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GROUND-BREAKING AGREEMENT BENEFITS DALKEITH COMMUNITIES (24/07/06) A ground-breaking new partnership between Forestry Commission Scotland and Newbattle Abbey College, Dalkeith, will see the college's woodlands managed for the benefit of the local community, visitors and students. Under a new concordat, the Commission is to lease the historical woodlands from the college and help maximise the opportunities for more people to enjoy them for recreation and learning. The concordat is part of the Commission's drive to bring the benefits of well managed woodlands to more people living in urban areas under its Woods In & Around Towns (WIAT) initiative. From here on the
woodlands will be regenerated and opened up for better access, with new
footpaths built to encourage more people into woods for peace and quiet,
exercise or learning. The partnership has received help from a legacy
left by the late Mary Emily Scott, who lived in the Liberton area of Edinburgh
and wanted to ensure that some of her will went to the management of a
mature woodland. Two new woodland wardens
from the Commission have been especially recruited and are to be based
at the college. They will take forward the management of the woods and
will create new links with local schools. Dr Hugh Insley, Chief Executive of Forest Enterprise Scotland (the Commission's forest management agency) highlighted that the ground-breaking agreement was part of a wider strategy to use the national forest estate to boost public benefits: "Most of the national forest estate is located in areas generally distant from where people live. What we are doing now is to improve the public benefits derived from woodlands, but also in areas closer to urban people. One way open to the Commission to achieve this is to buy or lease new land into the national forest estate and manage it for the good of the community. The concordat for Newbattle is pioneering this approach." |
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