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Time running out to have say on options for fire byelaws in Cairngorms National Park


By Gavin Musgrove

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Disposable barbecues in the Great Outdoors could become a thing of the past in the Cairngorms National Park depending on what path is followed.
Disposable barbecues in the Great Outdoors could become a thing of the past in the Cairngorms National Park depending on what path is followed.

Time is running out to respond to consultation on recreational fire management byelaws in the strath and wider Cairngorms National Park.

There is less than a week left to get involved in the Cairngorms National Park Authority’s consultation on the possible introduction of recreational fire management byelaws.

The 10-week consultation has received more than 1,000 responses since it began on 8 February.

Related articles:

Potential ban on recreation fires in Cairngorms National Park goes out to public consultation

Will I still be able to have a barbecue in my garden or on the beach?

CNPA officers have welcomed the high level of engagement with the public.

Colin Simpson, the park authority’s head of visitor services and active travel, said: “It is great to see so many people getting involved in the recreational fire management byelaws consultation.

“As an organisation, we are not putting forward a preferred option as part of this process – we want to hear what residents, land managers and visitors have to say first.

“We know there is no single approach that will take away all of the risk, but looking at all the options and gathering people’s views is a very important first step in the process.”

The CNPA is carrying out the consultation after its board members agreed last year to consider the options for minimising the risks of wildfires starting in a bid to reduce the risk to people, nature and property in the national park.

Wildfire risk is increasing in Scotland and climate modelling shows a predicted increase in drought periods.

The Cairngorms National Park is home to 25 per cent of the UK’s rare and endangered species and around half of Scotland’s ancient pinewoods.

It is also home to 18,000 people and around two million people visit the area each year.

The consultation sets out three potential options for respondents to give their views on.

These are:

• no byelaws to be introduced and instead build on the current approach, investing in education and communications to raise awareness of the risks of fires in the national park.

• A byelaw which would ban recreational fires but only at times of high fire risk, with certain exemptions such as private gardens.

• A year-round fire management byelaw which would restrict recreational fires with certain exceptions, 12 months of the year.

The public are also asked if there are any other proposals they think would be appropriate with the park authority making clear that it is not putting forward any preferred option as part of this process.

The consultation closes this Wednesday (April 17).

Responses will be considered by the CNPA board in June and, if a fire byelaw is agreed to be the way forward, they are likely to be introduced in summer 2025.

For more information or to make your views known, visit www.cairngorms.co.uk/fires


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