The May
2007 Scottish Parliament election resulted, for the first time, in a
Scottish National Party minority government. The first term of SNP government was marked by a lack of action on land reform. However, following re-election in
2011, this time with a parliamentary majority, land reform returned to the government agenda with the Scottish Government establishing the
Land Reform Review Group in 2012 and First Minister
Alex Salmond in 2013 announcing a target of seeing 1 million acres of land in community ownership by 2020. The Land Reform Review Group was given the task of identifying how land reform would enable rural and urban communities to have a stake in the ownership, governance, management and use of land, assist in the acquisition and management of that land and promote new relationships between land, people, economy and environment in Scotland. Its final report, published in May 2014, recommended policies to modernise and diversify land ownership in Scotland and encourage sustainable development, some of which would form the basis of the
Community Empowerment (Scotland) Act 2015 and
Land Reform (Scotland) Act 2016. During this period the Land
Registration etc. (Scotland) Act 2012 introduced changes to the
conveyancing system in Scotland, with the aim of having all land in Scotland registered under the
Land Register of Scotland within 10 years. Prior to the act, entry of land into the register would be prompted by a sale but other transfers of land would not prompt first entry. The act expanded the triggers for first entry to include any transfer of property or the signing of a long lease in order to accelerate the transition from the antiquated deed based Register of Sasines to the modernised map based Land Register.
The Salvesen v Riddell case (2012–2013) In 2012, a section of the
Agricultural Holdings (Scotland) Act 2003 was challenged and suspended by the
UK Supreme Court. The trigger for this ruling was an appeal by Salvesen, the owner of Peaston Farm near
Ormiston. The Riddells were tenants in this farm and on a fixed term "limited partnership" tenancy. The original bill in the Scottish Parliament limited the ability of landowners to terminate the tenancies of their tenants on such tenancies. Initially, the start date of this restriction was set to 4 February 2003. This led many landlords, including Salvesen, to terminate the tenancies of their tenants the day before – 3 February 2003. A later amendment to section 72 retroactively set the start date of the restrictions to 16 September 2002, which made Salvesen's termination notice ineffective, so that instead of the tenancy being for a fixed period, it could become a tenancy that could last indefinitely after the end of the agreed period, thus completely altering the original deal between them. Salvesen applied to the
Land Court, which rejected his application. He then appealed to the Court of Session and obtained permission to apply to the UK Supreme Court. His main claim was that section 72 is incompatible with his property rights, the rights guaranteed to him by
article 1 of the European Convention on Human Rights. The Supreme Court unanimously allowed the appeal. It found that Mr. Salvesen's rights under article 1 were violated by section 72(10) of the 2003 act and that the provision was outside the legislative competence of the Scottish Parliament under the
Scotland Act 1998.
Community Empowerment (Scotland) Act 2015 The
Community Empowerment (Scotland) Act 2015 marked the first major piece of land reform legislation to be passed under the SNP government. Its provisions covered different areas pertaining to community empowerment and public participation in policy and planning, including several related directly to land. The most important of these was the extension of the Community Right to Buy to communities of any size, including, for the first time, those in urban areas. It also introduced a new community right to buy land which is abandoned, neglected or causing harm to the environmental wellbeing of the community. Similar to the 2003 act's crofting community right to buy, this new right does not require a willing seller. Rather, Scottish ministers may compel a landowner to sell to communities with a registered interest, if they deem the sale likely to contribute to sustainable local development. Further provisions granted community bodies the right to request to purchase, lease, manage or use land and buildings held by local authorities, Scottish ministers and other Scottish public bodies, of which relevant authorities are required to create and maintain a publicly available register. The act reformed
Common Good Property, requiring local authorities to establish and maintain registers of all common good property held by them and to inform and consult local community bodies before any change of use or disposal of common good property. Allotments, updates and simplifies legislation on allotments. It also set a requirement for local authorities to take steps to provide
allotments should waiting lists exceed certain lengths and strengthened protections for allotments, regulated rents and allowed tenants to sell food produced on allotments on a not for profit basis. The act required that local authorities develop food growing strategies, including the identification of land that may be used as allotment sites or potential land for community cultivation. It has been found that the Scottish approach to
community empowerment and localism marks an example of policy divergence from the rest of the UK, but that significant challenges remain in how to ensure a shared strategy; shared resources; and shared accountability.
Land Reform (Scotland) Act 2016 In 2013
Richard Lochhead, then
Cabinet Secretary for Rural Affairs and the Environment, announced the launch of the Agricultural Holdings Review, which would examine the situation of land ownership and use, tenant-owner relationships, and all of the relevant legislation. The review published its final report in January 2015, and the recommendations were put out to consultation. Following the responses to the consultation the
Scottish Government presented the
Land Reform (Scotland) Bill to the
Scottish Parliament on 22 June 2015. The bill was passed by the Scottish Parliament on 16 March 2016, and received royal assent on 22 March 2016 becoming
Land Reform (Scotland) Act 2016. The most radical and controversial provision of the act was the creation of the Community Right to Buy for Sustainable Development. This permitted
Scottish Ministers to approve the purchase of privately owned land by a community body with a registered interest. Like the Crofting Community Right to Buy and the Community Right to Buy abandoned or derelict land, the Community Right to Buy for Sustainable Development does not require a willing seller but allows ministers to compel landowners to sell if they decide that the sale will further sustainable development in the area. Community bodies may also register an interest in allowing a third party to purchase land on the same basis. This new Community Right to Buy was not the only provision of the act. The act required that the Scottish Government produce a 'Land Rights and Responsibilities Statement', setting out its objectives for land reform and to establish a
Scottish Land Commission to take forward the land reform process and prepare a strategic plan, for the approval of
Scottish Ministers. Other provisions of the act included new regulations to require persons who control land to be identified, with information obtained to appear in the Land Register of Scotland; the removal of sporting rights exemption from rates, are to be re-valued; and further powers for
Scottish Natural Heritage to control deer management. It also makes provision for notice and consultation where core paths are to be amended. Further provisions of the act pertain to agricultural tenancies including new protections for tenant farmers against eviction, the introduction of a modernised limited duration tenancy with greater rights for tenants relative to landowners and the widening of eligible assignees and inheritors of tenancies. Additionally, tenants under the Agricultural Holdings (Scotland) Act 1991 are now presumed to have registered their right to buy. Since 2012 statistics for agricultural land occupation have been published on an annual basis for Scotland by the Central Association of Agricultural Valuers and the 2019 figures indicate low levels of letting activity and that much relet land is bare land without buildings or investment by the landlord. == Criticism ==