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Report shows rural communities need a regional response to coronavirus


By David Porter

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Research published this week by Scottish Rural Action has highlighted that ‘thinking, resourcing and acting local’ is the key to enabling recovery from the impacts of Covid-19 in rural communities including the north-east.

Scottish Rural Action's latest report has highlighted the issues rural communities face from the effects of coronavirus.
Scottish Rural Action's latest report has highlighted the issues rural communities face from the effects of coronavirus.

The research provides backing for the regional approach to economic recovery recommended by the Higgins Report, published last month.

The research captured lockdown experiences from more than 500 people living and working in rural locations over a two-week period.

Key findings were:

Responses that were rooted in local communities worked well; one size doesn’t fit all in rural areas.

Local businesses were at least as important in responding to rural needs as community organisations.

Views about re-starting tourism are highly polarised in rural communities.

There are particular groups of people in rural communities whose needs appear not to be being met, in particular younger people, people with mental health challenges and those with dementia.

There is widespread concern about long-term economic damage and financial hardship in rural areas.

Positives associated with lockdown should be safeguarded and built upon to safeguard rural resilience and inform steps towards a wellbeing economy.

The full report can be viewed at https://www.sra.scot/wp-content/uploads/2020/07/SRA-Community-Survey-on-COVID-June-2020.pdf

Vanessa Halhead, acting chair of Scottish Rural Action, commented: “This report captures the findings from the first round of our research into the impact of Covid-19 on Scotland’s rural communities.

"The purpose of the research was to understand response and recovery from a whole-community perspective, rather than through a particular demographic or sectoral lens.

“Our findings paint a vivid picture of the extraordinary response of rural communities to the pandemic and the lockdown, and provide clear direction for how government can support rural recovery.

“The overarching finding was that thinking, resourcing and acting local is critically important.

"Rural communities are diverse and complex in their needs, so there can be no one-size-fits-all approach.

“Rural areas must be resourced, empowered and trusted in developing and delivering the recovery planning that best suits the needs of their local area.

"There has never been a more important time for government to devolve responsibility and resource to communities.”

Understanding the economic and financial impact on rural Scotland is the topic for Round Two of the Scottish Rural Action Survey, which launches today.

People from across rural Scotland are invited to take part at https://www.surveymonkey.co.uk/r/SRAc19-2.


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