but to look at the health of, and the opportunities for, the business.
I know that I am not a member of this committee, but I am fascinated by this subject. Some of the farmers who believed that they were going to get grants will be disappointed. I would have thought that they could appeal to Europe—to the European ombudsman or to the European Court of Justice, for example. My advice to my constituents would be to pursue that course of action immediately.
If there are no other questions or comments on the ABIS scheme, I will suspend the meeting for a couple of minutes, after which we will proceed with the agenda.
Meeting suspended.
On resuming—
We now progress to item 3 on the agenda. The suggestion is that we proceed with item 3 by receiving further information on ABIS from Mr Fergusson, the Parliament's audit adviser. It has been suggested that that be done in private. I therefore propose that, as Ross Finnie is here to cover item 4 as well, we should proceed to item 4 and return to item 3 in private at the end of the meeting.