The closure of VisitScotland’s iCentres which provide valuable in person information to visitors was made with no Islands Impact Assessment conducted, as recommended by the Islands Act. The closure of all the centres throughout Scotland is based on data which VisitScotland has collected on the use of the centres – however, as a Freedom of Information request by The Orkney News discovered – the devil is very much in the detail, Closure of Kirkwall iCentre Reveals Weakness of Islands Act

Visitor Information sign

The Orkney News report focussed on the closure of the busy Kirkwall iCentre. Shetland’s iCentre is to close this year.

Highlands and Islands Labour MSP, Rhoda Grant, met with the Minister for Employment and Investment, in the Scottish Government Tom Arthur, on Wednesday, 19th June, to discuss the concerns being raised around all the closures.

The phased closure programme is due to begin in September and will end in March 2026 as VisitScotland claims that the demand for information centres has reduced while the demand for online information and booking has continued to grow.

However a Freedom of Information request reveals that while total visitor numbers to the network dropped during the pandemic, they have increased year on year since then with over 1.37million people visiting a centre in 2023. It also shows that 8 of the centres have increased sales from their pre-pandemic figure including four in the Highlands and Islands region – Craignure, Lerwick, Rothesay and Ullapool.

Rhoda Grant said:

“VisitScotland’s decision is based on people moving online to book holidays, but 1.37million visitors used the iCentres last year and sales have increased in some centres since pre-pandemic.

“I have no doubt many will have used digital sources to plan their holiday too but many clearly still felt the need to seek more information in person when they were in the country so there is a definite demand there.”

94% of VisitScotland’s core funding from 2024/25 comes from Scottish Government Grant in Aid and 6% comes from other sources, such as retail and commercial income.

According to Malcolm Roughead, CEO of Visit Scotland, the closure of the iCentres will mean that VisitScotland “through a digital-first approach, using the channels we know visitors are using…can maximise our economic impact in all regions of Scotland.”

“We recognise the importance of community tourism and believe that visitors will continue to get information from locals – whether that be at the accommodation they’re staying at, in a local pub or when out and about at a local shop or visitor attraction. “

This view expressed by VisitScotland that visitors can just get the information they need by asking around was supported by the Minister, Tom Arthur.

Whilst that may happen, asking for information in a pub or a busy shop where other customers are waiting, is not as efficient or reliable than that provided by the knowledgeable staff in the iCentres. Looking at the figures below of those using the Kirkwall iCentre last year, it’s difficult to see how ‘asking around’ in a shop or a pub will work for 122,304 people – especially if there are a couple of cruise liners in on the same day.

VisitScotland’s website has a section on Island Communities Impact Assessments and why they need to be carried out when decisions of this nature are taken. VisitScotland didn’t carry out Island Impact Assessments and instead carried out their own screening assessment. They claim the impact the closures will have on island areas won’t be significantly different to the impact they will have in mainland areas.

Rhoda Grant continued:

“VisitScotland claim that most of the jobs will be retained through redeployment but where will island based staff be redeployed to?

“It’s not clear from the information provided by VisitScotland and the Scottish Government exactly how many staff will be affected by these closures, and what alternatives will be offered to island based staff.

“This will have a far bigger impact in island communities and will only seek to add to the depopulation of our islands. For an organisation that is almost entirely funded by the Scottish Government, one would have though that to disregard government policy on this is shoddy at best, arrogant and ignorant at worst.”

Footfall had been collected at each location via the means of either electronic or manual visitor count system. Since November 2023 however, only manual trackers have been used to collate footfall. Rhoda Grant is questioning why the process was changed to solely manual trackers in November 2023.

The Minister with responsibility for Small Business, Innovation, Tourism and Trade, Richard Lochhead, is currently unavailable due to health reasons but he met with VisitScotland in March urging them to continue discussions with partner organisations and to listen to any concerns that communities and businesses may have.

Rhoda Grant added:

“There’s been no prior engagement with MSPs on this. The concerns are being brought to us by constituents and by local newspapers representing the needs of their communities.”

The Minister advised Mrs Grant that he will:-

  • raise concerns with VisitScotland and ask them to consider/reconsider the impact on islands in particular
  • ask VisitScotland to provide her with more information and clarity around the reasons for the decision
  • follow up with her and meet again if needed

Rhoda Grant concluded:

“The tourism and hospitality sector has been one of the worst hit from the pandemic and we need to be bolstering these businesses at this time, not cutting services to the millions of people who visit Scotland annually. We must get this decision reversed.”

Rhoda Grant MSP outside the iCentre in Inverness

Kirkwall iCentre is staffed by experienced islanders with local knowledge which is invaluable for tourists who, for example, want to know when they can cross to the tidal island of the Brough of Birsay. For locals it is also excellent for booking your travel needs if for instance you wish to take a bus from the Scrabster Ferry Terminal south – the staff will book all that for you, effortlessly and print out the booking.

The retail side of the centre is excellent for maps, local brochures, books, up to date information ‘What’s on’, and locally produced crafts, for visitors who do not have much time to spend in Orkney, this is a great place to shop.

The FOI acquired by Rhoda Grant MSP covering all the iCentres in Scotland, reveals a patchy picture, with some of the centres doing extremely well – and yet VisitScotland has ignored this, and decided to sweep away all of them.

The  annual footfall figures recorded for each iCentre for 2019 – 2023.

Some of the centres have limited opening times – Aberfoyle, Aviemore and Oban, which will have affected their numbers.

iCentre 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023
Aberdeen  41,971 5,550 9,791 20,861 30,044
Aberfoyle 74,927 13,254 35,425 57,417 55,674
Aviemore 73,929 13,237 24,416 48,263 38,003
Ballater 101,237 15,941 30,690 61,035 72,636
Balloch 72,977 15,810 28,632 49,492 52,671
Bowmore  23,185 2,803 7,217 9,981 14,401
Brodick 26,547 2,677 10,647 20,404 20,483
Craignure 68,613 9,530 23,908 46,252 53,415
Dumfries  21,089 6,764 9,349 11,919 11,588
Edinburgh  268,635 33,468 42,193 148,570 183,750
Fort William 152,934 17,148 25,435 78,784 88,672
Glasgow  107,918 11,078 15,448 53,143 67,282
Inverness 115,326 14,393 26,906 72,162 78,688
Jedburgh  24,246 5,241 12,178 19,133 22,832
Kirkwall 139,967 7,704 21,434 73,182 122,304
Lerwick 56,555 7,322 17,886 39,321 52,991
Oban 150,821 15,816 38,062 72,905 60,124
Perth 29,744 6,619 10,210 18,524 21,626
Pitlochry  44,558 7,777 18,641 34,340 34,304
Portree 99,596 10,468 20,892 49,563 54,993
Rothesay 60,347 9,410 13,255 36,271 54,464
St Andrews 97,920 10,880 23,448 52,578 68,087
Stirling 87,053 16,100 23,847 42,664 60,138
Stornoway 30,033 2,510 11,571 18,939 19,052
Ullapool 34,388 3,496 9,811 27,982 31,838

It’s pretty clear from all of this, that VisitScotland made the decision to close all the iCentres without taking into consideration that last year, 2023, tourism was still bouncing back from the effects of the Covid pandemic. Inexplicably they changed from an electronic footfall counter to a manual one in November when it would be assumed the collection of data was important.

Scotland’s publicly funded tourism organisation will no longer have a presence in our towns once these closures happen. It’s quite astonishing when the sector has become so important to the Scottish economy. The complete failure to embrace the vision of the Islands Act and to complete an Islands Impact Assessment demonstrates the disregard this tax payer funded organisation has to communities up and down Scotland.

It’ll be interesting to see what the figures for 2024 will be, however, by the time those come out, some of the iCentres will already be closed, including Lerwick, Shetland.

the VisitScotland iCentre building with people outside it

Fiona Grahame

3 responses to “1.37million visitors used Scotland’s iCentres last year as VisitScotland goes ahead with closures”

  1. berniebell1955 Avatar
    berniebell1955

    My ‘Like ‘ is for the article, not for what’s happening!

  2. […] Islands Community Impact Assessments are recommended for any changes to policy by public bodies in the Islands Act, however, many pay scant regard to the guidance as in the case of VisitScotland’s decision to close all its iCentres. […]

  3. […] closures on local communities remained outstanding. The reason for the closures is being cited as reduced footfall to the Centres throughout Scotland as visitors move online to source information ahead of their visit. Data which […]

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