Online on Monday February 13th 4-6pm 2023
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Could the future of Scotland's rural communities be transformed by considering health and tourism together?
Rural tourism makes a massive contribution to Scotland’s economy, including generating £1.2 billion from walking tourism alone, as well as improving the country’s social capital in terms of health and wellbeing. But many who live in rural communitie are not getting their fair share of the benefits.
Rural communities are suffering the downsides - congestion (with settlements on the NC500 particularly badly affected), litter, housing pressures - on top of more longstanding problems including business closures and rural depopulation. Decades of under-investment in rural infrastructure have seen the deterioration or removal of ranger services, public toilets and rural roads. The Scottish Government recently stepped in with dedicated funding for visitor management but this was on an annual, one-off, basis whereas long-term investment is needed.
SEDA Land is running a conversation on how more of the fiscal and other benefits generated by visitors to the countryside - tourists, day-trippers, dog-walkers, mountain-bikers and other extreme sports enthusiasts - might be channelled back into the affected areas.
Recreation and enjoyment of the outdoors is also crucial for our health and wellbeing, with these benefits increasingly recognised in the growth of preventative medicine and the growing use of “green prescriptions”. Given the contribution that outdoor pursuits make to our health, should we be looking at alternative sources of investment in their infrastructure and management, rather than simply seeing them as part of rural tourism? Given the potential savings to NHS Scotland's £18bn-a-year budget we will also be looking at how some of the clawed-back funds might be redistributed to rural communities for investment in improving regional infrastructure and visitor management.
Join this diverse panel in the search for some innovative ways forward to tackle these overlapping problems.
Aims
To develop a model for local distribution of funding for the infrastructure necessary for rural tourism and supporting better health
To give communities the skills and responsibilities to enable/empower them to respond to the growing needs of tourism and supporting better health