Official Report 303KB pdf
Good morning everybody. Welcome to the 21st meeting this year of the Edinburgh Tram (Line One) Bill Committee. I apologise for the slight delay in getting started, but there were traffic problems.
The first witness is Tina Woolnough, who will address the impact on wildlife and vegetation for group 33.
Good morning, Ms Woolnough. Can we start with Mr Dapré's rebuttal, in which he refers to the current condition of the footway and cycleway? In that context, do you have any comments on vegetation and wildlife?
The promoter has played up the poor management of the cycleway and walkway. It has been suggested that neglect is a virtue, in terms of putting a tram on the Roseburn corridor. We feel that the vegetation along the cycleway and walkway should have been maintained better, with proper tree management and so on. However, the promoter is the City of Edinburgh Council, which has had every opportunity over the past number of years to maintain the area properly. That raises for us an issue of trust, as to whether the promoter will ever deliver the maintenance that it is supposed to. Mitigation will be included in the bill, but who will maintain the area and ensure that the corridor is kept in good condition?
Mr Dapré states that the corridor will be well lit, and that the removal of vegetation will assist in providing good visibility. Do you agree?
No, not at all. The removal of vegetation will have a devastating effect on the corridor's function as a secure blanket of cover for wildlife. There will be some reinstatement, but it will be only partial. There will be an almost wholesale removal of vegetation in some areas of the corridor. We are not sure for whom there will be good visibility. Perhaps there will be good visibility for tram drivers, but wildlife does not need good visibility.
Mr Dapré probably also meant that the tram stops on the Roseburn corridor would be more visible as a result of the signage.
I have already given evidence that an on-street alignment would be much more visible than an off-street alignment. Off-street alignments are often in embankments or cuttings, shielded by vegetation and some remaining trees and they often go through residential areas. An on-street alignment would be much more visible and obviously much less detrimental to the Roseburn corridor.
I want to move on to Karen Raymond's rebuttal. What are your thoughts on her suggestion that the tram proposals offer an opportunity to deliver improved management of the Roseburn corridor?
That suggestion harks back to the downplaying of the state and benefits of the Roseburn corridor and its success story from a wildlife point of view. The corridor is also a success story from a human point of view. Its rural character is very much part of what we value about it and what the wildlife enjoys about it. We think that formal planting or any changes that are made will change the corridor's character for the worse. We do not accept that better management will result. There has been no guarantee at all about the management of the corridor—there is only an aspiration. We do not know where the money for managing the corridor will come from or who will manage it in the future. We do not know whose responsibility it will be. In the light of the track record that the promoter has, by its own admission, we are not hopeful that the aspiration will turn into reality.
Paragraph 2.2 of Mr Coates's rebuttal indicates that he thinks that the promoter's surveys are adequate. Do you have any comments to make on vegetation and wildlife?
We have been disappointed by the level of the surveys. I submitted evidence using the views of experts. I looked to a number of expert bodies for information on birds, badgers, flora and fauna and so on and they said that more rigorous surveys should have been done. Our view is that the surveys were not rigorous enough. Obviously, Mr Coates has taken a tram point of view, if you like. The surveys may have been fit for his purposes and boxes have probably been ticked. However, the promoter is the City of Edinburgh Council, and it should have set an example of excellence rather than adequacy in looking at what is in the wildlife corridor.
Do you also recollect that Mr Coates said that stabilising works may add to the amount of vegetation lost? Therefore, even the figures that Ms Raymond has put forward for loss of vegetation are still conservative.
That is right.
It is not until stabilising works and construction actually start that we will know the full impact.
When I cross-examined Mr Coates last week, it was clear that there are many unknowns and that he feels that neighbouring gardens will somehow compensate for the losses in the Roseburn corridor during construction. People's gardens are not the designated urban wildlife corridor; they are people's gardens. To encompass them casually in the function and facility of the Roseburn corridor from a wildlife point of view is completely unacceptable.
Mr Coates suggested, regarding loss of trees, that they have no impact on local air quality but only on global climate change. What are your thoughts on that?
Mr Coates is an expert, and I respect his viewpoint. However, it is the experience of local people that trees in leaf behave quite differently from when they are not in leaf as regards sound and visual screening.
Would you agree that in giving the Roseburn corridor designated urban wildlife corridor status, the City of Edinburgh Council designated that space for wildlife and flora and fauna?
That is right. I accept that if the bill becomes an act, it will remove that status, but to people from all over Edinburgh and beyond, that status is the corridor's value and its loss cannot be mitigated. We are not getting a replacement urban wildlife corridor somewhere else. Function might be retained to a degree; we dispute that. The loss of the amenity, benefits and success of the corridor for humans and wildlife cannot be mitigated.
Referring to replacement planting, Mr Coates suggests that the tram scheme will be an opportunity to enhance the existing vegetation. He also says:
I have been very active in the community liaison group. I had to go to two groups because Blackhall community association spans two of the community liaison group areas so I was fortunate to be able to pick up questions where I left them at the previous meeting.
Do you also feel that the promoter might be tempted to go for the cheapest option, given the probable financial constraints?
Because of the lack of clarity and the absence of a business case, we are not sure whether the original budget for environmental mitigation should now be increased or whether costs have increased. We cannot see the context. I cross-examined some of the promoter's witnesses about that and it seems to me that we are feeling our way in the dark. Our aspiration is to know how the area will be managed if the tramline is built. We do not know where the money for that will come from. We do not know whether there is enough money in the pot to pay for the things that have been included in the scheme. Presumably, when the scheme was originally costed there were no details about the badgers and existing levels of vegetation, or about the human usage of the corridor. None of that information was included, so one wonders how accurate the budgeting for such projects can be; global experience is that it is not very accurate. We are concerned that those issues are not very important for the funding because the promoter has to get the tram up and running on the rails. The Roseburn corridor is not very visible; the promoter might have considered that it could be done later.
I am also unsure about where the money for mitigation measures for the flora and fauna is going to come from. Is it going to come from the construction funds or public realm improvements? Do you recall the promoter advising the committee that there is only £1 million in the bank for public realm improvements?
That is right. A small amount of money has been set aside, as far as we know—and it is a question of what we know rather than what is the case. There is £1 million for public realm improvements, but we want to know what the environmental mitigation budget is. If we can, we would like to see it costed out. I do not think that that is an unreasonable request. Perhaps we would gain some confidence from that.
It might also be the case that if the promoter considered alternative on-street alignments, it would not have to spend so much.
Exactly. Until you know what the facts and figures are, you cannot make comparisons or see whether this is an incredibly expensive place to put a tram or whether there is a cheaper way to do it that is less environmentally damaging or even environmentally beneficial, as it will remove cars from roads, make the air cleaner on streets and reduce noise and vibration from general traffic.
And possibly even attract more patronage.
Possibly, but without the figures we cannot know.
You have been sailing very close to the wind. No more alternative routes or patronage cases, thank you.
In his rebuttal, Mr Coates states that a further bat survey will be undertaken prior to construction. Do you have any comment to make with regard to that?
I have been in correspondence with a bat expert. We walked up the Roseburn corridor and looked at the bridges and so on. There was some anxiety about the Coltbridge viaduct, because bats like to inhabit roosts near rivers because of the feeding potential.
Mr Coates also mentions that further bird surveys were undertaken in May and June of this year. Has the promoter shared the findings of those surveys with you in an attempt to address that part of your objection?
I have seen what has been done. Again, there was a limited survey. Using experts—I spoke to RSPB Scotland and got advice on how to conduct a bird survey—I discovered that more seasonal work needed to be done. Again, however, we feel that every bird, particularly those of red-list species, is of value, especially in relation to the ecosystem of the corridor. To say simply that they will go somewhere else and find other trees to nest in and so on is to miss the point. That is not an answer to our concern. Displacement is not mitigation, it is a hope that something good will result.
In short, is it your view that the flora and fauna of the Roseburn corridor are such that the area should be considered a valuable and sensitive habitat?
Absolutely. To be fair to some of the promoter's witnesses, we have heard that the Roseburn corridor will never be the same again, that there will be losses that cannot be mitigated and that some of those losses might be extreme. In summary, all that I can say is that we still oppose the use of the Roseburn corridor and would support alternative alignments.
Are you aware that the Scottish transport appraisal guidance document offers the following helpful advice? It says that transport proposals should be designed to
Yes. It is our view—
For the benefit of the committee, could you tell me where that is in the rebuttal witness statement?
It is not in the rebuttal witness statement, but I think that the STAG document is crucial to any consideration of environmental impact.
Okay, but the focus of this session is to home in on rebuttal witness statements.
That concludes my questions.
Mr Thomson, you may question Kristina Woolnough.
Ms Woolnough, would it be fair to suggest that you might find it difficult to be objective about the promoter's mitigation measures because of the vehemence of your opposition to the idea of a tram going down the Roseburn corridor?
The vehemence of my opposition is the result of a cumulative process based on what the promoter has said and the information that has been issued. I have become more and more convinced in my views. Initially, I did not know much about the issues. I did not know the extent of the wildlife on the corridor and I did not know much about the badgers on the corridor. Admittedly, I am a layperson, but the more research that I have done—I spoke with experts on every subject on which I submitted written evidence—the more concerned and disappointed I have become about the level of the surveys. It is perfectly legitimate for you to suggest that I am biased, but the same suggestion could be made about the promoter.
Do you agree that there is a difference between protected and unprotected species?
There is in terms of law. That is right.
And in respect of species such as badgers there are regulatory provisions and licences are required.
That is right. I understand that there is robust protection for badgers, but the issue is also whether it would be better for them if the tram did not go on the Roseburn corridor. In respect of protected species such as birds—we heard from Mr Coates last week about red species or whatever they are; I cannot remember the exact terminology—there seems to be a sliding scale of protection. I tried to get to the bottom of that last week. From a layperson's point of view, protected means protected, so it is difficult for ordinary people to understand that a "yes, but" is attached.
Were you at all comforted by Mr Coates's evidence last week that even where a species was not protected steps were proposed to mitigate the impact on them, such as avoiding work during the breeding season for birds?
I was concerned about the food-chain issue because no protection is proposed for foxes, voles, moles and other mammals. There is also no protection for a whole raft of flora and fauna that form the foraging grounds. The Roseburn corridor is currently a success story for wildlife and the difficulty for us is that elements of the wildlife that comprise the success story are not mentioned in any landscape and habitat management plan. What will happen to foxes and other mammals when construction is taking place? What will happen when the tram operates? We do not know.
Are you at all comforted by the ecology section in the code of construction practice?
Again, there are not the surveys and there is not the information about mammals and so on to match up with the ecology aspects of the code of construction practice so it is difficult to envisage how it will operate in reality. I respect the aspirations and so on of the policy documents, but until we can be helped to understand the nitty-gritty of the plan it is hard to see how it will work on the ground.
Have you seen a copy of the badger mitigation plan?
No. I was a bit disappointed about that because we asked about it last week when we did not know whether to question Mr Coates about it. We agreed that we would reserve our concerns about the badger mitigation plan for today when we were witnesses. I have not, however, been sent a copy of the plan—I have not received one. I will rely on Patricia Alderson's evidence, as she has seen the plan.
Have you seen the promoter's response paper 8, which outlines its intention to amend the bill with regard to enforcement of the landscape and habitat management plan?
Yes, I have seen that paper. That is a welcome step and we appreciate it, but the concerns that I have described this morning are still outstanding. We are concerned that there is no independent arbiter and no independent monitoring body. We are concerned that the promoter, the City of Edinburgh Council, will not be impartial. For example, there is our experience of the changes made to the Edinburgh biodiversity action plan from the 2000-2004 plan to the 2005-2009 one. The 2005-2009 plan accepted the tram as a fait accompli despite the fact that there were robust statements in the 2000-2004 biodiversity action plan, which stated that urban wildlife corridors should be protected from development. That evidence suggests to us that we should be concerned about the impartiality of the council.
Are you aware that Scottish Natural Heritage was involved and will continue to be involved in the preparation of the landscape and habitat management plan?
That is my understanding and that is of some comfort. I believe that SNH's primary concern has been about the badgers. I also understand that SNH is concerned that it does not have sufficient manpower or funding to retain a person to work on the tramline 1 project on the Roseburn corridor, during construction and beyond. We urge the promoter to consider funding someone from SNH to take on that role. If there is a manpower issue, it should be addressed.
Would you be comforted if the badger mitigation plan was a confidential annex to the landscape and habitat management plan?
I cannot answer that, because I have not seen the badger mitigation plan. Until we hear the evidence of our expert witness on that matter, I would not wish to answer that, although such a measure would give me some comfort, as long as we were happy with the contents of the plan.
It would be a step in the right direction.
Yes, but the content of the plan may not be acceptable to us.
The Edinburgh and Lothians badger group has been involved in the preparation of the badger mitigation plan.
Yes, but I reserve any comment on that until we hear Patricia Alderson's evidence.
Has the promoter communicated better in recent times? There was a lot of historical content in your comments on the wildlife corridor.
From our point of view, there has been no change. We did not receive the badger mitigation plan, although the private bills unit kindly forwarded to us some documents from the promoter. Patricia Alderson has issues about the speed with which documents are emerging.
Could the situation be improved in the future?
I sincerely hope so.
We were clear that the promoter was to send the badger mitigation plan only to the Edinburgh and Lothians badger group and SNH, for reasons that we discussed previously, which were to do with the sensitivity of the contents, which identify the location of particular badger setts. Neither we nor the promoter ever intended to send you the badger mitigation plan. The purpose of the present discussion is to enable you to draw from your expert witness—who has seen the plan—the positives and negatives about the plan. I want to dispel any impression that you were to receive a copy of the plan and I apologise if we inadvertently gave you that impression.
I have a couple of brief ones.
That is right. We distribute a newsletter to 2,500 households three times a year, so I stress that my vehemence is not personal but representative of a whole community. The friends of the Roseburn urban wildlife corridor has, I think, 227 members now. There is a network of people who are extremely concerned throughout and beyond Edinburgh.
Certainly, the committee was not releasing any information on that.
I understand that completely. That was not what I had understood.
So your stance on the Roseburn corridor is informed—I hate that term—by the 2,500 households.
That is right. It is also informed by people beyond those households. The peculiar thing is that, because I as an individual have accumulated information on behalf of my community, people see me as their spokesperson and I have a burden of responsibility. That might have partly resulted in what Mr Thomson described as vehemence. I have not shied away from that burden of responsibility, and the more that I have discovered and shared with my community and other people, the more concerned I have become.
It is probably an unfair question but, as a matter of interest, can you recall anybody from the Blackhall community contacting you to say that they did not agree with what you were saying about the Roseburn corridor and the effect that the tram system would have on it?
In the two and a half years since the tram was suggested and the proposed alignment has been in front of us, nobody has ever contacted me to say that they wanted the trams on the Roseburn corridor and that they thought that I was doing entirely the wrong thing.
Is it your view that the tram system will result in an unacceptably severe negative impact on vegetation and wildlife on the Roseburn corridor?
From the evidence that I have given and the questions that I asked last week, it is clear that there are some things that simply cannot be mitigated. The promoter acknowledged that, but my concern is that the things that cannot be mitigated and the things that therefore will be lost for ever have been downplayed and, to an extent, discredited. The importance of the Roseburn corridor as a wildlife corridor and an amenity has been downplayed. It is an amenity for people well beyond the communities that the plans affect. The corridor functions as a linear park, whether or not it is designated or formally described as one.
What would you consider to be the best and most effective mitigation measure?
An alternative, on-street alignment.
There being no further questions for Ms Woolnough on the issue, I thank her for giving evidence.
I clarify that my question was not intended to be in any way personal about Ms Woolnough. I was regarding her as entirely representative of group 33.
Your comments are noted, but I think that they have been rebutted quite well—not that I am allowed to make such comments.
Ms Woolnough and I thought that it might be helpful if we tried to roll all the questions into one questioner, so I am content that Ms Woolnough question Ms Alderson on behalf of group 33, if that is all right.
Excellent. That is helpful to the process.
I put to you the $1 million question: would it be better for badgers if the Roseburn corridor was not used for tramline 1?
Absolutely. That has been my opinion from the beginning and it has not changed.
I want to ask about initial construction. What impact might noise and vibration during construction have on the badgers? Are there worst-case and best-case scenarios?
The worst-case scenario, which is probably the likely one, is that many of the badgers will simply leave the corridor as soon as possible after work begins, maybe even after a few days, and they will all depart in the course of about a month. Even if fencing is put alongside the road accesses, the badgers will simply go through gardens to escape the constant noise. It does not matter if construction does not happen at night. Excessive amounts of noise and vibration during the day will definitely have an effect on them. I have seen in other places the effect that an amount of interference far less than is projected for the tram project can have on badgers. In that case, they moved the whole sett, but that was in the countryside, so although they moved it was not particularly disadvantageous to them, but where are the badgers from the Roseburn corridor going to move to?
Is it your experience that in similar, but perhaps less intensive, construction processes the badgers tend to move out?
The case to which I referred involved only the installation of a water pump at a distance of about 100m. It was quite interesting to see that the main sett that I was looking for was no longer occupied. The badgers had moved right round the hillside so that they were away from the noise.
When I asked Mr Coates a similar question last week, he said that he could not predict what individual badgers would do, that there was an element of uncertainty and that it might or might not be all right. Do you think that it is possible to take a view on likely scenarios?
Yes, certainly. A lot of work is being done on badgers in different parts of Britain, so people should be able to come up with some averages. Different badgers behave differently, and it is possible that, in the long term, badgers might survive in the Roseburn corridor after going somewhere else in the meantime, but that will not save the individual badgers that are killed on the roads when making their initial escape.
You will be aware that the promoter is proposing an alternative sett location. Is there any guarantee that that will work? Does your experience suggest that it can work in the specific circumstances of the Roseburn corridor, which is quite a confined space? What is your view on that temporary sett?
The new location of the artificial sett probably means that the badgers can survive in that area. Unfortunately, as there are two communities of badgers, the second one is at much greater risk. However, the main sett, for which the artificial sett is to be provided, is probably in danger of collapse because of the works. That is one of the problems. The badgers may not have that chance to go back. The location of the artificial sett is not ideal. It is the best location available, but that is different from saying that it is ideal. If the badgers really liked that area, they would be there already; it is not really perfect, but it is the best that we can do.
You mentioned the construction works taking place underneath the main, long-established sett, which is referred to in a paper from the promoter that has been shared with us. Are you reassured by the promoter saying that it will shore up the bank and that that will be fine because badgers dig away from their sett entrances? Again, that was in Mr Coates's evidence last week.
It is quite interesting to see that that sett is on a very steep slope and that the tunnels go back underneath neighbouring gardens. However, the steepness of the slope means that it will have to be cut back quite a long way. I am not an expert on soil dynamics, but the soil is really sandy and I cannot see how it can be protected to stop it collapsing. We know that the ground will be full of badger tunnels dug back quite a long way. The stability of the soil is probably not great enough to withstand that kind of operation.
You think that, at best, there is a significant risk?
There is certainly a risk.
Do you think there can be total or even adequate mitigation of noise and vibration during construction?
No. I cannot think of any measures that would provide total mitigation, because the affected area is so close to the work. Even a single track would cause disturbance. The amount of excavation work that will be done means that a lot of land will be taken from the embankments.
It is my understanding that the promoter intends to phase construction. Would that be your preferred approach? What would be the best-case scenario for the badgers? Should all the work be done in a oner or should it be done in phased stages, as is proposed?
There has been a lot of tree felling already. That is supposed to be part of a management plan, but it is significant that it has not happened in the past. The area is now more open than it was. Some work, such as tree felling, would have to be phased. All the work should be done in sections. Once people have completed work in an area they should move along to another one. It should not be a matter of taking out the trees, then coming back a few months later to excavate the site. Work should be completed by section, but I do not know whether the promoter would find that economically viable.
You have seen the badger mitigation plan. Did you have a chance to express your view of it to the committee before today?
No.
What do you think of the document overall?
It looks interesting superficially, until you read it in detail, which is difficult. Aspects of badger mitigation such as tunnels, which can be lifted from other sources, have been set out in nice diagrams. That is one section of the work. The other section is fairly general, with statements such as "we can do this" and "we can do that", but without specific commitments. The problem is in the detail. There are a lot of setts, each of which should have been addressed individually. The document should have set out what can be done at specific points.
It does not include an exact mapping of what would be done where?
That is right. Given that the plan is a restricted document, I can see no reason why such mapping should not have been done.
Do you have concerns about the management and monitoring of badger activity after construction? Is that mentioned in the plan?
Yes, it is. The idea is that activity will be monitored afterwards. That has not happened in most places where badger mitigation has been put in, so people do not know whether the mitigation has been successful.
Such monitoring would be welcome?
It is important.
I presume that there is no indication of where funding for it would come from or of who might do it?
I have no idea who is supposed to do it. I cannot see the promoter funding anyone to do it, but the principle sounds good.
We have heard the promoter say that the badger mitigation plan might be attached to the landscape and habitat management plan, which will be included in the bill. I presume that that would be welcome?
Yes.
But that would depend on what was in it?
Exactly. It is easy to attach the plan because it does not commit the promoter to as much as it should.
You have described what has been done elsewhere. Do you think the plan addresses adequately the particular circumstances of the Roseburn corridor?
The main problem with the Roseburn corridor is that the promoter wants to put so much into it. It is like nowhere else I know of. For example, the Croydon system has twin-track running in places, but it does not have a cycleway. In the Roseburn corridor, only the twin-track running will occupy the base of what was the old railway line. The promoter is not highlighting that a lot more land is being taken here than is being taken in other places.
So, because of the particular circumstances of the Roseburn corridor, we do not have details of how—
We do have details: they have revealed the problem. We know that the promoter will take away much of the embankments.
Does the badger mitigation plan contain anything about foraging?
Yes. The promoter has decreased the amount that is supposed to be taken for foraging. That is the most striking thing about the plan.
At previous meetings of this committee, we have heard various calculations of the removal of vegetation, and revisions of those calculations. I presume that the more vegetation is removed, the more impact there will be on the badgers?
Absolutely.
That is important even if we are talking about vegetation that the badgers will not eat. What other impacts will there be?
A third of the vegetation—between 32 and 34 per cent—will be removed. Badgers have very clear paths along the Roseburn corridor but they do not use them all the time. I have watched them. After they leave the sett, they potter around all over the place. They are foraging. It is not necessarily obvious that they are foraging; they just pick up insects and roots and things. I have watched them foraging for half an hour in one quite small area, which clearly offers important foraging for them.
What might look like scrub to a human does not look the same to a badger?
Exactly, not from underneath. Badgers like it.
Are you aware that the promoter's figures for the removal of vegetation are averages? In some parts of the corridor, the figures will be much higher and as much as 80-odd per cent of the vegetation will be removed. Will that impact on badgers?
The more vegetation is taken away, the worse it will be.
What will badgers do if there is no cover they can scurry along underneath?
They will have to find cover. They do not like open areas very much because they have discovered that they are quite dangerous. Because of the trams and the stations, there will be a lot more activity, the lighting will be better and everywhere will be more open. The badgers will not be very happy—although, of course, there will be fewer people walking along the corridor, and fewer bikes.
Badger fences have been proposed, as have other kinds of fences for other purposes. Do badger fences work well? Will they further reduce the badgers' foraging grounds in certain locations? Fences are intended to be restricting, of course, but will they prevent access to things that badgers might want access to?
The promoter has proposed two ideas. The first is to build fences to keep badgers from the track and the walkway and cycleway, which is good. The fences will have to be set back from the verges.
So the proposed grass tram track would be an attraction to the badgers?
I imagine so.
So you are saying that some of the replanting that is intended to replace some foraging grounds would be inaccessible to badgers?
Yes.
You said that you have seen badgers using the Roseburn corridor and you described how they move across it. Have you made any other significant observations of badgers on the Roseburn corridor? Why do they like it?
Badgers like it because it is secluded and provides them with the basic necessities of bedding and some of their food. When they come out of their setts initially, they spend a while foraging in the area. They first socialise and then forage close to the setts because they cannot move away from the setts until human activity has diminished considerably, not only along the corridor but in people's gardens. It is crucial that the badgers wait before they move, so foraging around the setts is important to them.
Has the promoter put enough importance on foraging? We heard from the promoter that you have been involved in some of the survey work and at various stages of what has been proposed so far.
Consultation in this context just means that the promoter asked me what I thought and then told me that it was not going to do a lot of other surveys because they are not necessary. Consultation just means that I disagree with what the promoter said. Nowhere near enough work has been done.
On foraging?
On foraging and on where the badgers go. The promoter does not know where they go; it thinks they forage in gardens.
Will badgers displace to gardens? The promoter talked about gardens as if they were part of the wildlife corridor. As I described earlier, they might be part of the function, but they are not part of the designation of the corridor. Might badgers go into people's gardens more?
Yes, they clearly will. I know that I have covered this point, but it is important to repeat it. When people ring me up and say, "Holes are suddenly appearing in my lawn," the holes are sometimes quite significant because badgers have been digging. People do not like that. If badgers did not have the alternative of the Roseburn corridor, they would have to depend more heavily on foraging in people's gardens. They would lose so much if they lost the corridor that they would be forced further afield into nearby gardens.
We have heard a lot about the Roseburn corridor and its function as a wildlife link. The badgers are unusual in that they also live in the corridor. It is all very well if the function of the corridor is retained, but because the badgers' home is combined with the function of the corridor, losing it would have a much greater impact on them.
Yes. We travel along corridors in buildings, but a wildlife corridor is not quite the same. It simply means that animals live in it.
Have you had a chance to see the landscape and habitat management plan?
I have, yes.
Can the Roseburn corridor be planted and replanted to reinstate it as it is now?
No, because by changing the amount of light one changes everything below it. Some parts might be improved for wildlife, but simply increasing the amount of light changes what is below it.
Do we know whether that will or will not be a more suitable habitat for badgers?
Badgers like cover.
They like cover.
Yes.
Can I ask you about the new information from the promoter and the risks attached to the setts? Is it your opinion that the construction works near setts may pose a risk to the stability of the setts and the bank?
Yes, particularly where the sett is high up on the banking.
We will talk about another sett now. You said in your evidence that single-track running would make a difference, although that was rebutted by the promoter who said that double tracks would be fine. Why do you feel so strongly that single-track running would make a difference?
Because it would reduce the land take; it would mean that the banks could be left more or less as they are. There would be very little extra work. The badgers would probably still have to be protected, but much less tree and foraging removal would be required.
We have heard a great deal about mitigation and so on, and that is a solution in many cases—in part, at any rate. It seems to be the fashion to take a pragmatic view. Can the impact of tramline 1 be successfully mitigated for badgers?
I do not think that the badgers will have an easier life. Perhaps they will survive; I do not know. I cannot say; I do not think anybody can say. Having so much work done to their habitat would certainly be very disadvantageous to them and, afterwards, there would be severe restrictions on their foraging.
Presumably badgers are so successful because their habitat is as it is.
Exactly. They have good places for their setts and sufficient foraging. I do not know what is sufficient, but they must have sufficient there. The promoter has not found that out either. I would have thought that it was really important for them to find out what is sufficient.
Is there anything else that you wish to add? I have not read the badger mitigation plan, so I cannot anticipate anything that you might wish to raise.
It is important to realise that in this location there is a sett that is very conspicuous and quite low down. At that point, the solum is to be raised by 2m. That would put the sett entrances very close—I do not know how close, as it is difficult to measure, but I think very close—to the running surface.
That is the area in which there will be a large access ramp.
Yes. There will be a pedestrian access ramp there and that is where a massive amount of construction work will take place—the whole of the embankment will be removed opposite the badger sett and no artificial sett will be provided. I understand from the promoter that that spoil will be used to raise a solum. That is absolutely unacceptable.
Thank you very much, Ms Woolnough. Mr Thomson.
I have a few preliminary points, the first of which is that I fully understand that you think that the best solution would be to put the tram somewhere else so that the badgers would not be disturbed. However, for the purposes of the questions that I will ask, I would like you to assume that the tram has to go along the Roseburn corridor. My other preliminary point is that I do not want you to feel that you have to say anything that you regard as confidential in answer to any of my questions. If you feel that I am straying into a no-go area, please warn me, because it is not my intention to ask you to disclose anything that is confidential.
Yes.
Was the badger mitigation plan discussed at that meeting?
Yes—briefly.
Was the topic of possible enforcement measures for the mitigation plan discussed at that meeting?
Yes.
In other words, you discussed the proposal to make the mitigation plan a confidential annex to the landscape and habitat management plan?
Yes.
If that were done, would you regard that as a step in the right direction?
Yes.
I see from your statement that you have worked, and still work regularly, with both the council's planning department and SNH.
That is right.
Have you any reason to doubt the integrity or the competence of either of those bodies in dealing with badger issues?
No. I am sure that they will do their best to ensure the safety of the badgers.
Am I right in understanding that one of the current problems with the badger mitigation plan is that the detailed design work for the tramline has not yet been done, which means that, to some extent, the detailed mitigation measures have to be somewhat generic and tentative?
Yes.
Do you accept that, because of the sequence of events, that is an inevitable problem at the moment?
I think that more could have been done by this point.
As a result of reading the mitigation plan and listening to the discussion at last week's meeting, has it become apparent to you that engineers have been involved in considering the generic means of providing badger mitigation?
Yes.
Does it give you some comfort that there has been engineering involvement in putting together the proposed solutions?
Yes.
Are you satisfied that the drainage issue has been dealt with satisfactorily?
We did not discuss drainage—or rather, we barely discussed it.
But as far as you are concerned, drainage is not a burning issue at the moment.
I think that there are probably ways around the problem.
Did I understand from your evidence in chief that you regard the proposals on maintenance and monitoring as another step in the right direction?
The proposal that maintenance and monitoring should be done is definitely a step in the right direction.
We find that in both the badger mitigation plan and the code of construction practice.
Yes.
Am I right in understanding that the badger mitigation plan will evolve over time, with input from both SNH and the Edinburgh and Lothians badger group, and that the carrying out of detailed design work will allow it to crystallise?
Yes.
And you are happy to be involved in that process on behalf of the group.
It is something that I have to do. It is like medicine—one has to take it.
Again, perhaps that is because of your initial opposition to the use of the corridor.
Yes, because the Roseburn corridor is not the best option for the badgers. The tram should not be on that route, therefore anything that I do is second best.
Am I right in thinking that two main setts are affected by the Roseburn corridor?
Yes.
Two family groups of badgers are affected. Can you give the committee some idea of the general area of land over which a family group forages?
It depends on the foraging that is available, such as the type of landscape that they are in. In an urban area, it is even more difficult. The promoter has been able to take only averages.
Would 50 hectares sound reasonable to you as the probable foraging area for one family group from one main sett?
It is possible, probably in a rural area.
Do badgers use the Roseburn corridor much as humans would use a tram, in other words as a way of accessing further afield areas?
Not exclusively.
But they use it for that purpose.
They use it for that purpose among others.
Am I right in understanding that badgers use used and disused railway lines and roadways as a means of accessing foraging areas?
I do not know of any sett that is located where there is no shelter and foraging, which are the most important things to a badger. Badgers move their main sett if foraging accessibility is changed. In many places, I have found that it is important to badgers that they can come out of their sett and forage immediately. That is why it is normal in a rural area for badgers to locate their sett at the junction of pasture and the edge of a wood, because both kinds of foraging are available to them there.
I do not mean this in a critical way—I am merely curious—but do you have direct personal experience of setts like the two in question, which are in the immediate vicinity of a foraging access corridor? In other words, they are a way of accessing foraging areas that are further afield.
No one place is a corridor for badgers. They just see it as a junction between different kinds of foraging. In the Roseburn corridor, their foraging is between the corridor, with a certain kind of foraging, and gardens. They also go along the corridor, undercover, to reach other places, gardens and open spaces.
That is what I wondered about. We have read evidence that some residents are fond of the badgers—they deliberately feed them and encourage neighbours and children to come and see them—whereas other people, as you say, do not like holes in their lawn and plainly do not encourage the badgers to come into their gardens. Presumably, the badgers learn which gardens are which and know which ones to go to and which ones not to go to.
I know a lot about badgers, but I could not speak for them to that extent.
If people put food out in their gardens, are the badgers more likely to come back there?
Yes, once a badger has found the food.
In your previous evidence to the committee, you stated:
Yes.
For the badger, is not part of that process learning where it will find food?
Absolutely, but human beings are more fickle. We sell our houses and move elsewhere, and a new person moves in. It is very much a matter of what humans provide that makes the badgers decide which garden to go to. If a person who has been feeding the badgers moves to a different area and the new person does not like badgers and has a large dog, the badgers must quickly learn that the garden is no longer accessible to them.
But they will learn.
Yes. Badgers have to learn in that way.
I am thinking of gardens in particular. Badgers use the Roseburn corridor to gain access to the gardens that they have chosen to go to.
Yes. They also go through gardens to access other gardens.
And other foraging areas.
Yes.
How many badgers are there in each of the two setts?
I do not know. You should ask the promoter; it should have done the work on that.
I am asking you to see whether you know.
I do not know. The badgers have undergone a lot of disturbance, so I do not want to go and spend a lot of time looking at them. Cameras should have been put up over the setts and the badgers should have been assessed.
Looking at the overall foraging areas of both setts, do you accept the promoter's evidence that the amount of foraging that will be lost as a result of the tram is in the order of 1 to 2 per cent?
Is that foraging or land?
Foraging.
How did the promoter assess foraging when it did not do any analysis?
Do you accept that figure?
No, I do not. It is based on a lack of knowledge.
You have not done any work that would contradict that figure.
No. The information is not available.
Can we agree that the removal of a sett and the creation of an artificial one can be done only under licence from SNH?
That is right. The artificial sett is not a permanent alternative to the existing main sett, and it certainly has to be licensed.
The hope is that the badgers would return later to their own sett.
Yes.
You talked about the difficulties of sandy soil. I take it that badgers are able to build their own tunnels satisfactorily in such soil.
Yes. It is their preferred environment.
Am I right in thinking that the promoter changed the proposed location of the artificial sett after consultation with your group?
Yes. What happened was—
You do not want to mention where it is.
No. The badger consultant did not notice the precise location of a stop and pedestrian access, so they recommended that the artificial sett be located very close to it. I realised that that was not the best place and recommended a different location.
Was that recommendation accepted?
Yes.
I am thinking about the access that badgers will enjoy to foraging in the immediate vicinity of the tram track after construction. I understand that it is proposed that there should be badger fencing on one side of the proposed tram track and on the outside of the new cycleway and walkway. Is that your understanding?
Yes.
Was the difficulty to which you alluded in your evidence in chief that the further away the fence is from the tram track and the cycleway and walkway, the more the badgers are liable to be separated from their natural foraging on either side of the present cycle track?
The problem is that if the badger fencing goes along both sides of the tram track, badgers could get on to the track at pedestrian crossing points, so that is not possible. On the other hand, if the fencing was put a little way up the banking so that the tram track and the cycleway were seen as one corridor and badgers were confined to the banks, that would exclude badgers from the verges, where there is short-grass foraging, which is particularly desirable for badgers.
What would be wrong with putting the badger fencing closer to the edge of the cycle track on the one side and the tram track on the other side?
That would be better, but that is not the intention.
Would it be an improvement?
Yes, although it would not be possible to keep the verges cut short, as there would be problems with access for a cutting machine. Therefore, it is not a viable option.
We have talked about badger fencing that has the intention of keeping badgers away from the cycle track and the tram track. As you said, there is the risk of a badger getting on to the tram track at one of the places where pedestrians can cross. If the fencing between the cycle track and the tram track were to be permeable to badgers, so that they could step off the tram track and on to the cycle track when a tram came, would that be a satisfactory protective measure?
Yes, if somebody mentioned to them that they should not be on the tram track when a tram comes. It is a little difficult to train them before they die—there is a short but rather final learning process.
Do you accept that badgers use ordinary roads at night?
Yes, and they get killed there—that is their main cause of death.
But some survive.
Yes, but in some places whole setts have been eliminated when a new road has been routed through badger territory.
That may be because they have moved.
Yes. I could not find them—whole setts disappeared completely.
But you did not find enough bodies to account for the total demise of the setts.
I did not know how many badgers there were to start with but, over the years, the bodies could well account for the vast majority of the setts.
At what time of day do badgers forage?
In the evening, night and early morning.
So for at least half of that time, the trams will not be running.
That depends on the season. In winter, the trams will be running for a large amount of the time.
How much of the badgers' foraging time is after midnight?
Quite a lot, especially in the summer, although they probably will not be on the Roseburn corridor at that point, as they will have moved away.
I am slightly concerned about sett 2. You described the access and egress as being close to the cycleway and walkway, which may make that site impractical. Why is there no plan to provide an artificial sett for that family?
Because there are other setts along the corridor, which the promoter thinks would be suitable for the badgers. However, the badgers will still be subject to a lot of disturbance from construction traffic and work.
So there is an alternative for the badgers.
On the corridor, yes.
You said that Mr Thomson's proposition with regard to the narrowing in of the fencing was impractical from the point of view of maintenance. You said that it was "not a viable option". If the promoter were to make such a proposition, surely it would be the promoter's responsibility to determine whether it was viable. Surely the promoter would not make a suggestion that was not viable.
The promoter has not made that proposition to me. In the badger mitigation plan, I have read that the fencing is to be on the other side of the verge.
If the situation were changed to reflect Mr Thomson's proposition, would you welcome that, even though it would not meet all your needs?
The proposition would have to be considered carefully and I have not done so. Other problems might arise from increasing the access that badgers would have to the line, which is what we want to avoid. The point is to keep badgers off the line.
Would you like such a proposition to be put to you so that you could consider it?
Yes, that might be helpful. However, there might be a problem with the practicalities that would be involved in cutting the grass, which is extremely important. Such details are usually what sink mitigation plans. Further, we want to ensure that badgers are kept off the line in areas where there is pedestrian access across the line. It would be possible to do that if the fencing held them on the banks. Where there is pedestrian access down the banks, there would have to be a badger fence on either side and a badger tunnel going underneath the pedestrian access.
Is it not the case that the Protection of Badgers Act 1992 applies in this circumstance and that the promoter has no choice but to conform to the regulations that it contains?
Under the act, the badger is protected, its setts are protected and access to its setts is protected. However, foraging is not protected. That does not stop our concerns being important.
Do you think that, in that context, the badger mitigation plan conforms to the act in intent and spirit and addresses your concerns about foraging?
The plan does not address my concerns about foraging, but it protects badgers in other ways, although I still think that there will be engineering problems relating to removing the banking from below the sett.
However, as it stands, the badger mitigation plan conforms to the act.
Probably. However, I do not know. If the sett collapses, no; if it does not collapse, yes.
Ms Woolnough, do you have any follow-up questions for Ms Alderson?
Mr Thomson asked about the foraging times of badgers and the running times of the tram. Is it correct that dusk is an important time for foraging and that that might be at half past three—peak time for the tram—on a winter afternoon?
Yes. Badgers are less active in the winter, but when it is mild—and there can be mild weather in winter—they come out and forage around the sett.
So the suggestion that badgers are most active in the middle of the night, between midnight and 4 in the morning, when trams will not be running—that is the expectation, although that is not guaranteed—is not correct.
I would not say that badgers are more active at that time. It depends on a hundred other conditions, particularly the time of year. They certainly forage in the early morning, when there are few people around. That is quite an important time for them.
Mr Gallie tried to find a helpful solution to the suggestion that the fence could be moved up or down the bank. Is it your understanding that Mr Thomson made that suggestion and that it had not been made previously?
I am not aware that it is in the badger mitigation plan.
The matter has not been raised in discussions with ERM or anyone else?
We have not discussed it.
So your understanding—
Let me correct myself. We raised the matter and we were told that the fence would be put up the bank.
So your understanding is that the proposals in the badger mitigation plan that is before us represent the promoter's best efforts at addressing the issue.
Yes.
I wanted to verify with you that foraging is not protected by legislation, and your view that the promoter has not investigated foraging. Do you think that the promoter has taken a rather cavalier attitude to foraging or that the proposals are, at best, wishful thinking?
The promoter has stayed within the letter of the law. However, because other protections apply to the corridor, the matter should have been investigated more thoroughly.
Do you feel that because the promoter is the City of Edinburgh Council it had an additional responsibility to be seen to be setting more of a precedent for other developers?
Indeed. After all, the council has introduced its biodiversity action plan and signed up to green spaces. It insists that other developers go to some lengths to accommodate badgers.
When Mr Thomson asked you about your relationship with the City of Edinburgh Council, you said that anything you did was second best. By that, did you not mean that you have to engage with developers no matter whether you would rather that they went away?
Yes.
And that, as a result, you have a good relationship with the council, in that you will do the best that you can in the circumstances. As a result, were you surprised to find that the council, as the bill's promoter, proposed to use the Roseburn corridor even though it knew that there were badgers there?
I was horrified. I often look around the setts in Edinburgh and I thought that the badgers in the Roseburn corridor were happy and safe. Now I discover that they are some of the most endangered badgers in the city. I find that very sad.
I just wanted to clarify that when you say that anything you do is second best, you mean that you take a pragmatic view of the situation, engage with developers and do your best for badgers.
Yes.
And this is just such a case.
I think that we have got the point, Ms Woolnough.
Thank you.
It is considered to be bad policy. In fact, Scottish Natural Heritage's policy is not to encourage badgers to go into people's gardens.
Thank you very much.
Thank you, Ms Woolnough. As there are no further questions, I thank Ms Alderson for giving evidence.
Yes, please.
I can give you only a minute, because I intend to press ahead with the meeting.
Meeting suspended.
On resuming—
Okay. Before I bring in Ms Woolnough, I point out that we have heard a lot of detail from the expert witness about the impact of trams on badgers. She was speaking as a witness for groups 33, 34 and 45, so I expect that the statements that follow will be brief and will not repeat what we have heard. I welcome back Kristina Woolnough, who will address badgers for group 34. In the absence of a questioner, she will make an opening statement and will then have the opportunity to make a closing statement.
I rest on what our expert witness said. However, I share an anxiety concerning Mr Thomson's remarks about my "vehemence" earlier. I am bit anxious that my personality is getting in the way of my evidence, and I wish to apologise if that is the case.
I think that it was clear from Mr Thomson's earlier comments that no such inference was intended. That is now a matter of record, Ms Woolnough.
Thank you.
Is there anything else?
No, that is it.
Ms Woolnough, just to make it absolutely clear, when I referred to "vehemence" earlier I had no intention of suggesting that you were allowing your personal feelings on the matter—which I know are very strong—to colour the evidence that you were giving. It was my intention to ask you, as a representative of group 33, whether other members of the group felt as you did.
Okay. Thank you for that clarification.
I have no further questions.
Thank you, Mr Thomson. Do committee members have any questions?
No.
Do you wish to make a closing statement, Ms Woolnough?
No, I rest on the evidence that our expert witness gave.
Excellent. Thank you. There being no further questions, I thank you for giving evidence. I will allow you a brief opportunity to return to the other side of the table. The next witness will be Sue Polson, who will address badgers for group 34. Ms Woolnough will begin the questioning.
Ms Polson, how long have you been aware of badgers visiting your garden in Blinkbonny Road?
We moved to Blinkbonny Road 17 years ago. A year later, we suddenly became aware of visitors.
Is it appropriate that people's gardens should be seen as part of the solution to the loss of some of the Roseburn corridor?
In no way are people's gardens part of the solution in relation to badgers. As our expert said, many people dislike having badgers in their gardens, digging them up. I do not particularly like them digging our garden up, but we try to avoid that. We are talking about the corridor; we are not talking about the gardens. The worry is the badgers' life, and their life is in the corridor. Occasionally, badgers wander into gardens at different places, but those are not part of the corridor.
A number of the other questions that I was going to put to you relate to mitigation for the badgers. However, we have not seen the plan, have we?
No.
Are you happy to rest on the evidence that Tricia Alderson has already given?
Yes, very much so. It was very interesting.
Will you describe your concerns about construction?
I am quite concerned about the situation. We all know that construction sites and animals cannot possibly mix. I am concerned that, even if badgers weather the first onslaught, they will not have a chance. I have only recently understood the fact that the construction workers will be revisiting each section of the corridor constantly. Will that be over a year or two years? I do not know. As soon as the badgers revert to some sort of normal pattern, the workers will come back again. Although I am sure that they will be terribly wildlife friendly, I do not think that the badgers are going to appreciate that. The length of time that the whole thing will take, with the various sections being revisited, will be the end of the badgers. They will just go.
Can we conclude that your preference is for the Roseburn corridor not to be used, because of the badgers and the wildlife?
Absolutely. It has no place for a tram.
In the light of your evidence this morning, I want to ask you whether the following, given in your written witness statement, is still your evidence. You state that badgers
It is my evidence, yes.
I acknowledge your concern about the extended length of time that the construction of any one section will demand. However, my recollection is that the promoter gave an undertaking to the committee to concentrate on the construction section by section and to minimise the construction time for any one section. We heard a suggestion last week that the promoter will try to fit the work in with badgers' breeding habits and other aspects of wildlife in the area. I questioned the commitment on that at the time. Would it be some consolation to you to know that the promoter has committed to working section by section, in relatively small blocks, from start to completion?
That is an improvement. I would like not to see construction at all, but if I have to see it, I would not want the work to go on for ever, ruining what is a wonderful thing.
To pick up on Mr Thomson's point, I presume that you offer a garden that is friendly to badgers, as it were. That might not be the case elsewhere. Is that true?
Yes, that is very true.
Is it also the case that, even if badgers are already using people's gardens, their further displacement into people's gardens might not necessarily be possible? Gardens are already foraging grounds, but would you say that the promoter's idea that everything will be fine because the badgers will move even further into gardens might not be true, given that the slack might already have been taken up?
I think so. It could be a disaster area if badgers start moving into the gardens that are not friendly. There are people who really do not like badgers, who do not want them and who really do not care what happens to them. That would be a disaster.
Is successful interface between humans and badgers the most desirable outcome for all parties?
Of course.
Thank you very much, Ms Woolnough, and thank you, Ms Polson. I am afraid that you do not escape quite that easily; we are going to keep you here just a wee bit longer. We turn to the issue of bird survey evidence for group 34.
Ms Polson, could you illuminate for us how long you have been monitoring birds in your garden?
I began monitoring the birds when I suffered a massive multiple sclerosis attack and lost the use of my legs for some time. I had to relearn how to walk. One of the good things that I could do was to sit and watch the birds in the garden. They have always been plentiful in our garden.
We were all fortunate that you lodged your bird survey as part of your evidence to the committee a considerable time ago. Is it true to say that your evidence was confirmed by the promoter's bird survey?
Yes. I was happy about that.
Do you take a different attitude to red-list species from that of the promoter? I do not know whether you heard Mr Coates's evidence last week when he said that they are still quite common, so they are not really an issue.
Yes. I got that feeling from his rebuttal statement. Every species is important. The species that come into my garden are some very shy birds. I do not really care whether they are red-list species or not; they are valuable to us all.
Did Mr Coates's rebuttal statement reassure you on the methods that will be used to mitigate the impact on birds in the corridor?
I am not reassured about the birds. I am sad about Mr Coates's fairly flippant comment in paragraph 2.1 of his rebuttal statement, in the chapter on "Issue 12 - Impacts on Birds", where he says:
The promoter has also suggested that birds can nest elsewhere temporarily and that that will be fine. Is it true that there is a general concern that people's gardens are increasingly becoming hard surface—people put down pebbles—so that feeding and nesting opportunities in gardens are reducing?
One can tell that from the number of people who are incredibly surprised at how much bird activity there is in our area. The noise alone is incredible, and many people never see that quantity of birds, because gardens are diminishing and tubs are taking their place. We have a wonderful canopy of trees and good undergrowth edging the garden, which encourages the birds to come into the garden. However, that is disappearing fast.
Do you want to add anything else in response to the rebuttal statements?
I would just like to feel that the promoter takes the bird situation a little bit more seriously. I do not feel that the survey was very brilliant. There is a great deal more to learn about the birds in the corridor.
Thank you.
Thank you, Ms Woolnough. Mr Thomson, do you have any questions?
I have no questions, madam.
Do members have any questions?
Ms Polson, will you just remind me how many red-list species are represented in the Roseburn corridor?
There are very few; probably only two or three.
Which are they?
I would love to have a thrush. I am waiting. Occasionally, I get a thrush—perhaps once a year. Of the more common species of birds, that is the main red-list one that I seldom see. I have ones that are fairly rare, such as bullfinches, which are seen by only a tiny percentage of people in the country. It is a bit sad when we cannot even depend on the old thrush.
If there are no more questions from committee members, Ms Woolnough, do you have any follow-up questions for Ms Polson?
No, unless she has anything to add—
You cannot go on fishing expeditions. I let you do so once; I will not let you do so twice.
I will comment on the same key issues of dispute, such as inadequate surveys; the resulting unknown impacts, and whether they are permanent or short term; and the laissez-faire attitude of the promoter that wildlife can find somewhere else to go temporarily and hopefully come back. I am disappointed, as are the groups that I represent, with the ticking of boxes to meet the legalities. That is not enough when the promoter is a local authority. The loss of the wildlife's amenity value to humans and of the interface between wildlife and humans cannot be mitigated.
That was fairly comprehensive. Mr Thomson?
I have no questions.
Do committee members have questions? If not, would you care to make a closing statement, Ms Woolnough?
No, I have nothing to add.
That is excellent. I will keep you where you are and move you on to address vegetation, human amenity and linear park for group 34. Again, you are entitled to make opening and closing statements.
Once again, I will summarise the key points. The loss of vegetation is extreme in places, and goes on for some distance, in terms of the linearity of the corridor. There is uncertainty about what will and will not be lost. The promoter has agreed that there will be a permanent change in the character of the Roseburn corridor, and we do not accept and find upsetting the suggestion that the tram will lead to an improvement in the amenity that we currently enjoy. We find the concept that neglect is a virtue and that poor management hitherto can be used to justify the tram alignment completely unacceptable. As I have said, to local people and people from all over Edinburgh, the corridor is a linear park, whether or not it is designated as such. That point is disputed—we argue that it is, and the promoter argues that it is not. However, the promoter has conceded that for a large number of user groups the amenity and the current use of the corridor will be lost forever.
Thank you very much, Ms Woolnough. Mr Thomson has questions.
Ms Woolnough, is there any signage on the Roseburn corridor suggesting that it is a park? Do we see Roseburn park signs anywhere?
Until fairly recently there was no signage at all on the corridor, which is what we liked about it. It was completely free of urban street clutter. There is no sign that says "park", but the corridor functions as a linear park. Whether the promoter and the City of Edinburgh Council describe it as a park is a technical matter. As we have heard, the function is an important aspect of usage and the corridor functions as a park. People walk and talk along it and meet people from other communities. They gather in a way that occurs in a park. We have no other local park. The corridor is our nearest park, which links all our communities together. That is why we enjoy it—as a park.
Am I right in thinking that, in fact, the signage says, "Roseburn Path"?
Yes. We are not sure where the signage came from. We believe that it was a cycling initiative that began about five years ago. Signs were unilaterally put in the corridor. I do not know whether it was called "Roseburn Path" by the street-naming department. As I said, I believe that the signage was funded by a cycling initiative, but we are not sure. It came without consultation. The signs were installed in the wrong places in some circumstances and are still sitting there as urban street clutter, which we do not like.
Have you seen Roseburn corridor park or Roseburn park referred to anywhere in writing or in signs?
There is a Roseburn park, which is next to Murrayfield.
But the Roseburn corridor is not it.
It is not it, but we are talking semantics here. I am talking usage and you are talking designation. I have already agreed that we do not agree about whether the corridor is designated as a park. It is certainly an open space and a recreational space. Our view is that, in the central Edinburgh local plan, it is designated alongside parks. We dispute your view of the designation, but we are not allowed to go into that. You are trying to get me to agree with your point of view, but we dispute that point of view.
Do people commonly picnic in the Roseburn corridor?
Amazingly, it has been known. It has also been known for people to pick blackberries and to eat them as they go along.
The word I used was "commonly".
I have no evidence that it is common or uncommon. I have not assessed or surveyed that. People frequently walk along the corridor from Sainsbury's eating their sandwiches, but I do not know whether you would describe that as picnicking.
Is it common for people to sunbathe in the Roseburn corridor?
I am not sure how common that is in Edinburgh parks or, indeed, in Scottish parks.
Is it common for children to kick a ball about in the Roseburn corridor?
Yes, it is.
Despite the cycle traffic.
Yes.
I am unclear where we are going with this, given that I cautioned at the beginning that I did not want to stray too far into planning matters or descriptions of what things are.
That was my last question.
Ah!
The point of it was that because Ms Woolnough demurred at the suggestion that the title "park" was in any way relevant and preferred to consider usage, I was asking her questions about usage.
Indeed. I confess to having eaten blackberries as I walked along. How did you know?
And you are still alive, convener.
Indeed. Committee members have no questions, so do you want to make a closing statement, Ms Woolnough?
No, I do not think I do. Thank you.
Okay, on that basis, I thank you very much for giving evidence.
I am content. The only things that I might have asked him about, I have dealt with through other witnesses.
Excellent. The cycle path issue will be coming up later on, which includes the issue of bridges. Can I confirm that you are similarly content with that?
Indeed.
Thank you very much. Okay, this seems like a natural point at which to take a break. I suggest that the committee reconvenes at 1.30, at which point we will hear evidence from Alan Jones, Rosanne Brown and Ms Woolnough.
Meeting suspended.
On resuming—
I welcome everybody back to the meeting. Before we go any further, I welcome Alan Jones and Rosanne Brown to the witness table.
Ms Woolnough will now address three issues for group 45: the linear park, flora and human amenity. I notice that the witness statements that Ms Woolnough provided for group 34 on those issues have been adopted by group 45, so I assume that the oral evidence that Ms Woolnough provided for group 34 earlier today can be adopted without being reiterated again. Is that fair?
Totally fair.
Excellent. I take it that there is no opening statement.
There is none.
Mr Thomson.
On that basis, I have no questions.
I like this committee meeting. Do members have any questions?
No.
We are very happy.
Mr Gibson is very happy. That is great. We will capture that for the Official Report and I will use it again in future.
No, I do not.
Thank you very much.
For my opening statement, I must confess that I was one of the ball kickers who have been mentioned and that my wife makes frequent sandwich parties, although not for humans. The rest of my statement consists of what is in my rebuttal.
Excellent. Thank you very much. Mr Thomson.
Have you had a chance to look at Mr Andrew Coates's rebuttal of your statement?
Yes.
Are you in any way satisfied with the explanation of the increase in badger activity at Ravelston bridge that he provides in paragraph 2.1 of his rebuttal?
I know for certain that there has been a tremendous increase in badger activity this year. I put that down to the fact that the badgers have been driven out of the main sett by the refurbishment of a house at Craigleith, which has meant that they have come along to Ravelston to start work on a sett there.
May there be some force in Mr Coates's explanation, too?
Do you mean the suggestion that the increase in activity was related to the birth of cubs?
Yes.
Yes, there may be some force in that explanation.
Again on Mr Coates's rebuttal, do you accept that one of the proposed tram stops is being relocated to accommodate badger issues—if I can put it in that general way?
I think that that relocation will be detrimental to the badgers. In the first map that we got, the ramp and associated fittings were on the south side of Ravelston Dykes—in other words, they would have been on the other side of the road bridge, away from the badger sett. On the new map, the ramp is directly opposite the badger sett. When I did my training in copper-pipe bending, we filled the pipe with sand, vibrated it to make it solid and bent it. If there is vibration opposite a sandy embankment, the only thing that will happen is that the embankment will fall down.
Do you accept that the Edinburgh and Lothians badger group had some say in the proposed relocation of the tram stop?
That is what it says in Mr Coates's rebuttal.
So the badger group seems to have a different view of the matter from you?
Precisely.
On the basis that I have raised the badger issues that I wish to raise with previous witnesses, I do not propose to pursue any of those matters further with this witness, unless the convener would particularly like me to.
No, I would not. We obtained comprehensive detail this morning and I suspect that we would just be covering old ground rather than introducing anything new.
That was my view. In that case, I thank Mr Jones.
Thank you, Mr Thomson. Do committee members have any questions for Mr Jones?
No.
You are escaping lightly, Mr Jones. Would you care to say anything by way of a closing statement?
On the main thing, which is wildlife, I am a bit perplexed. At the Coltbridge end, the promoter proposes to lower the solum by about the height of a human being. That means that they will reinforce the banking. What steps will be taken to give small animals a chance to escape from predators?
Thank you for giving evidence this afternoon, Mr Jones.
Mrs Brown, is your evidence contained in your statement and in group 43's rebuttal of the promoter's witness statements?
It is.
Do you wish to emphasise or clarify any particular points?
I am due to speak about wildlife and the enforceability of the landscape and habitat management plan. I do not propose to add anything on the subject of wildlife, which has been adequately covered. I adopt what the other objectors said on that subject.
I have no more questions.
Mr Thomson?
Mrs Brown, are you aware that Scottish Natural Heritage has been and, it is proposed, will be involved in the iterative process of the landscape and habitat management plan?
I am aware that it has been involved to date, yes. I was not aware that it is proposed that it should have any further involvement.
Are you aware that it has withdrawn its objection to the bill?
Yes. It withdrew its objection on the basis that it was going to rely on undertakings from the promoter. Is that correct?
Unfortunately, I get to ask the questions.
I am referring to the houses that are affected by the tram proposal.
On the other side of the road there are flats and I believe that there is so much on-street parking that the controlled parking zone is about to be extended to Wester Coates Terrace. Is that correct?
Yes it is.
Thank you. I have no further questions.
Do members of the committee have questions?
It seems to me that your only concern—leaving aside the fact that you would prefer the tramline not to be proposed—relates to the enforcement of the habitat plan. Is that correct?
My principal point is that if there is to be no alternative route, the implementation of the plan will be essential.
If you were to receive assurances from the promoter on enforcement, would that be sufficient for you to withdraw your objection?
No. As residents, we do not have the resources to police that or to take enforcement action. We need an independent body to act on our behalf.
As there are no further questions from committee members, Mrs Hawkins may question Mrs Brown further.
Do you wish to add anything, Mrs Brown?
No.
Technically, you should not have asked a fishing question, but it was asked and answered before I could object, so that is fine.
Meeting suspended.
On resuming—
Mrs Hawkins must take the oath or make a solemn affirmation.
Ms Woolnough will now address the impact on the walkway and cycleway for group 33. Ms Bourne will ask questions.
In his rebuttal statement, Mr Dapré suggests that the tram system
Absolutely not. Our surveys, which were conducted in December last year and in May, show that current users of the cycleway say that the trams will affect their usage of the corridor. A commonsense approach would probably help. The introduction of high-speed, noisy trams and high noise barriers in particular, and the removal of vegetation and so on in the area for which group 33 is acting, will surely not encourage anybody to use the cycleway—indeed, it is extremely likely that they will have the opposite effect. Trams travelling at speeds of up to 50mph in a constrained space cannot mean that it will be an attractive place in which to walk or cycle.
Are you convinced by Mr Dapré's statement that
As we argued earlier, a more restricted speed limit would be needed to retain any of the attractiveness of the walkway and cycleway. There should be the lowest speed limit that can be controlled and monitored. It seems to our group that there should be a maximum speed limit of 20mph because of the line's proximity to the walkway and cycleway. The tram will go through areas that are safer routes for a number of schools. I do not know whether a number of activities such as nature walks and school fundraising runs that currently take place on the cycle path could still take place, but a more restricted speed limit would certainly lead people to think that the corridor was more attractive to use.
Am I right in thinking that the Roseburn corridor is currently designated as a public road?
There is a dispute about that, but I believe that that is its status. Obviously, no vehicles are allowed to go at 50mph on roadways in the vicinity of the cycle path at the moment and it seems to me that a sensible urban speed limit—preferably a maximum of 20mph near schools—would be much more applicable than a speed limit of 50mph. We are talking about a route that goes through a quiet residential area and not a motorway or a dual carriageway on which one might expect to see vehicles going at 50mph.
I want to move on to Mr Dapré's comments on the friends of the Roseburn urban wildlife corridor association—FRUWCA—survey. Mr Dapré suggests that we should not draw any conclusions from the finding that the tram would affect people's usage of the corridor. What do you think about that?
When I cross-examined Mr Dapré on that matter, he was unable to present any evidence to support his view. Our May survey was a refinement of the December survey and the comments were made by users. I think that there were 600 responses. Perhaps I do not need to go over the figures, as we have supplied them to the Parliament, but I will give them to you anyway. Some 74 per cent of those who were questioned did not want the tram to go through the area; 70 per cent said that the introduction of trams on the cycleway would affect their use of it; and 4 per cent were unsure whether the tram would affect them. Our evidence, which is based on the views of real people, is all that we have to go on, as the promoter has done no similar assessment to find out whether there would not be the impact that it claims that there will not be.
Am I right to say that FRUWCA membership rocketed when those surveys were done?
Yes. I think that that was partly because the surveys raised awareness. A large number of people did not know about the trams at all when we carried out our December survey. By May, most people knew about them and wanted to be kept informed about what was going on.
My next question, on the point that Mr Dapré makes in paragraph 3.10 of his rebuttal statement, is slightly similar to what I have already asked. Do you agree with his contention that people will continue to use the corridor?
We have heard the promoter concede that a number of user groups will not get the benefits from the corridor that they currently get—peace and tranquillity are obvious ones—and that vulnerable groups of people, such as young children learning to cycle, will not continue to be able to move freely in their communities without fear of traffic. Our concern is that that represents a rather large number of current walkway and cycleway users, so we do not think that people will continue to use the corridor. Perhaps they will continue to use it as a commuter cycleway, but it will not be used as an amenity because, with trams going past every three and three quarter minutes at 50mph, it will not be an attractive amenity.
What are your comments on Mr Dapré's assertion that segregation of the tramway has been discussed with Her Majesty's railway inspectorate?
From cross-examining Mr Dapré last week and from information that I got as a result of a freedom of information request, my understanding is that the mechanism is that the promoter goes to HMRI with a proposal to which HMRI says yea or nay. My understanding is that no proposal on segregation has been taken to HMRI for a final yea or nay. Therefore, the situation is unclear and we might end up with much higher and more substantial barriers than we expected or were led to believe we might have. There is also the issue of whether it will be legal to go on the tramway—will it be like a railway, or not? All those matters are unresolved until the promoter takes a design to HMRI and asks whether it is on. We will not know until that point, which will probably post date the committee procedure.
In his rebuttal statement, Mr Turner states that tram stops on the Roseburn corridor will comply with the Disability Discrimination Act 1995, which will give improved access to a much wider group of people. Do you have any comment on that?
Our experience is that there are a number of access points on the corridor that are wheelchair accessible. They are accessible to people with mobility difficulties and young children, for example. My understanding is that the tram stops, but not all the access points, will be DDA compliant. Access to the corridor will be made DDA compliant at certain points, but new access points will be installed that will not be DDA compliant. I am not entirely sure why that is and I am not sure that it is a gain.
My next question deals with visibility, which we covered this morning, so we will move on.
I raised that point in cross-examination last week. I do not agree at all. A cycleway and walkway that has that number of movements is deemed to be busy by anybody's standards. Elsewhere in the city, there are cycle paths that are much wider and carry fewer people than that. The survey that we carried out over 10 hours did not reflect the people who use the cycleway and walkway outwith those 10 hours. Pedestrians and cyclists, whose mode of travel is prioritised in Scottish planning policy 17, should be kept as a priority and it is unacceptable that public transport could displace them.
What are your thoughts on Mr Turner's suggestion that 1,000 movements is not much compared with the thousands that the tram will carry?
As I pointed out last week, our people movements are tested and proven, but the tram is untested. We are not comparing like with like. As I said, SPP17 prioritises walking and cycling over public transport, so we think that that should be the priority in the Roseburn corridor.
I have a question—[Laughter.]
I can tell from your laughter that I am about to rule it out of order.
I suspect that you will, but it is worth a try. The question arises from the oral evidence that was given by several of the promoter's witnesses and it covers a major area of dispute between the objectors and the promoter, but it is not referred to in the statements or the rebuttals.
I will allow your question if it has arisen from the oral evidence so far, on the basis that you will get to the point rather than ask a series of questions.
The promoter's witnesses have repeatedly stated that the reason for using the Roseburn corridor is that the line would be cheaper to construct there, that it would give faster journey times and that the environmental impact would therefore be justified. What are your comments on that?
That is simply not proven. Without an alternative alignment being assessed, we cannot say that that is the case. When Karen Raymond gave evidence about the use of the Roseburn corridor, we pressed her about whether an on-street option would be more environmentally desirable than using the Roseburn corridor. Her answer was that it was, but that other factors had to be taken into account.
Do you accept that, at the moment, without there being a tram, if there is intensification of cycle and pedestrian use, that could be at the expense of more passive recreational uses of the Roseburn corridor?
I do not know, but what I do know is that if the council trimmed back its verges a bit more frequently and managed the corridor a bit more successfully, the walkway would be kept at a width that would accommodate everybody and all varieties of users. I do not know that Mr Thomson's contention would be the case. The corridor's success as a commuter cycle route is without dispute. Recreational users tend not to use it during the morning and evening rush-hour peak times.
Are you denying that, under the tram proposal, there would be more DDA-compliant access routes to the Roseburn corridor than there are at the moment?
When we examined that point last week, I could not assess whether that was the case because I do not know what DDA compliance is, I do not know the guidelines for that and I am not an engineer. To me, as a common and ordinary person, it looked as though the ramped-up section coming off Craigleith View, with its four tiers of ramping, was not very disability accessible.
But you cannot deny that there would be more DDA-compliant access routes if other people have given evidence to that effect.
No, I cannot deny that—that is correct.
I now ask Ms Woolnough to address the issue of access to the walkway for group 34. In the absence of a questioner, you have the opportunity to make both an opening statement and a closing statement.
My opening statement is simply to highlight the confusion felt by many residents about informal and formal accesses, and about what will happen to any informal access that people may have. My concern, as I have just been articulating to Mr Thomson, is that although accesses will be improved to a degree, it does not appear that they will be particularly wheelchair friendly or wheelchair accessible.
Thank you, Ms Woolnough. Does Mr Thomson have questions?
I have no questions.
Members have no questions. Do you wish to make a closing statement, Ms Woolnough?
No, thank you.
Excellent. In that case, there being no further questions for you at all today, I thank you for a marathon session of giving evidence to us.
Mrs Hawkins, is your evidence contained in your witness statement and group 43's rebuttal of the promoter's witness statements?
Yes.
Do you wish to emphasise or clarify any particular points?
Yes, please. I would like to emphasise the point that the parkland of Roseburn corridor offers a unique resource. Mr Dapré states at paragraph 3.1 of his rebuttal:
Is that the questioning concluded, Mrs Brown?
Yes, I have no further questions.
Thank you both very much. Do you have questions, Mr Thomson?
I have no questions, thank you.
Committee members have no questions, but I have one. I understand absolutely the force of your argument, but do you think that any mitigation can be put in place to make the proposed route safer?
I cannot think of anything. What sort of investigation has been made, for instance, of getting a group of schoolchildren, a group of children in wheelchairs or adults in wheelchairs—there is an adult centre near us—on to the tramline to get to the proposed cycleway and walkway on the other side? The trams are meant to pass by every three minutes, so how would one get a group across? We can enter the corridor just now with the greatest of ease and we can run and do all sorts of things there. The area is very well used by educational institutions in our community.
Thank you, Mrs Hawkins. There are no further questions from committee members. Mrs Brown, do you have any follow-up questions for Mrs Hawkins?
No.
Thank you for giving evidence this afternoon, Mrs Hawkins. That concludes this item on our agenda.