Overview
The Bill makes it an offence for circus operators to use wild animals in a travelling circus whilst in Scotland.
According to the Bill a “wild animal” means an animal that is not domesticated.
A definition of a domesticated animal is that, due to breeding or living conditions, changes can be seen in their:
- behaviour
- life cycles
- physiology
This means a wild animal cannot be:
- made to perform
- displayed
- exhibited
This is whether or not an audience is paying money to view the performance, exhibition, or display.
Wild animals can still be kept and transported by travelling circuses whilst in Scotland. They just can't be displayed whilst in Scotland.
You can find out more in the Explanatory Notes document that explains the Bill.
Why the Bill was created
Concerns were raised about the use of wild animals in travelling circuses. This was during a consultation on animal health and welfare. There are full and partial bans across many other European Union (EU) and non-EU countries. Scottish Ministers carried out a consultation in 2014. They’ve received feedback from:
- MSPs
- the general public
- animal welfare organisations
The responses raise concerns on animal welfare issues and ethical grounds.
The vast majority were in favour of a ban. The view is that there are no benefits to having wild animals in travelling circuses. People thought that this could only be resolved by banning wild animals in travelling circuses.
You can find out more in the Policy Memorandum document that explains the Bill.
The Wild Animals in Travelling Circuses (Scotland) Bill became an Act on 24 January 2018
Becomes an Act
The Wild Animals in Travelling Circuses (Scotland) Bill passed by a vote of 112 for, 0 against, and 0 abstentions. The Bill became an Act on 24 January 2018.
Introduced
The Scottish Government sends the Bill and related documents to the Parliament.
Related information from the Scottish Government on the Bill
Why the Bill is being proposed (Policy Memorandum)
Explanation of the Bill (Explanatory Notes)
How much the Bill is likely to cost (Financial Memorandum)
Opinions on whether the Parliament has the power to make the law (Statements on Legislative Competence)
Information on the powers the Bill gives the Scottish Government and others (Delegated Powers Memorandum)
Stage 1 - General principles
Committees examine the Bill. Then MSPs vote on whether it should continue to Stage 2.
Committees involved in this Bill
Who examined the Bill
Each Bill is examined by a 'lead committee'. This is the committee that has the subject of the Bill in its remit.
It looks at everything to do with the Bill.
Other committees may look at certain parts of the Bill if it covers subjects they deal with.
Who spoke to the lead committee about the Bill
First meeting transcript
The Convener
The second item of business is an evidence session on the Wild Animals in Travelling Circuses (Scotland) Bill. We are joined by officials from the Scottish Government’s team who have been working on the bill. I welcome Andrew Voas, veterinary adviser, and Angela Lawson, solicitor. Good morning. Members have a series of questions for you, which I will kick off.
Richard Lyle (Uddingston and Bellshill) (SNP)
Before we start, convener, may I remind members of my registered interest?
The Convener
You may do so now or when you ask a question.
Richard Lyle
I will do so now. I refer members to my registered interest as the convener of the cross-party group on and an honorary member of the Scottish Showmen’s Guild.
The Convener
That is duly noted, Mr Lyle. Thank you.
We move to questions. Does the three-year gap between the consultation and the bill’s introduction pose any challenges for the Scottish Government in ensuring that the bill reflects the weight of scientific evidence and public views?
Andrew Voas (Scottish Government)
The bill is based on key ethical arguments. We are aware that there have been developments in scientific evidence, which were outlined in the Dorning and Harris report that was produced for the Welsh Government. Some of the scientific evidence might have strengthened concern about aspects of keeping animals in travelling circuses, but the key ethical arguments remain unchanged from those that we laid out in the consultation in 2014.
The Convener
The Welsh Government has plans for a scheme that is aimed at addressing mobile animal exhibits more widely, and the Scottish Government has acknowledged that the current legislative framework, which in part dates back to 1925, is
“somewhat dated and might benefit from review”.
Given that, did the Scottish Government consider undertaking a follow-up consultation to seek a wider range of views and fill the gap between 2014 and now?
Andrew Voas
We are aware—and, when we were drafting the bill, we were especially aware—that there is a wide variety of other uses of wild and domestic animals for performance or public display. At one end of the range are zoos and safari parks, which have a statutory obligation to be involved in conservation and education and are generally regarded by most of the public as being acceptable. In the middle is a range of uses of wild animals, such as birds of prey that might be seen at country fairs or animals that might be taken into schools so that, for example, children can hold snakes or see what different animals look like.
We are aware that the public do not seem to have the same fundamental ethical objection to those other uses of animals as they do to circuses. The argument is that circuses attract sufficient moral opprobrium that the only appropriate way of dealing with them—given the particular ethical arguments that apply to them—is complete prohibition, whereas for the other uses, it would be appropriate to tighten the registration and licensing requirements in order to modernise the approach that stems from the Performing Animals (Regulation) Act 1925.
The Convener
I presume that the assertion that you just made about the public view is informed by the volume and nature of the correspondence that was received in response to the call for opinions. The responses have not yet been published in detail. Will you give us a flavour of the volume and balance of the views that you received?
Andrew Voas
The consultation analysis has been published and the individual consultation responses were published very recently. The consultation took place back in 2014. The analysis extracted key points that respondents made. In addition, from United Kingdom public opinion polls that date back over the past 10 years, we are aware that 70 to 80 per cent of a random sample of the public support a ban on wild animals in travelling circuses.
The most recent poll was by YouGov in 2013 and was broken down by species. Although there was more support for banning the use of bears, big cats and elephants, there was still significant support for banning the use of creatures such as parrots and snakes.
We have also had a constant stream of correspondence. There is regular correspondence to ministers, which we answer. Some of that is sparked by events, such as the visit of the big cats to Peterhead in 2014. That took place after the consultation, but a lot of letters were sent at that time to ask why we had not yet banned wild animals in travelling circuses.
The Convener
The committee has taken a particular interest in engaging with young people to gauge their views. Was any particular effort made in the consultation to get young people’s opinions and, if so, what form did that take?
Andrew Voas
The consultation was open to everyone. We are not aware of any particular responses from young people. We have not yet had any particular initiative to engage young people, but we have the option to do so as the bill progresses and we could look into that.
From the responses that were submitted, we know that a significant concern was the potentially damaging effect on young people of seeing wild animals in travelling circuses being made to perform unnatural behaviours, being dressed up in human clothing or being invited to do things that lead people to make fun of them or laugh at them. The argument is that animals are seen as props for entertainment or as ways of demonstrating the superiority or cleverness of the trainers in making the animals do certain things. Several respondents made the point that it is harmful for young people to see animals being used in such a way, because it gives them a false impression of wild animals and shows a lack of respect for the inherent nature of wild animals.
The Convener
But you have not spoken to young people.
Andrew Voas
We have not specifically asked young people for their views.
Mark Ruskell (Mid Scotland and Fife) (Green)
Have you done any attitudinal surveys or polls on the other uses of wild animals—for example, to see what the attitude is to wild raptors being used in displays?
Andrew Voas
We have not done specific work on the other uses of animals. From time to time, people write in with concerns about other uses of animals, and we often have discussions with groups such as OneKind and the Scottish Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, which have raised concerns about other uses. That is the basis for the further work that we plan to do, which the cabinet secretary recently announced, in which we will be modernising the Performing Animals (Regulation) Act 1925.
10:30Mark Ruskell
How do you know that the public attitude to circuses differs from the public attitude to other uses of wild animals? You say that there is quite a big ethical difference in the public’s mind between the use of wild animals in circuses and other uses of wild animals, but I am trying to work out what the evidence basis is for that. The consultation was about the bill; it was not about other uses of wild animals.
Andrew Voas
The consultation was specifically about the use of wild animals in travelling circuses. Some people made remarks about other uses of animals, but there were not many of those responses.
Mark Ruskell
What is your basis for the ethical distinction between circuses and other uses of animals in performance?
Andrew Voas
That was outlined in the consultation. Key ethical arguments inevitably apply to the use of wild animals in travelling circuses, and some of those arguments apply to an extent to other uses of animals, but they do not all apply in the same way.
The first ethical argument is to do with the lack of respect that is shown for animals, which I have outlined. Wild animals are perceived to have a particular status, and they should be able to fulfil their natural potential; using them in a way that is seen as demeaning or as a source of amusement is contrary to their natural essence. That is an inherently disrespectful attitude, which, as I have said, can foster harmful attitudes in young people who are exposed to it.
The second argument is that the travelling circus environment involves keeping animals in relatively barren enclosures and subject to the stress of transport and disturbance, and it is inherently difficult in such situations to allow a wild animal to express its full range of natural behaviours and to provide suitable accommodation that allows it to do that. Although wild animals might not suffer physically if they are transported as part of a travelling circus, it is inherently difficult in that situation for them to fulfil their instincts and express wild behaviour—to breed, shelter and move about in the way that they would like to.
The third key argument is that, although we accept some compromise to the ideal welfare of domestic or wild animals—for example, we accept that farm animals are not always kept in optimal, ideal conditions—that is justified by the wider benefit to humans of the ability to have food at a reasonable price or to use animals for leather or milk production. With other types of wild animal keeping or performance, conservation values might apply. Zoos take part in planned breeding programmes, and there might be an educational value in taking wild animals into schools so that children can see them. Other wide benefits justify ethical costs or potential welfare compromises.
The argument is that circuses are basically commercial, money-making operations that purely provide a type of entertainment that is widely perceived as outdated. In the public mind, there is a lack of justifying benefit in circuses that does not seem to apply to the other possible uses of wild animals.
Mark Ruskell
I now understand the bill’s ethical basis better, but I am still trying to understand whether the public view of circuses translates to other forms of animal performance. It is clear that you do not have data on that.
The Convener
Let us explore the ethical issue.
Emma Harper (South Scotland) (SNP)
The policy memorandum talks about ethical versus welfare issues. It is hard to separate them, because ethics and welfare are part and parcel of the same issue. How did you distinguish between the welfare concerns and the ethical concerns about wild animals in travelling circuses?
Andrew Voas
Some of the ethical concerns are clearly related to welfare aspects, such as, for example, whether it is possible to keep animals in circuses without compromising their welfare. That is part of the ethical concern, but the conclusion of Mike Radford’s 2007 report, “Wild Animals in Travelling Circuses”, was that it is hard to find objective scientific evidence that would apply to all wild animal species that might be used in travelling circuses.
There is probably good evidence on animals such as elephants and big cats that might suggest that their welfare is sufficiently compromised in circuses to justify a complete ban, but it is difficult to gather that sort of evidence scientifically and in sufficient detail for every single species that might be used in a travelling circus.
There is a wider ethical objection that, no matter whether a wild animal can be shown to be suffering in ideal welfare conditions, wild animals just should not be used in that sort of environment purely for entertainment, made to perform unnatural acts and dressed up in unnatural regalia or clothing. That wider ethical objection applies to all wild animals—it is not a matter of specific welfare concerns about specific species.
Emma Harper
I think that it is fair enough to look at the ethics as opposed to welfare. We are probably talking about animals ranging from snakes all the way to seals and zebras—a really wide variety of wild animals, elephants and big cats included.
Andrew Voas
Yes, exactly.
Kate Forbes (Skye, Lochaber and Badenoch) (SNP)
Can you elaborate on the three ethical issues: the impact on respect for animals, the impact of travelling environments on an animal’s nature and the ethical costs versus benefits?
Andrew Voas
I have outlined those areas already. On respect for animals, the view was expressed that wild animals should be free to express their natural essence and wildness—telos is the technical term. Some of the remarks that were made in response to the consultation mentioned how putting animals in unnatural environments, making them do unnatural tricks and behaviours and dressing them up in unnatural ways is demeaning or humiliating for them. People felt that animals that should be considered as wild, free and allowed to express their natural behaviour were being portrayed in an unnatural way. They are being brought into an unnatural situation and made to do unnatural things contrary to their natural purpose in life.
Kate Forbes
What about ethical costs versus benefits?
Andrew Voas
As I said, we accept that in a variety of situations there can be a welfare cost to animals that can be justified by some benefit to animals or wider society in general. We accept a welfare compromise for farm animals; they might not always be kept in ideal conditions, but they are fulfilling a purpose by providing food and drink.
Similarly, people have concerns about the conditions in which wild animals are kept in zoos, but zoos fulfil a valuable conservation and education role. They take part in planned breeding programmes that are co-ordinated worldwide and they also do useful work in education. In fact, zoos and safari parks have a statutory obligation to be involved in such work. There is a welfare cost to those animals in being kept confined—they might be kept in more natural environments than in a travelling circus, but people still agree that there is a potential welfare cost to those animals—but that is justified by the benefit of conservation and education and a wider benefit to society.
However, if we consider the travelling circus environment, the welfare cost or the ethical objections to the use of animals in that environment surely cannot be justified by the commercial benefit to the circus owners in providing a spectacle purely for public entertainment.
Kate Forbes
It strikes me that there is a balance to be struck between an evidence-based justification for such legislation and taking into account general public opinion. Presumably, you are trying to find a middle ground where both meet.
Andrew Voas
Yes. The consultation’s approach is quite unusual because we tend to try to base legislation on objective evidence or scientific evidence, if it is available. In this case, the approach has been to try to gather evidence of the general public’s ethical objections. Therefore, the purpose of the consultation in 2014 was to seek views and opinions on the ethical arguments that had been suggested. We had more than 2,000 responses to the consultation, 95 per cent or more of which agreed that the use of wild animals in travelling circuses should be banned. However, there were some detailed responses to the specific ethical questions that were asked. We certainly did not treat the consultation as an opinion poll or a mini referendum; we were really interested in considering the detailed arguments that some of the respondents made. Those are outlined in the response to the consultation.
The Convener
Let us get into the nitty-gritty of the bill.
Richard Lyle
I said earlier that I am the convener of the cross-party group on the Scottish Showmen’s Guild. Who in the industry did you consult about the proposal?
Andrew Voas
The consultation was open to all and we had some responses from the circus industry. There was a response from the circus guild of Great Britain.
Richard Lyle
Yes, but not from the Showmen’s Guild.
Andrew Voas
It was an open, public consultation, which was advertised. I do not think that we had a response from the Showmen’s Guild.
Richard Lyle
I remember going to circuses as a child—most of us can. However, the bill does not define what a circus is. Why does it not to do so? What is a circus to your mind?
Andrew Voas
Our view was that there is a common understanding of what a circus is and that it would take its dictionary definition. I will pass the question on to Angela Lawson, who is the legal adviser.
Angela Lawson (Scottish Government)
The Scottish Government’s view was that there is an ordinary meaning of “circus”. I am sure that the people who are in this room have a view of what a circus is. We did not want to be unduly restrictive in defining it and follow, for example, the Dangerous Wild Animals Act 1976 and the Zoo Licensing Act 1981. That legislation is more than 35 years old and describes a circus as somewhere
“where animals are kept … for the purpose of performing tricks”.
We did not want such a narrow definition because circuses have moved on since then. Often, animals are used for display purposes and are not performing tricks.
If we do not define “circus” in the bill, it will take the ordinary meaning. The “Oxford English Dictionary” is often cited and relied on by courts for defining something if it is left to ordinary interpretation. It says that a circus is:
“A circular arena surrounded by tiers of seats, for the exhibition of equestrian, acrobatic, and other performances. Also … the company or ‘troupe’ of performers and their equipage.”
Basically, it is the place of the circus and the acts that are in it.
Richard Lyle
However, the proposed ban will not apply to a static circus. In my constituency, there is a theme park that, technically, could have a static circus all year round and the bill would not cover it. Is that correct?
Andrew Voas
Yes, that is right. The justification is that the travelling environment is one of the key parts of the ethical objections. It applies to travelling circuses but not to other circumstances. There are other situations—such as theme parks, as you said—in which animals are used for performance but the reasoning is that, if they are permanently based there, there is more possibility for them to be provided with a suitable, stable environment that provides more enrichment and allows them to express more natural behaviours when they are not performing. That is why we focus on travelling circuses.
Richard Lyle
If you will allow me to develop the point, convener, the successful theme park in my area brings in reindeer for Christmas shows and so on. The reindeer travel to the theme park, as happens throughout the land for such shows. I remember being at an excellent Christmas show in Aboyne at which reindeer were present. Will such animals be covered by the act or not?
10:45Andrew Voas
We would not regard such displays as travelling circuses.
Richard Lyle
Okay. I will ask my other question. Across the country, people go to garden centres and see handlers standing with owls and other birds of prey. They might be raising money for charity, and kids can learn about how to treat birds and so on. Will those be covered by the act?
Andrew Voas
Again, such displays would not be commonly understood to be travelling circuses, so they would not be covered. We propose to address such situations in the future, with updated licensing or registration.
Richard Lyle
Here is my last question on this theme. Why has the Scottish Government chosen to limit the scope of the bill to the treatment of travelling circuses? People have concerns about the treatment of animals in general. I am a dog lover and do not like to hear about them being mistreated, but I dislike hearing about the mistreatment of any other animal. Why has the Government chosen to select only circuses?
Andrew Voas
The issue of travelling circuses has been the subject of public concern for many years. It was a manifesto commitment of the Scottish National Party specifically to ban wild animals from circuses. It is also something that the UK Government wants to pursue.
As I have tried to explain, the key argument is that the ethical objections to travelling circuses all inevitably apply to them, but they do not apply to the same extent to other uses of animals. As there is sufficient public opprobrium or moral objection specifically to travelling circuses, we think it appropriate to ban the use of wild animals in those environments. However, for all the other possible uses for wild or domestic animals, we do not think that there is sufficient public opprobrium to ban them completely, but we would like to improve the arrangements for their registration and to introduce licensing conditions that are appropriate to the particular uses.
The Convener
Can I explore another aspect of that? The purpose of this session is to clear up any ambiguity either in the minds of members or where the bill might not be clear enough. I have read the bill a few times, and I am not 100 per cent sure whether the overwintering of animals is covered. We have had at least one case in Scotland in which concern was expressed about circus animals being displayed while they were being overwintered. For the record, I would like some clarity on whether wild animals being overwintered in Scotland will still be permissible, or will it be permissible only if they are not displayed and a charge is levied?
Andrew Voas
The bill specifically concerns the use of wild animals in performance, display or exhibition. Whether it involves a charge to the public is irrelevant. Any performance, display or exhibition of wild animals in travelling circuses is prohibited.
The term “travelling circuses” covers any premises connected with them, and so would cover overwintering premises in Scotland to which animals associated with a travelling circus might be brought. Any performance, public display or exhibition of those animals at that overwintering site would be prohibited by the bill.
The bill will not prohibit the private keeping of wild animals that might or might not have been associated with a circus at some point in the past, so it will not prohibit circuses from transporting animals through Scotland or keeping them privately in Scotland if there is no public display of those animals.
The Convener
Thank you. It is useful to get that on the record.
Claudia Beamish (South Scotland) (Lab)
I want to push that last point a bit further. It is hard to fathom why the bill does not prevent animals from being kept or transported by circuses while in Scotland even if they are not going to perform or be displayed or exhibited in Scotland. I understand that it might be difficult for the bill to do that, but it seems to me that that should be part of what happens.
Andrew Voas
As I explained, one of the key ethical objections was that it is the viewing of those animals performing unnatural behaviours that is potentially harmful to younger people and which engenders attitudes that are considered to be disrespectful to wild animals. It is the actual viewing of the animals that is felt to be particularly morally objectionable.
Other difficulties that we would have if we prohibited or sought to prohibit the private keeping of wild animals that had been associated with a travelling circus are that there would be inconsistencies—private individuals are allowed to keep wild animals if they comply with appropriate legislation, and wild animals can also be kept in other environments by zoos, safari parks and other enterprises. If we sought to prevent circuses from keeping wild animals, that could be perceived as discriminatory and, basically, it would affect people’s right to own property, which would contravene the European convention on human rights on a couple of counts.
If across the UK there was a general prohibition on the keeping of wild animals by people who were associated with travelling circuses, we would also potentially have the practical problem of what to do with the existing wild animals. There would undoubtedly be stories of animals having to be put down, rehomed or separated from people who regarded them as companions and, in some cases, almost as family members. There would be the practical welfare difficulty of what to do with the wild animals that were no longer allowed to be kept by people associated with circuses.
The Convener
I would like to raise the question of the definition of a wild animal. There is an argument that changes could occur to the behaviour, life cycle or physiology of some wild animals when they are closely engaged with human beings or engage in particular practices over a period of time. Is there any concern that the definition of wild animals as we would understand it could be challenged?
Andrew Voas
The definition that we have used is that a wild animal is
“an animal other than one of a kind that is commonly domesticated in the British Islands.”
There is a similar status for wild animals under the Animal Health and Welfare (Scotland) Act 2006. That has allowed some useful flexibility in interpretation, and it has been widely understood and accepted.
There are problems, in that “wild” can be defined in different ways for different pieces of legislation and in different contexts. In some cases, “wild” could be associated with danger or with animals that have been free living and which are not captive. For our purposes under the bill, we have used a definition that is closely related to wording under the 2006 act, which we feel provides sufficient explanation but allows some flexibility for changes in circumstances.
The Convener
Okay. Thank you.
Claudia Beamish
What other approaches to addressing issues associated with the use of wild animals in travelling circuses did the Scottish Government consider? Why did it rule those out in favour of the legislative approach?
Andrew Voas
As I have tried to outline, the public demand has been for complete prohibition of wild animals in travelling circuses.
The committee will be aware that a licensing regime was introduced in England. We decided not to introduce a similar regime in Scotland, partly because we did not have any wild animals in travelling circuses in Scotland at the time. We did not feel that a licensing regime would address the key ethical issues that I have outlined, which we think justify a complete ban on the use of wild animals in travelling circuses.
Claudia Beamish
That is helpful. Thank you.
The Convener
We will move on to a different theme, but first I would like to get some context. Could you outline the scale of travelling circuses in Scotland?
Andrew Voas
Travelling circuses visit Scotland, and we currently have one that uses animals—it has horses, dogs and budgerigars, but last year it also had performing domestic cats. There are also human-only circuses that visit from time to time. No circuses with wild animals have visited Scotland for several years.
In England, there are currently two licensed circuses with wild animals. They have particular rounds in Wales and the English midlands, and they have given no indication that they want to come to Scotland in the near future. In effect, we have not had any wild animals in travelling circuses in Scotland for several years.
The Convener
Okay. I apologise if we have already dealt with this, but if a travelling circus with animals that was based in England was heading for Northern Ireland and it travelled through the port of Stranraer, would it be covered?
Andrew Voas
As I have said, the bill would not ban the private keeping of wild animals for travelling circuses, so provided that those wild animals were not used for performance, display or exhibition while they were in Scotland, no offence would be committed by transporting them through Scotland.
The Convener
Thank you. I just wanted to get that on the record.
Angus MacDonald (Falkirk East) (SNP)
I want to turn to the issue of enforcement. Schedule 1 makes provision for local authorities or the Scottish ministers to appoint an inspector for the purpose of enforcing the legislation. What discussions has the Scottish Government had with local authorities, the SSPCA and Police Scotland on the enforcement approach and provisions?
Andrew Voas
We have had discussions with local authorities. We anticipate that, in practice, local authorities would be the key enforcers of the legislation, although it is unlikely that circuses with wild animals will choose to come to Scotland if they know that there is a ban in place. If that did happen, we would expect local authority inspectors to be the first point of contact, as such circuses would also need to apply for public entertainment licences to perform in Scotland.
I might be wrong, but I do not think that we have had direct discussions with the police. We do not think that the Scottish SPCA would be directly involved, but it is aware of the bill and we have had general discussions about it.
Angus MacDonald
Do you plan to have discussions with Police Scotland at some point?
Andrew Voas
We could contact Police Scotland and let it know about the bill.
Angus MacDonald
You are saying that enforcement would be the responsibility of local authority inspectors, but to whom would they be accountable?
Andrew Voas
Local authority inspectors are appointed by local authorities as inspectors in relation to a wide range of animal health and welfare legislation. Ultimately, therefore, they are accountable to their local authority.
Angus MacDonald
I turn to the issue of fines. Schedule 1 also provides for someone who commits an offence under section 1 of the bill to be liable to a maximum fine “not exceeding level 5”, which I understand is currently £5,000. How did the Scottish Government arrive at the proposed maximum fine level? How does it compare with the income from a run of circus performances?
Angela Lawson
The sum of £5,000 was chosen because it is commensurate with other offence provisions in other animal legislation, particularly the Animal Health and Welfare (Scotland) Act 2006, which allows for offences under the part of the act that deals with animal welfare to be set at level 5—£5,000—except in certain instances of extreme cruelty, such as cases involving unnecessary suffering or animal fights. If there was unnecessary suffering in a circus context, we could use the powers in the 2006 act and prosecute under those provisions, which would attract a much higher fine of £20,000.
11:00Angus MacDonald
Are you fairly confident that, between the two possibilities, there will be an appropriate deterrent?
Angela Lawson
Yes. As the 2006 act has been in place for some time and it is generally working well, we have been able to use the information from it to feed into the provisions in our bill—in particular, the enforcement provisions.
Angus MacDonald
Do you envisage a situation in which there might be multiple individuals in an organisation who could be held responsible for an offence and that each of them would be liable for a fine, or would it just be the business?
Angela Lawson
If we look at the way in which the bill is drafted, we can see that the person who commits the offence is the circus operator, and that we have listed more than one type of person who could be that operator. Therefore, in some instances, depending on the facts and circumstances of the case, it is possible that there might be more than one fine or more than one person. A lot will depend on the set-up of the circus. It may well be that the circus owner is different from the person who has overall responsibility or who is ultimately responsible for the circus in the UK, in which case there is a possibility of there being more than one fine. There are also situations in which a circus might be owned or managed by more than one person. Sometimes, families might manage a circus together. In such circumstances, there could potentially be more than one fine.
Alexander Burnett (Aberdeenshire West) (Con)
I turn to the economic impact. You come to the logical conclusion that, as there have been no circuses in Scotland for several years, the financial impact would be minimal in practice. I am sure that that is fairly easy to agree with.
As far as the evidence behind the bill is concerned, you mentioned earlier that the consultation had been published. However, we understood that the individual responses had not been published. Will you clarify that?
Andrew Voas
I will ask my colleague who is sitting in the public gallery. [Interruption.] I am sorry—the individual responses are still to be published. I thought that they had already been published. I apologise for my mistake.
Alexander Burnett
That was part of the point of the question. We understand that the individual responses will be published in future. Is that correct?
Andrew Voas
Yes—they are in the process of being published.
Alexander Burnett
In the absence of those, and for the record, will you tell us whether the circus guild of Great Britain, Performing Animals Welfare Standards International and Producers Alliance for Cinema and Television raised any economic concerns with the Scottish Government about the proposed bill and, if so, what those concerns were?
Andrew Voas
We had a meeting with those organisations last week. They explained that, as their circuses have not visited Scotland for several years, they are not particularly concerned about that aspect of the issue. However, they did make the point that, if there were to be a wider prohibition on wild animals in travelling circuses, it could have knock-on effects for the film and television industry. They said that some of the wild animals that are currently used in travelling circuses are also used in film and TV productions—particularly the big cats that members might have seen, many of which will have been sourced from people who also operate circuses. Therefore, there might be performing circus animals that are also used in film and TV production. The organisations’ main concern, from an economic point of view, was that if there were to be a wider prohibition, that would adversely affect those uses of animals.
Alexander Burnett
Is there a timescale for publication of the individual responses?
Andrew Voas
There are some technical difficulties. I thought that they had been published, because I knew that we had given approval for that to happen. I had thought that they were in the process of being published, but there are a few technical problems to do with the volume and the physical size of the data that is to be published.
The Convener
Once you have looked into that, perhaps you could write back to the committee on the timeframes that you are working to.
Andrew Voas
Yes, we will do that. We will write and let the committee know when the responses are due to be published.
Mark Ruskell
Returning to the definition of a circus, it is clear that there are now multiple definitions, and you are introducing a further one, which is based on the “Oxford English Dictionary”. Could that be problematic?
Andrew Voas
We do not think so. I think that there is a general understanding that, if a word is not specifically defined for a particular purpose in legislation, it tends to take its dictionary definition. There is a common understanding of what a circus—in particular, a travelling circus—entails that is different from other uses. We do not anticipate any particular difficulty in defining what a travelling circus is, as commonly understood by the general public or the man in the street.
Mark Ruskell
But it is already defined in law under several different acts. It is stated quite specifically what the nature of a circus is. I am asking about that difficulty, whereby you have two pieces of legislation, one of which defines a circus in one way and one of which—if the bill is passed—will define it in a very different way. Does that create challenges?
Andrew Voas
We find that in other situations, in which a particular word can be defined in a particular way to suit the particular context and measures in one particular piece of legislation. As I have mentioned, “wild” might be defined in different ways for different pieces of legislation. I believe that “circus” is defined for the Dangerous Wild Animals Act 1976, but that is in the context of that act.
Angela Lawson
“Circus” is defined in the 1976 act and in the Zoo Licensing Act 1981 for those specific purposes. The bill concerns wild animals in travelling circuses, which is quite a different purpose from the licensing of zoos. Therefore, we need a different definition of “circus” in relation to the bill.
Mark Ruskell
The act from the 1970s refers to animals being used in a performance setting to carry out tricks or manoeuvres. Is that largely irrelevant to the bill, because you are taking a broader dictionary definition, and you are saying that it does not matter where they are—wild animals are not allowed?
Angela Lawson
Yes.
Andrew Voas
If the situation concerns something that would be commonly understood to be a travelling circus, or premises associated with a travelling circus, that is what is covered in our bill.
Angela Lawson
Technically, we are leaving the definition of “circus” to ordinary interpretation, but we specifically define what a “travelling circus” is, in terms of its movement from place to place.
In such a situation, we fall back on the point that we could not possibly adopt the definition from other legislation, because it would not work for the purposes of the bill. One of the key things is that we want to prohibit display. The definitions in the older legislation did not take into account the possibility that animals were going to be used merely for display.
Mark Ruskell
I am hypothesising, but if someone wanted to get round the eventual legislation, they would have to conduct the circus somewhere other than in a tent, and they would have to have no other ancillary acts around it, such as
“acrobats, clowns, and other entertainers”—
I am reading from the “Oxford English Dictionary” definition. They would have to avoid all of that, and then they could get round the proposed legislation. Is that right?
Angela Lawson
Yes—but then it would basically not be a circus.
The Convener
Regarding the definition, how often does a circus have to travel to be a travelling circus?
Angela Lawson
It just has to travel from place to place. If it is a circus and it moves from one place where it performs to another place and performs there, it is a travelling circus.
The Convener
So if it makes two movements, it is a travelling circus.
Angela Lawson
We specifically do not want to end up in a situation in which people can get out of or avoid the legislation by, for instance, travelling just once a year. If it travels from place to place, it is a travelling circus.
Richard Lyle
You mentioned the Civic Government (Scotland) Act 1982, which covers licensing. The act applies only to Scotland; for showmen, the law in England is different. Councils have had many interpretations of the act, with add-on after add-on.
In relation to Mark Ruskell’s point, what if I was a circus owner and I decided to take out the circus element and put up a sign saying “Wild West Show”? I have been reminded that, for several years, there were stallions—I cannot remember the exact breed—going round for a sort of Vienna horse show. Could horse shows, safari parks, theme parks, fêtes and zoos be affected by the proposed law? You propose the law, but we have to ask about it. I am concerned, because my experience is that councils have a very different perception of the law once it gets out there.
Andrew Voas
As we have outlined, the bill is specifically limited to travelling circuses and things that will be commonly understood to be travelling circuses. Horses are domesticated animals, so they are excluded from the bill. I suppose that there could be circumstances in which a travelling circus chose to call itself something different, but people would still have to consider whether that enterprise or show included elements such as acrobats, clowns, variety acts and performing animals. If it did, there might be a common understanding that it would be reasonable to call it a travelling circus, even though it did not describe itself as such.
Richard Lyle
I am sorry to keep pressing you, but I have had experience of issues being perceived in a particular way but things turning out differently. If someone had a wild animal but it was not part of a circus, because no acrobats or whatever were involved, would that be covered under the proposed law? I see Angela Lawson shaking her head. There is a way round the bill: by not calling something a circus and not having acrobats in it, it will still be possible to have wild animals in it and we will not be able to touch it. Is that the case or not?
Andrew Voas
As we have described, if an act involves a single wild animal and there are no accompanying acts of a traditional circus nature, it will be, in effect, a single wild animal display or act.
Richard Lyle
I apologise for pursuing this, but would you class penguins, performing seals, zebras and llamas as wild animals?
Andrew Voas
The bill defines a wild animal as
“an animal other than one of a kind that is commonly domesticated in the British Islands.”
As penguins are not commonly domesticated in the British isles, they would fall under the definition of wild animals for the purposes of the bill. Zoos and safari parks would be outwith the scope of the bill, because they would not be regarded as travelling circuses.
Richard Lyle
I take it that you have never watched the penguins walk round at Edinburgh zoo.
Andrew Voas
I have, but that is not regarded as a travelling circus.
Richard Lyle
I apologise for pressing you, but my contention is that if someone wants to get round the bill, all that they need to do is remove the word “circus” from the show’s title and take out a few acrobats. As sure as tomorrow follows today, they will have got round the bill.
Andrew Voas
Such an act involving the performance or display of a single wild animal will be covered by our proposed registration and licensing requirements for all performing animals in circumstances other than those covered by the bill, if such an act is not already covered by the requirement to register under the Performing Animals (Regulation) Act 1925 or the public entertainments licence.
The Convener
So if there were any kind of loophole, it would be closed.
Andrew Voas
Yes.
Emma Harper
I agree that it is a difficult issue. In the south of Scotland, there is a display team that has owls and raptors in it. The staff pride themselves on the education that they do, which involves going into schools and promoting conservation. Is it correct that that would not be considered to be a circus?
Andrew Voas
Yes. It would not be commonly understood by the man in the street to be a travelling circus, so it would fall outwith the scope of the bill.
Alexander Burnett
I come back to the definition of “circus”. Any law that is drafted should be as definite and clear as possible.
You say that you want to use the ordinary dictionary definition of “circus” but, as a solicitor, Angela Lawson, you must be aware that precedence will always be given to definitions that have been laid down in court or in existing legislation. How will the use of a dictionary definition overrule that?
11:15Angela Lawson
We will make clear in the guidance exactly what is intended by the definitions involved. There is a definition in the Dangerous Wild Animals Act 1976, but the bill is not about the licensing of dangerous wild animals or zoos, and we would not necessarily lift a definition from an area of legislation that was not relevant to the legislation that we were dealing with. Even though a definition of “circus” has been provided in other contexts, those contexts—the Zoo Licensing Act 1981, for example—are not sufficiently similar that the definition there would overrule the ordinary dictionary definition in the bill.
Alexander Burnett
Would that not be the first line of the appeal in the first case that was brought?
Angela Lawson
The Scottish Government has considered the issue and is of the view that it is better to rely on the dictionary definition and ordinary meaning of “circus”.
Finlay Carson (Galloway and West Dumfries) (Con)
Are you confident that we are not creating messy legislation because of the fluffiness of the common definition of “circus”? The first thing that springs to my mind is travelling llama shows, which have been mentioned. Are llamas wild animals? They are not native to the United Kingdom. Are they commonly domesticated? The more this conversation goes on, the more I see opportunities for misinterpretation—including deliberate misinterpretation—of the bill. Are you confident that the bill will not give rise to the kind of claims that Alexander Burnett and Richard Lyle talked about? Could we do with a legal definition of “circus”?
Andrew Voas
There is the experience of England, where there is a similar definition of the animals that are covered and two circuses are licensed. I do not think that there have been difficulties in England and Wales because of confusion caused by other potential uses of animals. I think that the general public are quite clear about what a travelling circus is. The two in England have not visited Scotland for many years, so there has not been a travelling circus with wild animals in Scotland for several years. We are not expecting people to overthink the issue or suggest that particular activities are travelling circuses when a reasonable understanding of the term would suggest that they are not.
Finlay Carson
We cannot expect everyone to be reasonable. There are some determined animal rights people out there who might seek loopholes to stop travelling llama shows, which could be described as circuses. That is where I am coming from. We are not necessarily talking about people who are reasonable and who take a balanced view; we are looking at people who might want to push the law to an extreme. That might include animal rights activists who want all animal shows to be banned.
Andrew Voas
If such people took a case to court, the judgment would be based on a reasonable interpretation of what a travelling circus is, which would be the common understanding of the man in the street, rather than the argument that certain groups might put forward.
The Convener
I think that the committee has covered the issues that we wanted to cover. If we have other questions, we will contact you in writing in due course. In the meantime, thank you both for your evidence, which has got us started on the process.
11:18 Meeting suspended.11:24 On resuming—
23 May 2017
23 May 2017
6 June 2017
13 June 2017
27 June 2017
What is secondary legislation?
Secondary legislation is sometimes called 'subordinate' or 'delegated' legislation. It can be used to:
- bring a section or sections of a law that’s already been passed, into force
- give details of how a law will be applied
- make changes to the law without a new Act having to be passed
An Act is a Bill that’s been approved by Parliament and given Royal Assent (formally approved).
Delegated Powers and Law Reform committee
This committee looks at the powers of this Bill to allow the Scottish Government or others to create 'secondary legislation' or regulations.
It met to discuss the Bill in public on:
23 May 2017:
- read the official transcript of the meeting
- watch a video of the meeting
12 December 2017:
- read the official transcript of the meeting
- watch a video of the meeting
Read the Stage 1 report by the Delegated Powers and Law Reform committee published on 24 May 2017.
Debate on the Bill
A debate for MSPs to discuss what the Bill aims to do and how it'll do it.
Stage 1 debate on the Bill transcript
The Deputy Presiding Officer (Christine Grahame)
The next item of business is a debate on motion S5M-08062, in the name of Roseanna Cunningham, on stage 1 of the Wild Animals in Travelling Circuses (Scotland) Bill.
15:03The Cabinet Secretary for Environment, Climate Change and Land Reform (Roseanna Cunningham)
I first thank the Environment, Climate Change and Land Reform Committee for its consideration of the bill. The committee took a great deal of evidence from a wide range of stakeholders and produced a very detailed stage 1 report, especially for such a short and concise bill. The Scottish Government has responded to the committee’s recommendations and I would now like to explain what the bill will and—perhaps of equal interest—will not do, and why I am bringing the bill before Parliament.
The bill will, quite simply, make it an offence for a circus operator to cause or permit a wild animal to be used in a travelling circus in Scotland. There has been growing concern for many years about the use of wild animals in circuses. Although such circuses have not recently visited Scotland, they continue to perform in the rest of the United Kingdom and across much of Europe. The bill is a Scottish National Party manifesto commitment. Scottish Labour and the Green Party had similar commitments, as did the United Kingdom Conservative Party.
The bill will address the widespread concerns that led to these commitments by preventing travelling circuses from ever showing wild animals in Scotland in the future. It will also demonstrate to the wider world that Scotland is one of the growing number of countries that no longer condone use of wild animals in that fashion.
Previous concern about wild animals in travelling circuses focused on perceived animal welfare issues. In 2007, the Radford report, which was the product of extensive evidence gathering by a committee that was appointed by the United Kingdom Government, ruled out a ban on welfare grounds. By 2016, the academic Dorning and her colleagues considered that, nearly 10 years on, there was sufficient new evidence on welfare to support a ban. However, such evidence varies greatly according to the type of animal, and much work is focused on a few naturally wide-ranging animals—in particular, tigers and elephants.
However, when the Scottish Government began work on the issue we recognised that there are much wider ethical concerns that apply to use of all wild animals in travelling circuses. The Scottish Government consultation in 2014 therefore asked specific questions about the potential for a ban on purely ethical grounds. The response was overwhelmingly in favour of a ban—98 per cent of respondents supported a ban on performance and 96.4 per cent supported a ban on exhibition. Many responses from individuals and organisations gave detailed replies to the ethical questions that were posed.
The bill seeks to address three main ethical concerns. The first is the impact on respect for animals. Most people now consider it outdated and morally wrong to make wild animals perform tricks that they would not perform naturally, and to display them in an unnatural environment simply to entertain the viewing public, thereby seeing animals as an entertainment commodity rather than as sentient beings.
The results of the 2014 consultation also showed that 89.5 per cent of respondents considered that the performances that are required of wild animals—not just their keeping—compromise respect for the animals concerned. In addition, more than 94 per cent of respondents considered that exposure to such acts has an adverse impact on the development of respectful and responsible attitudes to animals, particularly in children.
I am grateful for the additional engagement with young people that was undertaken by the committee, its clerks and the Scottish Parliament education service, and I welcome the results of the survey of young visitors to the Parliament. That survey showed that, of the 1,045 children and young people who were asked whether it should be an offence to use wild animals in travelling circuses, 81 per cent were in favour of a ban. That work echoes the results of the Scottish Government’s recent survey, which was carried out in conjunction with Young Scot. The clear majority of young people who responded to our survey—80 per cent—were in favour of the prohibition.
The second area of ethical concern is the impact of the travelling circus life on wild animals. In response to the 2014 consultation, more than 90 per cent of respondents considered that the ability of wild animals to undertake natural behaviours is compromised in the travelling circus environment. Many people regard that as morally wrong, regardless of whether it can be proved that the animals suffer, because it compromises the integrity of their wild nature and, therefore, their wellbeing.
The third area of concern is the balance between ethical costs and wider benefits. I know that other types of animal use cause concern about the environment in which the animals are kept, how far they are transported and what acts they are expected to perform. However, despite there being a range of individual views on the ethical challenges of other uses of animals, it is generally accepted that there are clear benefits to be obtained from conservation of exotic species and from food production. Those benefits are generally assumed to balance out the ethical costs.
A query was raised in the committee’s report about why the bill addresses only travelling circuses. I believe that use of wild animals in travelling circuses is unique among all the uses. It is the only situation that raises significant ethical concerns in all three of the areas that I outlined. Other types of animal use could give rise to unease in one or two areas of ethical concern, but not all three.
The bill will not stop use in travelling circuses of domestic animals including dogs and horses, or use of wild animals in displays in static circuses and zoos and at public gatherings. Penguin parades at zoos, birds of prey demonstrations at fairs and reindeer displays will not be affected. The use of wild animals in television and film production will not be affected. The programme for government includes a commitment to develop new licensing requirements to protect the welfare of wild and domesticated animals that are used for public performance or display, which will address a number of those other uses. Those requirements will replace the somewhat dated Performing Animals (Regulation) Act 1925.
I would now like to address some of the issues that are raised in the committee’s report. The committee is concerned about the definition of “wild animal”. However, the definition in the bill is clear and easily understood, and has been at least since the Zoo Licensing Act 1981. The definition includes two parts: a requirement that an animal not be
“of a kind that is domesticated”
and, equally important, a requirement that it is not
“commonly domesticated in the British Islands.”
Even if a circus was to argue that, in its opinion, its lions or tigers had become domesticated across successive generations of use, such animals would still be caught by the ban because they are clearly not
“commonly domesticated in the British Islands.”
Furthermore, I do not believe that including in the bill a definitive list of wild animals that are covered would be either proportionate or effective in addressing the aims of the bill. Nevertheless, I will seek to provide ministers with a power to create secondary legislation that is subject to affirmative procedure in which particular kinds of animals can be classified as wild or commonly domesticated in the British isles, or not, for the purposes of the bill. That power could be used in a targeted manner in any unforeseeable cases of genuine doubt in the future.
The committee has also expressed particular concern about the definition of “circus” in the bill. An ordinary meaning allows for flexibility and common sense at both enforcement and prosecution stages. A specific definition is, by its very nature, frozen in time and risks, because of its rigidity, capturing or excluding unintended enterprises. It could also provide a clear signpost to the potential loopholes that would be caused by that rigidity. We must not be naive: listing the constituent parts would also lay out a path to circumventing the ban.
There is a common public understanding of what “circus” means. In the 2014 consultation, the respondents did not have any difficulty understanding the word, and it is the word that is commonly used in other legislation that covers similar areas. I strongly believe that the approach that we have taken is most likely to achieve the purpose of the bill.
In the meantime, my officials will continue to engage with stakeholders to draft guidance for the bill. That should, I believe, be sufficient to allay unfounded fears about the definition and the danger of it being misinterpreted to include what are clearly not travelling circus activities.
I hope that my opening remarks explain why we are taking forward this important, proportionate and simple bill. It seeks to prohibit a singular practice that is morally objectionable to the people of Scotland: it seeks to do no more and no less. A more detailed Government response is available for people to consider; I think that most committee members will have had it relayed to them earlier today.
I move,
That the Parliament agrees to the general principles of the Wild Animals in Travelling Circuses (Scotland) Bill.
The Deputy Presiding Officer
Thank you, cabinet secretary. I call Graeme Dey, convener of the Environment, Climate Change and Land Reform Committee, to speak on behalf of the committee.
15:13Graeme Dey (Angus South) (SNP)
I am delighted to speak in the debate on behalf of the committee. I thank the members of the committee for their efforts in producing the unanimous report on the bill, all the stakeholders who gave evidence, and the clerks to the committee.
The committee recommends to Parliament the general principles of the Wild Animals in Travelling Circuses (Scotland) Bill and is supportive of its aims. However, the committee believes that it will achieve those aims only if several key concerns are addressed. Let me explore the specifics of those concerns and react, in so far as I can do so, to the response to them that we have recently received from the Government.
The most significant of the concerns is about the definitions in the bill. It defines a “wild animal” as
“an animal other than one of a kind that is commonly domesticated in the British Islands.”
It also provides a definition of “domesticated”, stating:
“an animal is of a kind that is domesticated if the behaviour, life cycle or physiology of animals of that kind has been altered as a result of the breeding or living conditions of multiple generations of animals of that kind being under human control.”
The committee believes that it would be helpful if the definition of “wild animal” in section 2 was made clearer. The Scottish Government suggested in evidence to the committee that a flexible definition is appropriate, which was supported by some stakeholders. However, local authorities and circus operators feel that the classification of animals as domesticated or otherwise is open to interpretation.
Local authorities also suggested that there may be circumstances in which veterinary assistance would be required to classify an animal in order to ascertain whether an offence had been committed. Although the committee accepts that flexibility can be helpful in some circumstances, we do not believe that operators and local authorities should be in any doubt as to what would be considered a wild animal.
The definition of domestication was also the subject of debate in the committee’s consideration of the bill. People who oppose the bill suggested that animals living in circus environments could be domesticated—and therefore not covered by the bill—due to changes in their behaviour being developed through their having been reared in captivity, including when it had taken place over several generations.
Similarly, those who support the bill proposed that the definition be removed in order not to suggest that domestication could be achieved from captive breeding and rearing over time. The fact that such views exist persuaded the committee that further consideration might be worth while, in order to nail down what is and what is not a “wild animal”.
The committee also feels that the rationale behind omitting a list of animals that would be covered should be revisited by the Scottish Government. The committee has suggested that such a list would provide clarity and could, if the processes are right, be updated to react to unforeseen circumstances.
I note the cabinet secretary’s comments in her formal response to the committee, which she has repeated this afternoon. I welcome her willingness at least to explore the development of an amendment to provide a regulation-making power to include or exclude animals that become the subject of genuine doubt as to whether they are wild. Members will want to reflect on her wider response on that, in due course.
I will continue with the theme of definitions. Perhaps the biggest elephant in the room—I suspect that will not be last pun we hear this afternoon—was the omission of a definition of “circus”. Although a definition of what constitutes a “travelling circus” is included, it is undermined by the lack of a clear idea of what is meant by “circus”.
The bill has been introduced to address the public’s ethical concerns about the use of wild animals in travelling circuses. The most recent such enterprise to visit Scotland that caused the public to express their views on the subject to the Scottish Government—a display, while they were wintering here, of lions and tigers from a show that contains only lions and tigers—would not, in the view of the committee, be covered by the bill. Similarly, the committee received several representations from stakeholders from both sides of the debate to the effect that any ambiguity would mean that the bill could apply to enterprises beyond those that it is intended will be caught by the bill, in particular due to the application of the ethical arguments for the bill to other animal acts.
The committee believes that the bill should be clear as to what acts will be covered. The committee heard evidence from Scottish Government officials suggesting that the term “circus” would be interpreted by courts using the “Oxford English Dictionary” definition, which includes references to elements such as “a circular arena” and “acrobatic” performances. The committee was also told that the omission of any one of those elements could mean that an act using wild animals would not be considered to be a circus. The ordinary or commonly understood definition was also advocated in evidence to the committee.
Not only does the committee believe that the bill’s reliance on such a definition opens the door to its purpose being undermined, it also considers that approach to legislating to be unsatisfactory. The law should be clear for participants and for enforcers without the need for immediate recourse to legal challenge. Let me pose a scenario: let us say that a show containing only lions and tigers was set up in a non-circular cage inside a major exhibition arena and no horses or acrobats were involved. Would that, beyond doubt, be captured by the bill?
The committee has recommended that a definition of “circus” be included in the bill. However, I welcome—as I am sure will the committee—the commitment to producing accompanying guidance with examples of what constitutes a circus, and to consider amendments that define “circus” without inadvertently capturing the likes of birds of prey displays or festive reindeer, or allowing circus enterprises to modify their offering in order to circumvent the ban.
The committee recommends that the accompanying guidance be ready as soon as the bill is passed so that there is no point at which legislation is in place without local authorities having supporting clarity. I hope that the cabinet secretary will confirm her intention in that respect, in due course.
Evidence to the committee suggested that the definition of “circus operator” should be extended to reflect the everyday hierarchies and employment scenarios that are at work in circuses. Having received the Government’s response to the report only last night, members will want to take time to reflect on its comments on that.
Although definitions occupied most of the evidence that was received on the substance of the bill, local authorities also explored proposals on potential additional enforcement powers. The committee proposed that such powers should be considered by the Scottish Government. The Government has provided a detailed response on that, on which members—individually and, perhaps, collectively—will come to a view.
Representations were also made to the committee on the potential wider impacts of the bill on the entertainment industry. The committee received evidence suggesting that moves to restrict the use of wild animals in travelling circuses could have an impact on, for example, Scotland’s attractiveness as a filming location. The committee has highlighted that evidence in its stage 1 report. The cabinet secretary has helpfully acknowledged the validity of such concerns, in as much as she will issue additional clarifying guidance reiterating that the bill is intended to capture only travelling circuses.
I have focused mainly on the substance of the bill, but I wonder, Presiding Officer, whether by way of conclusion I can turn briefly to the issue of further legislation on performing animals.
The Deputy Presiding Officer
Yes. We have a little time in hand.
Graeme Dey
On the day on which the bill was introduced, the cabinet secretary wrote to the committee to highlight the intention to review the operation of the Performing Animals (Regulation) Act 1925. Although that is welcome, there remain concerns about whether it was best to introduce the bill in isolation instead of including it as a part of more comprehensive approach.
Similarly, we sought assurances that at the end of the process there will be no gaps in clarity on whether the use of wild animals in static circuses is to be addressed. The detail that has been offered in response, indicating that new licensing requirements are planned to protect the welfare of wild and domesticated animals that are used in public performances and displays other than in zoos—which will cover static circuses—is again to be welcomed, as is the confirmation that a consultation will be undertaken and the affirmative procedure used for the subordinate legislation.
Finally, the committee believes that the decision to frame the bill based on an ethical basis has been difficult to justify, particularly in the light of evidence that would have supported a welfare-based approach. The committee does not question the value of the ethical arguments against the use of wild animals in travelling circuses, but it does not consider that they have been well utilised and, as I have stated, believes that the wisdom of what has been described as a “piecemeal” approach should be questioned. However, that does not detract from the fact—
Roseanna Cunningham
Will the member give way?
The Deputy Presiding Officer
I am sorry, cabinet secretary—the member must wind up now. [Interruption.] That is a fearsome look you are giving me, cabinet secretary, but I think that we really must move on. [Interruption.] Excuse me a minute—I am conferring with the clerk.
You may take a brief intervention, Mr Dey, but you will have to wind up very quickly after that.
Roseanna Cunningham
I would just like to ask my colleague whether he would seriously have preferred to have delayed all this for a number of years, because that would be the consequence of what he has just said.
The Deputy Presiding Officer
Briefly, convener.
Graeme Dey
As the cabinet secretary knows, I am reflecting the views of the whole committee, not just my own. I take her point on board, but that view was reached unanimously by the committee.
Regardless of what the report says, it does not detract from the committee’s support for the bill’s aims, and it looks forward to working with the Scottish Government to ensure that the aims can be delivered as effectively as possible.
15:22Donald Cameron (Highlands and Islands) (Con)
I commend the committee’s report and the convener’s comments, which we have just heard. The Scottish Conservatives will support the Government’s motion, and I want to reiterate many of the points that the convener has already made.
However, before I do so, I feel it necessary to point out that it is customary for the Government to respond in writing to the committee’s report prior to the stage 1 debate. Such a letter arrived in my email inbox shortly after 9 o’clock this morning, but, with the greatest respect, I think that a 14-page letter containing detailed points and arriving a mere six hours or so before the debate is insufficient. The Government’s failure to give adequate notice of a position that committee members can analyse and scrutinise properly respects neither the committee nor the wider work of the Parliament. Given that the timetable to which we are operating on the bill is being driven by the Government, not the committee, having a stage 1 debate with only the committee report to go on and limited time to digest the Government’s lengthy response means, inevitably, that the debate itself is prejudiced. I, for one, have simply not had enough time in the course of the day to go through the Government’s letter in detail.
That aside, I want, first, to assure the chamber that the Scottish Conservatives are committed to the highest standards of animal welfare. We are clear that those who abuse and inflict cruelty on animals should be punished in accordance with the law. The Scottish Conservatives support a ban on the use of wild animals in travelling circuses on ethical and animal welfare grounds. We do not believe that the majority of the public are either comfortable or satisfied with that on-going practice, albeit that there is no evidence that such a practice is under way in Scotland at this time.
The Wild Animals in Travelling Circuses (Scotland) Bill was discussed at a committee meeting on 27 June. As I did not join the committee until after that date, I was not there in person, but my colleagues Finlay Carson, Maurice Golden and Alexander Burnett were present. At that meeting, the committee’s Conservative members made it clear to the cabinet secretary that, in tackling the welfare of wild animals in travelling circuses, the bill did not go far enough; it needed to tackle the welfare of animals in static ones, too.
Let me move on to the bill. We support the principles behind the bill, but I regret to say that it requires much improvement. Broad criticisms of the bill include that it risks criminalising shows and events that have a good track record of animal welfare. Many examples of such events have been given, but they include reindeer at Christmas markets, falconry displays and llamas at the Royal Highland Show. This issue is a major concern across the country, but particularly for those of us who represent rural areas, where agricultural shows and Highland games are often part of the lifeblood of the summer economy. The cabinet secretary was trenchant in her views about that in committee and again today, but I venture that the bill does not give similar comfort.
I will concentrate on a couple of areas, the first of which is legal definitions. I can almost sense former colleagues in the legal profession rubbing their hands at the prospect of this legislation, given the issues of interpretation that the bill throws up in its present state. Strangely for a bill that is all about circuses, it does not define the word “circus”. As the cabinet secretary said, there is sometimes sense in having a general, flexible definition, but I submit that there is not in this case. The bill defines “travelling circus”, albeit that the word “circus” in that phrase is not defined. “Travelling circus” is currently defined as the public’s perception of a travelling circus, which is vague, open to all sorts of interpretations and risks criminalising people who put on a show or event to which animals have to be transported. That leaves anyone who tries to comprehend the bill in great difficulty.
There is also an issue with the term “wild animal”. The current definition of “wild animal” is an animal that is not “commonly domesticated” in the UK. Where does that leave reindeer from Scandinavia or llamas from South America, which would be classed as wild animals and might therefore be banned from being on show at public events?
Given those issues, I urge the Government to consider whether having a detailed list of defined species, which it could add to or subtract from at will through secondary legislation, would be a more sensible way forward. That might avoid some of the issues that my committee colleagues have mentioned and which I am sure others will go on to mention.
Unlike the Foreign Secretary, I will resist the temptation in closing to make reference to a roaring lion, but let me be clear that we accept that robust legislation must be in place to ensure that wild animals are properly protected. We welcome the creation of the offence and support the overarching principles of the bill, but it needs serious work before it is in a fit state to be enacted.
The Deputy Presiding Officer
Thank you very much, Mr Cameron. I hope that we have run out of animal references, but we probably have not. I call David Stewart to open on behalf of Labour—have I just sabotaged something?
15:27David Stewart (Highlands and Islands) (Lab)
Thank you, Presiding Officer. I rise to speak in support of the general principles of the bill. However, a number of recommendations that have been proposed will, in my view as a member of the Environment, Climate Change and Land Reform Committee, improve the bill at stage 2. Like Donald Cameron, I have only just received the cabinet secretary’s response to the committee’s recommendations, so I have not had the opportunity fully to assess the Government’s potential position at stage 2. Nevertheless, other members have referred to a number of key strands, including animal welfare versus ethics, the scope of the bill, definitions and enforcement.
Animal welfare organisations such as the well-respected OneKind believe that there are strong animal welfare justifications for a ban on the use of wild animals in travelling circuses. In its public petition to the Parliament, OneKind stated:
“A travelling circus combines a number of specific characteristics (including extreme confinement, frequent transport and relocation, and training for performance) which create an environment where the needs of wild animals cannot be met. This combination is not found elsewhere, even in zoos where wild animals are kept captive. It increases the risk of stress and, in some cases, ill-treatment of the animals, and makes effective inspection and regulation very difficult.”
Investigations into UK circuses in recent years have documented shocking examples of severe habitual abuse of animals. For example, in 1999, individuals from Chipperfield’s Circus were found guilty of cruelty to a chimpanzee and an elephant, and in 2009, Animal Defenders International filmed the beating of elephants prior to performance at the Great British Circus.
Earlier this year, a further exposé by the same organisation showed an aged arthritic elephant named Anne being repeatedly beaten and abused by a member of staff in the Bobby Roberts Super Circus. Video footage also showed a camel being spat at while tethered in its stall. Both of those animals have now been rehomed. Prior to that, however, they were regularly brought on tour to Scotland. The elephant was too ill to perform traditional tricks but was used for photographs in the circus ring, and the camel was also exhibited after performances.
Around half of Scottish local authorities have a policy of not letting public land to circuses with wild animals. However, the same circuses were shown to have used wild animals in defiance of specific licensing or a licence condition that was imposed by some councils.
Since the time of the public petition, an authoritative review of the animal welfare issues—by Jo Dorning and others—has been published by the Welsh Government, and was referred to several times during evidence that was given to our committee.
In its 2014 consultation, the Scottish Government acknowledged the strength of public concern about animal welfare and the strong body of opinion that the animals’ five welfare needs, as set out in the Animal Health and Welfare (Scotland) Act 2006, could not be catered for in relation to wild animals in a travelling circus environment.
Other members have talked about definitions, and I want to say a little about that issue as well. The Scottish Government’s position is that anyone enforcing the legislation would know what a circus was and that the courts would be well placed to interpret that if there should be any doubt. However, I note the points that were made by local authorities regarding enforcement activities, where the court process is only the culmination of the process. Council officers need to have a clear basis for initiating action and must feel confident that the legislation is applicable before they act.
The discussion in the committee referred to the “Oxford English Dictionary” definition. However, that could cause confusion to anyone who was seeking to rely on Scottish Parliament proceedings for an interpretation. Under the circumstances, I endorse what the convener said about the necessity of including in the bill a definition of the word “circus”.
The definition of the term “wild animals” in the Dangerous Wild Animals Act 1974 provides an interesting starting point, but it would require refinement. The bill’s current definition of “wild animal” refers to an animal that is not
“commonly domesticated in the British Islands”,
which accords with the existing definitions in the Animal Health and Welfare (Scotland) Act 2006 and the Zoo Licensing Act 1981. However, the definition of “domesticated” in section 2(2) is unclear and requires amendment. Domestication is a process that takes hundreds or thousands of years, and that is not reflected in the concept of “multiple generations of animals”.
I am conscious of time, so I close by saying that local authorities need to be resourced to deliver on their animal welfare powers or they will not be able to use them effectively.
I believe that the bill is a step in the right direction for animal welfare. I urge the Scottish Government to make improvements to the bill at stage 2, reflecting the recommendations of the Environment, Climate Change and Land Reform Committee. However, I support the general principles of the bill.
The Deputy Presiding Officer
We come to the open debate, and I ask for speeches of four minutes. One member who is due to speak has forgotten to press their request-to-speak button—I will not name them.
15:32Emma Harper (South Scotland) (SNP)
I am a member of the Environment, Climate Change and Land Reform Committee, which is responsible for scrutinising the bill, and I thank the members, the clerks and everyone else who has been involved for the work that they have done.
The Scottish Government has put forward an argument for a ban on wild animals in travelling circuses, using ethical grounds. That is outlined in the policy memorandum, and I support the Scottish Government’s bill. Today, I will focus on the ethical arguments.
The three areas that it has been suggested have ethical implications are the impact of travelling environments on an animal’s nature or behaviour; respect for animals; and the ethical costs versus the benefits. There is also the argument that of the five freedoms, which were developed by the Farm Animal Welfare Committee, the fourth and fifth freedoms—the
“Freedom to Express Normal Behaviour”
and the
“Freedom from Fear and Distress”—
are where the ethical concerns lie.
In considering the impact of the travelling component of the circus, we must consider the stress and trauma to the animals of being coerced out of the environment that they are normally in and being loaded into a vehicle, which is a strange, alternative environment, and the further stress and fear of the travelling itself—the movement, the vibration, the noise, the lights and the smells. Mike Flynn of the Scottish Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals stated in evidence to the committee that the loading and unloading of animals was the issue that caused the stress. The requirement to secure animals, especially big cats, to keep the animals safe—and to keep the public safe from any potential escape—is also a concern.
I struggle to see how any of that could satisfy the animal’s need for
“Freedom to Express Normal Behaviour”
and the
“Freedom from Fear and Distress”.
The ethical concern around respect is whether it is right and respectful to coax, coerce, train and tame wild beasts to perform for human entertainment or amusement. It is not normal behaviour for wild animals to perform for humans under the direction of another human.
I asked the cabinet secretary whether it is
“just time that we stopped having wild animals, such as tigers and lions, in circuses”.—[Official Report, Environment, Climate Change and Land Reform Committee, 27 June 2017; c 8.]
That is the third aspect that I will speak about today, with that same question: is it time? There was a time, about 100 years ago, when a wee lass who grew up in Stranraer, like I did, would have no way to see wild animals, such as lions or tigers, except for something like a travelling circus. There was no television or internet; there were no David Attenborough DVDs. That is no longer the case in 2017. I struggle to see the potential educational benefits outweighing the ethical costs.
There is already a history of displays or exhibitions in circuses being stopped on ethical grounds. We no longer display “Siamese twins”—conjoined twins—in circuses. We no longer exhibit “The Wolfman” or “The Bearded Lady”—that is a medical condition called hypertrichosis. We no longer display persons with birth defects such as Joseph Merrick, who was known around the world as the elephant man. There was a time when people like him were displayed in travelling circuses for the amazement, amusement and entertainment of paying customers, but, eventually, the time came when that archaic practice was no longer acceptable ethically.
I welcome the bill—I get the ethical argument and I get the fact that restricting the freedom to exhibit normal behaviour, which is what happens in a travelling circus environment, is not ethical, whether the animal is a lion, tiger, elephant or any other wild animal. Wild animals should not be tamed, trained or otherwise coerced to perform for the amusement of human beings. It is unethical and it is time to stop it. Nineteen countries have already implemented a ban.
The Deputy Presiding Officer
I am afraid that you must conclude now.
Emma Harper
I will conclude, Presiding Officer. Nineteen countries have already banned it, so it is time for Scotland to lead the way for the rest of the UK.
The Deputy Presiding Officer
Sometimes I do not win. [Laughter.]
15:37Peter Chapman (North East Scotland) (Con)
The debate is about wild animals, so for once I do not need to declare an interest. [Laughter.] To be honest, when I am in a pen with a newly calved coo, I sometimes think that I would be better off with a lion.
I wonder why the bill is being pushed through Parliament, as Scotland has not seen a travelling circus that uses wild animals for many years; there is no possibility that we will see one any time soon. Nevertheless, I welcome the bill and I support the principle that a circus should not be allowed to use wild animals as performance pieces. However, although I welcome what the bill is trying to do, there are far too many loopholes and a lack of clear definitions. It is poorly drafted and simply not fit for purpose.
One of my main concerns is that the current bill might criminalise shows and events that display animals yet have a good record of animal welfare and are ethically sound—many local businesses might be concerned. The Ythanbank reindeer park at Ellon allows children to visit Santa’s real reindeer during the festive season. In May, alpacas from a farm in Fife travelled to the University of Dundee for students to visit in a destressing exercise to emphasise the importance of maintaining good mental health. Will all those travelling and seasonal events be impacted by the bill? Unless it is amended and more detail and clarity are provided on its poorly defined terms and what a “wild animal” is, all of those events are at risk.
The bill defines a “wild animal” as
“an animal other than one of a kind that is commonly domesticated in the British Islands.”
That is open to interpretation. The Royal Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals defined wild animals used in circuses when it stated:
“Some circuses in Britain currently tour with wild animals, including zebras, lions, snakes, tigers and camels”.
I believe that the Scottish Government has a duty to take note of that and to list the animals that the bill seeks to protect. The bill should not be subject to interpretation. It needs to be much more clearly defined.
The bill provides no clear definition of “travelling circus” either, leaving it open to debate and the public’s and laymen’s perception of a travelling circus. Again, that is not something that should be subject to interpretation. There is no mention of static circuses, which is yet another loophole that would see the bill failing animals if a static circus were set up in Scotland.
The bill fails to address the issue of transportation. There is nothing in it to stop travelling circuses moving through Scotland, as long as they do not perform. For example, they could travel through Scotland to get a ferry to Ireland.
I agree with the committee that the bill as drafted does not fully address the issues that it is supposed to cover and is at risk of capturing animal performances and shows that it might not be intended to capture. It is vital that the Government addresses those issues.
It is the Government’s job to introduce clear legislation that does what it sets out to do, not legislation with loopholes and definitions that are subject to public perception—that is lazy and unacceptable. The Government needs to do better for the clear benefit of the animals that it wishes to protect.
15:41Clare Adamson (Motherwell and Wishaw) (SNP)
As an elected parliamentarian and councillor, I have been pleased to make links over the years with the Scottish Showmen’s Guild. On a number of occasions, I have attended their annual lunch to hear about their history, traditions and commitment to the entertainment of our communities. On one occasion, I was thrilled to discover that the grandfather of my host had been a lion tamer in London. I say “thrilled” because it conjured feelings of the unexpected, the bizarre, the amazing and the exotic. As the granddaughter of a steelworker, I was suddenly within touching distance of a romantic, dangerous, alien history and a lifestyle that I knew of only from my story books and imaginings as a child, but which was so real for the families of the Showmen’s Guild. I pictured Mucha-esque billboards with ringmasters in fabulous redder-than-red jackets, cartoon-like strongmen and exotic animal displays—images that are memories of a thankfully bygone era.
At a Showmen’s Guild fair today, someone would not even find a goldfish in a bag as a prize. That was another era, and our values have changed, as my colleague Emma Harper so eloquently outlined. Modern society no longer has a taste or tolerance for the thrills and exhibits of the past. Documentaries such as “Blackfish” have altered our views on the display, captivity and ethical use of animals.
I am not a member of the committee, but I thank it for its substantial work on the bill at stage 1 and I am delighted that it supports the general principles. I would like to drill down into one area that the committee examined, which is the meaning of “wild animal”. It is extremely important that we get that right.
My interest in the area comes from the work of Russian geneticist Dmitry Belyayev. He hypothesised that the anatomical and physiological changes seen in domesticated animals could be the result of selection based on behavioural traits. He conducted an experiment on silver foxes over 40 generations. Animals were selected for the breeding process based on temperament and there was a control group. He rated each fox’s tendency to approach an experimenter standing in front of its home pen, as well as each fox’s tendency to bite or be aggressive towards the experimenters. They were able to breed out aggressive and fearful traits and change the foxes by selecting fewer than one fifth of them for breeding.
There were changes to the appearance and behaviour of the animals that were bred to be domesticated. They wagged their tails and they were happy or excited to see people. Further, their fear response to new people or objects was reduced. The first physiological change detected was in the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis. That system is responsible for the control of adrenaline, which is a hormone that is produced in response to stress and controls fear-related responses. The domesticated foxes had significantly lower adrenaline levels.
I give that example to the chamber because it explains domestication and informs us about what it—as opposed to training—means. To my mind, genetic and biological changes that took hundreds of thousands of years to make in domesticated breeds such as dogs cannot possibly have been made in animals—such as those held in circuses—that have not been selectively bred from a very small group. They are wild animals, and should be considered as such.
15:45Colin Smyth (South Scotland) (Lab)
Presiding Officer, as your deputy on the cross-party group on animal welfare, it is a privilege to speak in a debate that I hope will take Scotland a step forward in ending the cruelty and distress that are inflicted on animals in travelling circuses. Later today, I hope that we will be unanimous in our vote to approve the principles of the bill, so that we can progress to more detailed consideration and—crucially—amendment.
This week saw the birthday of one of the greatest practitioners of non-violence: Mahatma Gandhi. He did not distinguish who he included in that non-violence, and he once said:
“The greatness of a nation and its moral progress can be judged by the way its animals are treated.”
There is nothing great about the treatment of animals in a travelling circus, from either an ethical or an animal welfare point of view. The animals are faced with cramped and restrictive accommodation, without the space to recreate their natural behaviour, to explore, to socialise and to find food as they would in the wild. From stress, to ligament damage, to disease, the behavioural, psychological and physical impacts that such conditions have on the animals are clear, as is the impact of the work that they are forced to do in order to perform. So-called tricks are learned through intensive training and there are many well-documented instances of trainers using abuse and negative reinforcement.
The performances themselves, in the presence of human audiences, often cause distress to the animals. I am sure that we are all aware of examples of that in our constituencies and regions, and—I say this for the benefit of Peter Chapman—not that long ago. Although I did not attend, I remember the Bobby Roberts Super Circus touring Dumfries and Galloway with its aged, arthritic elephant, named Anne, who was mentioned earlier by David Stewart. Having been taken from the wild in Sri Lanka, Anne was used for entertainment for more than 50 years, right up until 2011, when her last trick was to stand and pose for photographs with audience members for £5 a time, before she was eventually rehomed after protests at the appalling treatment that she received. That example shows that existing regulation or monitoring of the industry did not and does not work and that, without a full ban, the mistreatment of animals such as Anne is inevitable.
That is a view that appears to have overwhelming support. Public consultation on the bill showed that 98 per cent of respondents supported a ban on travelling circuses keeping wild animals for performance and 96 per cent believed that a ban is the only way to end such cruelty. Respondents were clear in their comments about the physical and psychological cruelty to which animals are subjected, describing it as “archaic” and “barbaric”.
The bill is a positive step towards relegating that cruelty to the history books. However, I very much commend the work of the Environment, Climate Change and Land Reform Committee in highlighting problematic definitions, potential loopholes and, ultimately, the need for the bill to be strengthened, and I welcome the 20 recommendations in its report. In particular, I echo the committee’s calls for the bill to include a list, which can be easily updated and amended, of animals covered by the legislation, to ensure that ambiguity over the distinction between domesticated and wild animals does not prevent the bill from working as intended.
I also reiterate the importance of not only making enforcement of the bill statutory, but taking steps to ensure that local authorities have the resources to enforce it. Council officials expressed to the committee their concerns about the practicality of enforcement, and Mike Flynn of the SSPCA expressed his doubt over whether enforcement powers would be used. The discretionary aspect of enforcement should be removed, but if the burden of enforcement is to be devolved to local authorities, they must also receive the necessary resources.
I hope that the Scottish Government will accept the changes to the bill that the committee has proposed, so that we will have a thorough and robust ban. I understand that the Government has now responded to the committee, but that that was only a few hours ago. I point out to members who are not members of the committee that we have not yet seen that response.
The bill is a step in the right direction for animal welfare but, in all sincerity, it is one that is badly needed. The failure of the Government to ban electronic shock devices or to consult on a ban on snaring, and its recent decision to reintroduce tail docking, together with concerns that it will not go beyond Lord Bonomy’s recommendations and ensure a proper ban on hunting, all seriously undermine its credibility when it comes to animal welfare. We badly need steps such as the bill if our “moral progress” as a nation is indeed to be judged in a positive light.
15:49Mark Ruskell (Mid Scotland and Fife) (Green)
As a member of the Environment, Climate Change and Land Reform Committee, I join the convener in thanking all the stakeholders who gave evidence and the clerks, who did a great job in herding the evidence into another excellent report for the committee.
This should be a victorious moment, because banning wild animals in travelling circuses is absolutely the right thing to do on both ethical and animal welfare grounds. Emma Harper really nailed the ethical argument in her speech. Green MSPs will back the bill at stage 1.
I moved an amendment to the Animal Health and Welfare (Scotland) Bill more than a decade ago that would have introduced a ban but, at the time, it was supported only—curiously—by SNP members. A ban is long needed and long overdue.
However, what should be a moment of celebration about the Wild Animals in Travelling Circuses (Scotland) Bill feels more like a headache because of some of the poor drafting. Many of us on the committee who started with very different positions on the bill have ended up sharing some of the same grounds for concern.
Let us take two of the most fundamental definitions. What is a “circus”? What is a “wild animal”? In evidence to the committee, the Scottish Government officials said that if it looks like a circus, walks like a circus and talks like a circus, then it is a circus. They also said that we should not expect people to “overthink” the definition of a circus—except, of course, that there are people who are paid exactly to do that, called lawyers.
We heard from a witness with a performance act with lions and tigers. He certainly talked like a circus when he gave evidence to the committee, but no one can tell him whether he would be a circus under the bill because he does not have a tent or clowns. Simply leaving it for the courts to decide is not good enough.
On the definition of “wild animal”, again, there needs to be much more clarity. The word “domesticated” is unhelpful and could be used by circus operators to argue that animals that have evolved over millions of years in the world are actually domesticated because they have lived in captive training environments for several generations. Certainly the taxonomy required to add a list of wild animals to the bill would not be too hard—a list would not have to name every individual wild animal on planet earth.
Given that more than a decade has passed since the wild animals in circuses issue was raised, I am perplexed about why the Scottish Government has not followed the Welsh Government route of updating legislation for all animal performances—of which travelling circuses are just one type—at the same time. That would have addressed the problem that the bill has in targeting the plight of wild animals in travelling circuses while simply ignoring those in static circuses.
We heard contradictory evidence from the cabinet secretary about the importance of the travelling environment being an ethical concern rather than an animal welfare issue, which had us, quite frankly, chasing our tails. Surely it would have been better to bring in a proper framework that places animal performances into categories that see them banned, regulated further or left alone.
The ethical basis for the bill was based on circuses being the top public concern, but no consultation or polling was conducted to understand the public’s view on greyhound racing, for example; yet those and many other types of animal performances raise ethical and welfare questions of varying degrees that need to be addressed.
The Government has much to do to make the bill look like a ban, walk like a ban and talk like a ban. I look forward to amendments being introduced at stage 2.
15:53Liam McArthur (Orkney Islands) (LD)
I thank Graeme Dey and his colleagues on the Environment, Climate Change and Land Reform Committee for the work that they have done.
I recognise the overwhelming support in favour of a ban on the use of wild animals in circuses, and the Liberal Democrats will gladly support the bill’s general principles later today. We welcome the bill but, as many others have identified, we believe that there is room and considerable scope for improvement of it. The committee has helpfully highlighted a number of those areas.
The cabinet secretary reiterated the ethical basis for the ban. There are clearly ethical reasons for such a ban, but the committee is right to raise awareness of the shortcomings of that approach. Furthermore, the ethical basis is difficult to justify in the light of the evidence, which supports a welfare-based approach.
The British Veterinary Association has reminded us that the welfare of animals in circuses is emblematic of how we treat all animals that are under the care of humans. At stage 2, when the detailed scrutiny of legislation gets under way in earnest, considerable work has to be done in that regard. Similarly, notwithstanding the points in the cabinet secretary’s speech, more work is needed to address the ethical and welfare considerations that arise from the use of wild animals in static circuses—Mark Ruskell and others picked up that point.
The Scottish Government relied on the premise that ethical objections to the use of wild animals in travelling circuses do not apply to the same extent to other types of animal performance or display. The cabinet secretary may be justified in that assertion but, to date, not enough evidence has been set out clearly or compellingly.
The problem to which colleagues on the committee have drawn the most attention, as anyone who reads the committee’s report will see, is with the definitions of “circus”, “circus operator” and “wild animals”. In her opening speech, the cabinet secretary sought to offer reassurance on those definitions again but, at the moment, it looks as if the bill will open up a bit of a paradise for lawyers rather than provide suitable and appropriate protection for animals in circuses.
It is critical that we get the definitions right, not least—as David Stewart and others emphasised—because we need to ensure that local authorities, which will be left to enforce the new restrictions, have the clarity that they require. We do not want decisions to be challenged in court, and the matter will fall to local authorities in the first instance. Whether the issues should be dealt with in the bill or in subsequent guidance, most of the work that needs to be done at stage 2 will focus on them.
The bill and the proposals that it seeks to introduce are welcome. They reflect our values as a society and the importance that we attach to the high standards of animal welfare that we want to see. I look forward to supporting the bill’s general principles at decision time.
15:56Angus MacDonald (Falkirk East) (SNP)
As a member of the ECCLR Committee, I am pleased to contribute to the debate, not least because it is a further step towards Scotland leading the way for the rest of the UK in tackling the important ethical issue of the use of wild animals in travelling circuses. It is also welcome because the use of wild animals in circuses has been the subject of deliberation by campaigners for decades, with part of the existing framework dating back to the Performing Animals (Regulation) Act 1925.
The cabinet secretary alluded to this but, for the record, it should be noted that the UK Government announced in March 2012 that it would
“bring forward primary legislation at the earliest opportunity to ban circuses from using wild animals on ethical grounds.”
However, as of this year—more than three years after the initial offer of a joint UK bill—no date had been set for a bill to be introduced in the UK Parliament, so the issue seems to have gone off the UK Government’s radar.
We have heard contributions from members that covered a number of issues, including the need to tighten definitions—particularly the definitions of “travelling circus” and “wild animals”. The ethical and welfare arguments have also been well aired. I will concentrate on enforcement and the need to support local authorities in their enforcement duties.
In its stage 1 report, the committee expressed the view that enforcement powers in the bill could go further, particularly given the evidence that we took from local authorities, which called for additional powers to intervene to prevent shows from taking place. The bill does not make it a statutory duty for local authorities to enforce the powers, so enforcement will, in effect, be discretionary.
I have some difficulty with that, and I wonder what the point of introducing the bill is if it will not remove the discretionary element of the local authority enforcement powers. However, I welcome the assurance that the cabinet secretary gave in evidence to the committee that any non-enforcement of the bill by local authorities could be solved by ministers appointing their own inspectors. As she told the committee,
“The bill also allows Scottish ministers some flexibility to appoint inspectors, so it will not be up to local authorities alone to do that. There is a power in the bill for ministers to appoint an alternative inspector if we think that certain local authorities are not enforcing this legislation.”—[Official Report, Environment, Climate Change and Land Reform Committee, 27 June 2017; c 13-14.]
That would be fine if we were not dealing with travelling circuses but, as it says on the tin, they travel, so there is every possibility that, by the time a Scottish Government-appointed inspector was alerted to a local authority’s non-enforcement, the travelling circus could have moved on. I therefore urge the cabinet secretary to re-examine the issue and consider removing the discretionary element of the local authority enforcement powers.
In addition, guidance is proposed to support local authorities in their enforcement duties. Given the importance of that document for interpretation, the committee considers that it should be available to councils as soon as the bill is enacted, if it is passed.
I look forward to further consideration of the bill at stage 2 in the hope that we can get it right by the time it reaches stage 3, so that, once enacted, it will enable the ban on wild animals in travelling circuses to be put into effect immediately. Implementation of the ban should be accompanied by the issuing of the appropriate guidance, which the committee has called for.
16:00John Scott (Ayr) (Con)
I declare an interest as an honorary member of the British Veterinary Association.
The Scottish Conservative Party and I welcome the bill’s general principles. I know that the British Veterinary Association, OneKind and others have campaigned for a ban on the use of wild animals in travelling circuses for many years, as they and we believe that the needs of non-domesticated wild animals—in particular, their accommodation needs and their need to express normal behaviour—cannot be met in a travelling circus.
For the time being, Scotland’s legislative benchmark is the Animal Health and Welfare (Scotland) Act 2006 and the five welfare needs of animals that it details. In this stage 1 debate, we seek to build on that position. That said, we note the 2007 review by the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs, which found that there was a lack of evidence to support a science-based ban on the use of wild animals in travelling circuses. On the other hand, we note the scientific review that was carried out for the Welsh Government post-2007, which concluded that
“captive wild animals in circuses and other travelling animal shows do not achieve their optimal welfare requirements”.
Although it is surprising that we in Scotland are relying on work that has been carried out elsewhere in the United Kingdom to support the bill, that is probably because no wild animals in travelling circuses are visiting Scotland at the moment and none is likely to do so in the foreseeable future.
The ethical case for the bill has, at best, been poorly made by the Scottish Government, notwithstanding Emma Harper’s valiant attempts to make it. It is much easier to make the case for such a ban on animal welfare grounds, and the Government’s response to paragraph 130 of the stage 1 report tacitly acknowledges that it would be much more sensible to take forward the bill on welfare grounds.
We must seek to improve the bill to make it fit for purpose, which it currently is not. As others have said, the term “travelling circus” must be properly defined, and I welcome the Government’s intention to provide a guidance note for the bill that will
“include guidance and examples around the definition of circus.”
I also welcome the Government’s willingness to consider appropriate amendments of the definition, although I might leave that possibility to finer legal minds than mine, given the parameters that the Government has set for its acceptance of such amendments.
In addition, a list of wild animals should be provided in the bill. It need not be exhaustive, but it should be indicative and it should be able to be added to or subtracted from by statutory instrument, as appropriate, over time. I note and welcome the Government’s response to that suggestion, but I nonetheless urge it to lodge an appropriate stage 2 amendment to create a list of wild animals.
When there is an opportunity for principles, policy and definition to be expressed clearly in any bill—not just this one—the opportunity should be taken and as little as possible should be left to subordinate legislation. My recollection is that the cabinet secretary adheres to that view.
Local authorities need clear guidance on the enforcement duties that will be expected of them under the bill, so I welcome the Government’s response to paragraphs 315 and 320 of the report. In particular—unlike my colleague Angus MacDonald—I welcome the level of discretion that it is intended will be given to local authorities and I welcome the intention not to overburden local authorities with potential extra expenses.
We support the general principles of the bill, but there is still much work to do to make it fit for purpose. The Scottish Conservative and Unionist Party will, of course, work constructively with the Scottish Government and others towards that goal.
16:05Kate Forbes (Skye, Lochaber and Badenoch) (SNP)
It is great to have this debate in the chamber after lengthy discussions in committee. We spent a number of hours taking evidence on and discussing the bill—I can only presume that those who watched the live stream were tempted to whistle a mash-up of “Old MacDonald Had a Farm” and “In the Jungle” as we talked about sheep, cows, reindeer, llamas, camels and even, courtesy of Emma Harper, ligers.
To move on to the serious matter of the debate, it is clear that there was in the committee and continues to be in the chamber unanimous support for the principles of the bill. When the bill is passed, Scotland will lead the way for the rest of the UK in tackling the important ethical issue of the use of wild animals in travelling circuses.
I am pleased to follow a number of excellent speeches. In highlighting their support for the bill and noting areas where they feel that it could be strengthened—particularly around definitions—others have said much of what I might have said. To avoid going over the same ground, I will go back to basics and, as the last speaker in the open part of the debate, remind members why we are here in the first place.
I recognise the work of Mark Ruskell and others when a similar ban was proposed 10 years ago, and I agree with Liam McArthur that a ban on the use of animals in travelling circuses and our discussions around the issue reflect our values as a society.
The unanimity in the chamber reflects the broad consensus among the public around a ban on the use of wild animals in travelling circuses. In early 2014, the Scottish Government conducted a public consultation on the use of wild animals in travelling circuses in Scotland in order to identify ethical concerns and gauge public support for—or opposition to—a Scottish ban.
It is probably fair to say that the use of wild animals in travelling circuses has caused discomfort to many people for many years, including those who actively fight for animal welfare and those who have respect for animals. The majority of respondents to the consultation supported a ban: 98 per cent supported a ban on performances by wild animals, and 96 per cent supported a ban on the exhibition of wild animals.
However, I accept that the consultation is not the main reason why the bill is before us today. I remind members of the three ethical arguments for introducing the bill. The first is the impact on our respect for animals that are forced to do unnatural tricks and acts for public entertainment that cause them harm. The second is the impact on wild animals of travelling environments, in which they are kept in temporary mobile accommodation for long periods and transported over long distances. Finally, there are the ethical costs and benefits—in other words, the weighing up of whether the ethical challenges, which are probably fairly obvious to us, had any benefit. When the benefit was seen to be minimal, it was deemed that we should introduce legislation to bring in a complete ban.
It is also important that we assure circuses, other shows and events more generally that the bill should not be a threat to their work or to entertainment services. I have been contacted by constituents—they know who they are—seeking confirmation that the bill will not affect the good work that they do. It is vital that we assure those who do not display wild animals and whose work does not constitute a travelling circus that they can continue to provide excellent entertainment services.
I am delighted that the bill will see Scotland leading the way in tackling the important ethical issue of the use of wild animals in travelling circuses.
16:09Claudia Beamish (South Scotland) (Lab)
Yesterday was world animal welfare day. As we have heard this afternoon, we should all work together to sharpen the bill and to develop further protections for the future.
OneKind reminds us that bans have already been introduced in at least 34 countries around the world, including 19 European Union member states. It says that banning the use of wild animals in travelling circuses in Scotland is a forward-looking and progressive act that will lead the way for the rest of the United Kingdom, and it urges members to support the bill at stage 1.
Although the ECCLR Committee and Scottish Labour support the bill’s principles, as members have said, its present form has necessitated a significant amount of committee work and consideration, leading to our stage 1 report recommendations to the Scottish Government to make it fit for purpose. It is disappointing that the cabinet secretary’s response to our report was only available this morning, meaning that there has been little time to consider it.
I intend to focus on three issues: static circuses, definitions—about which I will make a brief comment—and enforcement.
When they gave evidence, the cabinet secretary and a Scottish Government official noted that the travelling aspect of the use of wild animals in travelling circuses was not a primary concern. It therefore seems illogical not to re-examine the use of wild animals in static circuses, too. I acknowledge that a stage 2 amendment would be inappropriate as that issue has not been consulted on in relation to the bill, but I ask the Scottish Government to seriously consider the issue as soon as possible.
In relation to the definition of “wild animal”, it is positive that in her response to our report, the cabinet secretary stated:
“I would be willing to explore a possible amendment giving a regulation-making power to exclude or include specific animals as ‘wild animals’ that might be used in cases of real doubt in future. Regulations could be used when necessary following the coming into force of the Bill to remove doubt in particular cases where there is uncertainty as to which category a particular kind of animal falls into. That could be either to include or exclude an animal as ‘wild’.”
Like a number of members, I still think that a list in regulations, at least, that could be added to and amended is the best way forward. I am also of the opinion that the removal of references to domesticated animals in the bill would bring clarity as we go forward.
As Angus MacDonald mentioned, the committee considers that the enforcement powers in the bill could go further and supports evidence that was received from local authorities calling for additional powers to intervene to prevent shows from taking place. David Kerr of Argyll and Bute Council said:
“as things stand, our only recourse currently would be to take the person to court. I do not know whether any of you have been involved in court cases recently”—
I hope that none of us has—
“but”
taking
“a case to court is not a quick process”.—[Official Report, Environment, Climate Change and Land Reform Committee, 6 June 2017; c 22.]
The committee recommendation is that the Scottish Government adopts that suggestion from local authorities and gives them powers to serve notices, to issue fixed-penalty notices and to obtain records.
I understand the argument in the cabinet secretary’s response that
“the only question is whether or not the circus operator has caused or permitted a wild animal to be used in the travelling circus. All other activities ... are outwith the ambit of the Bill”.
However, I ask her to look very carefully at whether a stop notice would be as disproportionate as she said that it would be, or whether it would be possible to find a way forward on that issue to provide clarity.
I thank the clerks, and I reflect again on how well the committee appears to have worked together on this complex issue; it was perhaps more complex than it would have been if there had been more clarity in the bill at an early stage.
We support the principles of the bill and we will continue to support them and many other welfare and ethical issues involving animals in the future.
The Deputy Presiding Officer
I call Finlay Carson. You can have a generous six minutes, Mr Carson—but not too generous.
16:13Finlay Carson (Galloway and West Dumfries) (Con)
Today’s debate has been constructive with many valid and important points made about the bill. The committee convener addressed concerns over definitions, which raises the first question: is Graeme Dey a tame wild politician or a wild domesticated politician? Has his domestication taken place in this semi-circus over the many years that he has been here?
Graeme Dey mentioned the elephant in the room, and I wondered whether he was referring to Donald Cameron’s wonderful elephant design tie. We were also almost treated to some songs by Kate Forbes.
Although there have been plenty of puns during the debate, that should in no way detract from the seriousness with which the committee and my colleagues on the Conservative benches treat the subject of animal welfare. As my colleagues Donald Cameron, Peter Chapman and John Scott have eloquently set out during the debate, the Scottish Conservatives support the general principles of the bill. That support reflects my colleagues’ commitment to the highest standards of animal welfare. We support a ban on the use of wild animals in travelling circuses on ethical and welfare grounds through the delivery of robust legislation.
However, as we have heard today and in the committee, members of all parties have a range of concerns about the current drafting of the bill. I hope that the cabinet secretary takes those concerns on board.
We on the Conservative benches support the findings and recommendations in the Environment, Climate Change and Land Reform Committee’s stage 1 report, which I take this opportunity to commend.
Why the rush? There are concerns that the apparent need to rush the bill through will result in yet another piece of weak legislation from the Scottish Government that will fall down or be ineffective in the courts. Angus MacDonald said that Scotland would be leading the way. That is all very well, but we need to show that legislation passed by this Parliament is good and robust. Such legislation might address Mr MacDonald’s concern about councils’ confidence in taking action in future.
As the committee’s report sets out, and as many of my colleagues have reiterated in the debate, travelling circuses that use wild animals in the circumstances covered by the bill have not visited Scotland for many years, and there is no indication that they are likely to do so any time soon. Therefore, is there any need to rush the bill through?
I cannot speak for other colleagues but, before the bill was introduced, I had not heard anything from anybody about wild animals in travelling circuses. I suggest that, unlike puppy trafficking and other animal welfare issues, it is not necessarily a hot topic. I understand that the cabinet secretary, in a rather late response received by the committee last night, disputes that point. Nevertheless, my point still stands. Why are we rushing the legislation? Why not hold off and introduce a bill in a broader context—a bill that takes account of static circuses and other animal welfare issues, as suggested by my colleague Mark Ruskell? Surely it would make more sense to introduce a cohesive, well-balanced and comprehensive piece of animal welfare legislation later on in this session of Parliament. Liam McArthur rightly suggests that the current draft of the bill would be a paradise for lawyers.
As a number of members pointed out, the bill does not define “circus” and inadequately defines “travelling circus”—although that is the entire premise of the bill. The concern is that the vague definitions risk criminalising those who put on a show or event that animals have to be transported to. That must be clarified.
Peter Chapman is quite right when he highlights the further concerns about the definition of “wild animal”. The vague nature of the definition leaves far too much room for interpretation. I echo colleagues from across the chamber in asking the cabinet secretary to seriously consider including a list of the animals that the bill seeks to protect.
We agree with the committee’s view that the current draft of the bill does not fully address the issues that it proposes to cover and is at serious risk of capturing animal performances and shows that it may not have intended to capture.
Unlike Emma Harper, Colin Smyth and Clare Adamson, I have not spent any time exploring the use of the ethical argument or justifications behind the bill. That is because, across the chamber, we believe that public performance by wild animals is no longer acceptable. As Liam McArthur said, the bill reflects our values as a society. The majority of the arguments that have been made in the chamber this afternoon have involved concerns over the bill’s poor drafting, and its potential to fail in what it sets out to achieve.
There is plenty for the Scottish Government to take away from stage 1, and I hope that it will consider all our concerns inclusively and constructively. Members on the Conservative benches support the general principles of the bill and look forward to the Scottish Government bringing forward a much more robust, comprehensive and carefully drafted bill following stage 2.
The Deputy Presiding Officer
I call Roseanna Cunningham to close the debate. Can you take us up to our 4.30 decision time please, Ms Cunningham?
16:19Roseanna Cunningham
I will do my best.
I begin by thanking all the members who contributed to the debate, not only today or in the committee’s considerations but in the wider considerations of Parliament. Once again I am struck not only by the depth of insight afforded but by the passion and genuine commitment shown here to ensuring that Scotland continues to be seen as a country that considers its animals with respect and compassion.
I thank members and stakeholders, especially those from animal welfare organisations—[Interruption.] Presiding Officer, the vagaries of the iPad will slow me down. I thank members and stakeholders for being pragmatic about the bill and what it will achieve. I might return to some issues to do with that, because some of the interventions that were made today run the risk of losing sight of that pragmatism.
The bill is not a complex piece of legislation. It is a short, focused bill that will address a distinct and particular ethical concern in the most timely way possible, making the most efficient and proportionate use of parliamentary time possible. The Parliament’s commitment to tackling the issue head on has drawn praise from across the world and it would truly be a shame if we were to falter because of misunderstandings or technicalities that can be resolved.
I will remind members briefly of some of the key points that I made earlier. The bill will not interfere with the ownership, keeping or transport of wild animals by a travelling circus, as long as the animals are not performing or being displayed or exhibited. It will have no impact on the use of wild animals, whether they are sourced from a circus or otherwise, in film and TV production.
What the bill will do is ban the use, performance and display of wild animals in travelling circuses, reflecting the strong and clear mandate that the Scottish people gave us in our consultation on this matter.
I very much welcome the contributions that were made to the debate and the consensus from across the chamber that we should be at the forefront of this important issue.
I will now respond to some of the particular contributions that were made. Quite a few members, such as Graeme Dey, want to discuss issues with the various definitions, or, in their view, the lack of definitions. I repeat for the record that the definition of, for example, “wild animals” is consistent with the Welfare of Wild Animals in Travelling Circuses (England) Regulations 2012, the Animal Health and Welfare (Scotland) Act 2006, the Zoo Licensing Act 1981 and the Animals Act 1971.
There has been quite a lot of discussion about listing wild animals. I understand the desire to see such a list, but I truly caution members as to where we could go with that in the bill. I think that Mark Ruskell suggested that we should have a list of wild animals because taxonomy is straightforward. I am advised that taxonomy is not straightforward, that it is constantly changing and that people make scientific careers out of it. There is even further complexity when we consider hybrids and sub-species and so on. If we started to list wild animals that cannot be used in this fashion, such a list would never be comprehensive and it would need constantly to be reviewed and updated.
One can imagine that the list would constantly be subject to the imaginative use of animals that were not on it. Currently, we do not have performing tapirs. Would a list that we produced of wild animals in travelling circuses include a tapir? It would probably not, because we would not think of it as a standard animal to use in that fashion. However, if an animal is not on the list, the likelihood is that we would begin to see it being used in that way. That is my concern about starting to list animals.
Mark Ruskell
The cabinet secretary said that there are people out there who make their careers in taxonomy—in making these kinds of lists. Why cannot the Scottish Government just ask them to produce a list?
Roseanna Cunningham
Ultimately, I suppose that it would be possible to have a list of every wild animal in the world, but there would always be some animals of which we are not currently aware. What I am trying to do is to caution people as to the unintended consequences of producing a list that then, by definition, excludes other wild animals because they are not on it. That is the problem that I want people to consider.
David Stewart
Will the cabinet secretary take an intervention?
Roseanna Cunningham
I will, as I have a generous amount of time, although it is not unlimited.
David Stewart
I understand the technical point that the cabinet secretary is making, but I presume that it would be easy to have a list of wild animals and a provision that ministers may use secondary legislation—the statutory instrument process—to add any exemptions that come to mind.
Roseanna Cunningham
As I have already said, the term “wild animal” is already widely used in legislation. What I propose as a concession is that we have the capacity to make specific reference if, perhaps, the use of unexpected wild animals suddenly pops up. I am making a point about what happens with legislation once it is in black and white.
I made clear in my opening speech why I believe that the word “circus” should be left to ordinary interpretation. It is already in use in the Welfare of Wild Animals in Travelling Circuses (England) Regulations 2012. If someone believes that they can come up with a perfect definition that has previously been unavailable to legislators, we will of course look at it, but I am not sure that it is as easy as people think it is, and we already have the use of the word “circus” in legislation in the UK.
Understandably, many members, such as David Stewart and Peter Chapman, talked about the balance between welfare and ethics, and I get that point—I understand it. However, I remind people that welfare evidence tends to be species specific, so the welfare requirements of one species are not the same as those of another, whereas ethical arguments apply across the board. Many members veered from welfare concerns to ethical concerns and back again.
I just want to remind people of the timeline. The situation in 2014, when we consulted on the matter, was that the 2007 Radford report had ruled out a welfare-based approach, so we consulted on an ethics-based approach instead. Two years after that came the Dorning report, which is the Welsh report that members mentioned. It provided more up-to-date evidence on welfare concerns for particular species in travelling circuses and other mobile animal exhibits but, as I said, that does not necessarily support a complete prohibition of those uses for all conceivable types of wild animals on welfare grounds alone.
If wide-ranging, accurate, detailed and robust welfare evidence had been available when we started working on the issue—I have to push back a little on the notion that the bill has somehow come out of the blue and we are rushing it through, as we consulted on the matter in 2014—perhaps we would have taken things forward on the basis of secondary legislation under the Animal Health and Welfare (Scotland) Act 2006. We could perhaps have followed that slightly different route if the welfare approach had not become too complicated because of the different species that are involved. However, I do not detect any desire on the part of stakeholders to delay a ban any further, and I do not believe that there is any need to do that, as the ethical arguments that have been put forward in support of the ban are valid.
I will conclude, Presiding Officer, to be on the safe side with you. We have seen successive Westminster Governments commit to a ban such as this and then be unable to see it through, for whatever reason. Perhaps that addresses some of the concerns that have been raised today. I am proud of the work that this Parliament has done to progress the issue this far.
I am conscious that I have not covered all the points that members raised. Some talked about the late arrival of our response, but I point out to members that we did not receive the final report until 22 September, so we have had to turn it round in quite a short timeframe.
In all truth, the practical impact of the bill will be minimal. There are no travelling circuses with wild animals based in Scotland, none has visited for some time and none is likely to visit in the future. The bill lays down an important and symbolic marker on how we value and treat all our animals. I commend the bill to the Scottish Parliament.
Liam McArthur
On a point of order, Presiding Officer, like John Scott, I should have declared that I am an honorary member of the British Veterinary Association. It was an oversight for which I apologise, not least because I quoted the BVA in my remarks.
The Presiding Officer (Ken Macintosh)
Thank you for that helpful clarification.
5 October 2017
Vote at Stage 1
Vote at Stage 1 transcript
The Presiding Officer (Ken Macintosh)
There is one question to be put as a result of today’s business. The question is, that motion S5M-08062, in the name of Roseanna Cunningham, on stage 1 of the Wild Animals in Travelling Circuses (Scotland) Bill, be agreed to.
Motion agreed to,
That the Parliament agrees to the general principles of the Wild Animals in Travelling Circuses (Scotland) Bill.
The Presiding Officer
That concludes our business. I wish members a productive recess.
Meeting closed at 16:30.5 October 2017
Stage 2 - Changes to detail
MSPs can propose changes to the Bill. The changes are considered and then voted on by the committee.
Changes to the Bill
MSPs can propose changes to a Bill – these are called 'amendments'. The changes are considered then voted on by the lead committee.
The lists of proposed changes are known as a 'marshalled list'. There's a separate list for each week that the committee is looking at proposed changes.
The 'groupings' document groups amendments together based on their subject matter. It shows the order in which the amendments will be debated by the committee and in the Chamber. This is to avoid repetition in the debates.
How is it decided whether the changes go into the Bill?
When MSPs want to make a change to a Bill, they propose an 'amendment'. This sets out the changes they want to make to a specific part of the Bill.
The group of MSPs that is examining the Bill (lead committee) votes on whether it thinks each amendment should be accepted or not.
Depending on the number of amendments, this can be done during one or more meetings.
Meeting on amendments
Documents with the amendments considered at this meeting held on 21 November 2017:
Meeting on amendments transcript
The Convener
Agenda item 8 is consideration of the Wild Animals in Travelling Circuses (Scotland) Bill at stage 2. I again welcome the Cabinet Secretary for Environment, Climate Change and Land Reform. I also welcome her officials from the Scottish Government, who are Andrew Voas, veterinary head of animal welfare and bill team leader; Beverley Williams, bill team manager with the animal welfare team; Angela Lawson, solicitor with the legal directorate; and David McLeish, parliamentary counsel. Members should note that officials are not allowed to speak on the record in these proceedings.
As this is the committee’s first stage 2 bill consideration in the current session of Parliament, members might welcome my laying out the process on the record, with apologies to those who have been through this before.
Everyone should have with them a copy of the bill as introduced; the marshalled list of amendments, which sets out the amendments in the order in which they will be disposed of; and the groupings. There will be one debate for each of the four groups of amendments. I will call the member who lodged the first amendment in the group to speak to and move that amendment and to speak to all the other amendments in the group. I will then call any other members who have lodged amendments in that group to speak to their amendments and to any other amendments in the group but I will not, at that time, ask them to move their amendments.
Members who have not lodged amendments in the group should indicate to me or the clerk if they wish to speak. If the cabinet secretary has not already spoken on the group, I will invite her to contribute to the debate before we move to the winding-up speech. At times, I may allow a little more flexibility for members to come back on points of clarity that have arisen in the debate.
I will conclude the debate on each group by inviting the member who moved the first amendment in the group to wind up. Following the debate on the group, I will check whether the member who moved the first amendment in the group wishes to press it to a vote or to withdraw it. If the member wishes to press it, I will put the question on the amendment. If the member wishes to withdraw it, I will check whether any other member objects. If any member objects, the amendment is not withdrawn and the committee must immediately move to vote on it.
If any member does not wish to move their amendment when it is called, they should say, “Not moved”, and they should do so audibly. Any other member present may move such an amendment. However, if no one moves the amendment, I will immediately call the next amendment on the marshalled list.
Only committee members are allowed to vote. Voting on any division is by a show of hands. It is important that members keep their hands clearly raised until the clerks have recorded the vote.
The committee is also required to indicate formally that it has considered and agreed to each section of the bill, and I will therefore put a question on each section at the appropriate point.
I hope that that is all clear to everybody.
Richard Lyle (Uddingston and Bellshill) (SNP)
Convener, before we move on, can I refer members to my entry in the register of interests? I am the convener of the cross-party group on the Scottish Showmen’s Guild and an honorary member of the Scottish Showmen’s Guild.
The Convener
It was remiss of me not to give you that opportunity. Does any other member have interests to declare?
John Scott
I should declare an interest as an honorary member of the British Veterinary Association.
Mark Ruskell (Mid Scotland and Fife) (Green)
I should also declare an interest as an honorary member of the BVA.
Section 1—Wild animals in travelling circuses: offence
The Convener
Amendment 4, in the name of David Stewart, is in a group on its own.
David Stewart (Highlands and Islands) (Lab)
The bill’s long title states that it is
“An Act of the Scottish Parliament to make it an offence to use wild animals in travelling circuses”,
and the explanatory notes refer to
“The offence of using a wild animal in a travelling circus”.
However, OneKind notes that section 1(1) as drafted does not refer to using a wild animal in a travelling circus, but rather to someone who
“causes or permits a wild animal to be used”.
It might be argued that using a wild animal is included in causing or permitting a wild animal to be used, but it would be helpful to make that much clearer in the bill. If we do not do so, it is conceivable that a sole operator who trains and performs with his animals could argue that he is not causing or permitting use, as no other person is involved. Amendment 4 would add useful clarity and is consistent with the drafting of other measures such as the UK Government’s draft wild animals in circuses bill, published by the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs in 2013, and the new Irish regulations prohibiting the use of wild animals in circuses, which will come into force on 1 January 2018 and which state:
“A person shall not use, or cause or permit another person to use, a wild animal in a circus.”
Amendment 4 is reasonable and uncontroversial.
I move amendment 4.
John Scott
I support what Mr Stewart has said. It is a reasonable amendment, which we should consider.
Roseanna Cunningham
I thank David Stewart for lodging his amendment, the effect of which would be to make it clearer that a circus operator who uses a wild animal in a travelling circus is guilty of the offence. The provision in section 1 as introduced would have covered that scenario, since circus operators directly using a wild animal are in effect causing its use. However, the amendment removes any doubt and, therefore, we are prepared to support it.
David Stewart
I appreciate the support of members and the cabinet secretary.
Amendment 4 agreed to.
The Convener
Amendment 5, in the name of the cabinet secretary, is grouped with amendments 6 and 7.
Roseanna Cunningham
I will outline the thinking behind amendments 5 to 7. The committee’s stage 1 report raised concerns regarding the effectiveness of section 1 in introducing a ban on the use of wild animals in travelling circuses in Scotland. In particular, the committee noted that the use of the word “purpose” in section 1(2) could be interpreted to mean that, if a wild animal was transported with no intended use in mind but was subsequently used in a travelling circus, no offence would have been committed.
I thank the committee for its close scrutiny of section 1. The intended effect of the section is a ban on the use of wild animals in travelling circuses. The purpose, intention or manner of transport of the travelling circus in transporting a wild animal should not be the focus of the offence. We certainly want to avoid any loophole that would mean, for example, that a circus could claim that a wild animal is a pet and so was not transported specifically for the purpose of use. We also do not wish to inadvertently capture within the offence the movement of wild animals that does not mirror the movement of the travelling circus—for example, movement for veterinary treatment.
My officials have considered the drafting further, and I have lodged amendments to section 1 to address the issues that were raised. The amendments remove the reliance of the offence on the intention or purpose of the transportation by removing the requirement to establish intent. They adjust the wording to refer to an animal that is transported to a place where it is used, which establishes a factual situation that may be verified more easily. The amendments also adjust the wording to tie the offence to a particular rather than generic travelling circus by providing that the offence may be committed
“in relation to a travelling circus”,
and making further changes so that references to “a travelling circus” become references to “the travelling circus”.
The amendments mirror the new drafting that is proposed for the definition of travelling circus in Scottish Government amendment 8, which we presume will be agreed to, so that the offence is committed only if the wild animal is transported
“whether regularly or irregularly, from one place to another”.
The changes fully address the committee’s concerns about the effect of the offence.
I move amendment 5.
Stewart Stevenson
Can the cabinet secretary confirm that, in changing the wording from “a travelling circus” to “the travelling circus”—from a generality to specificity—that does not introduce a danger in relation to someone who transports in one context for use in another context and that we would not disconnect the transport from the circus in a way that defeated our objectives?
Roseanna Cunningham
That is not our view. The amendments were drafted to try to ensure that we do not capture the wrong things or exclude other things. The new drafting tightens up the bill and ensures that parallel transportation does not get caught in a situation in which we are talking about a travelling circus. It should be remembered that this is about committing offences. The clarity makes the issue a lot more straightforward in considering any offence.
The Convener
As no other member wishes to contribute, does the cabinet secretary wish to wind up?
Roseanna Cunningham
There is not anything extra that I need to add. I simply reiterate that the amendments are to tighten up the bill so that the nature of the offence becomes even clearer.
Amendment 5 agreed to.
Amendments 6 and 7 moved—[Roseanna Cunningham]—and agreed to.
Section 1, as amended, agreed to.
Section 2—Meaning of wild animal
The Convener
Amendment 1, in the name of John Scott, is grouped with amendments 14 to 16, 2, 17, 18, 3, 20 and 12.
11:15John Scott
Amendments 1 and 2 seek to create a list of wild animals that are not to be used in travelling circuses. Amendment 1 details where lists of such wild animals might be found and seeks to place such information in the bill. Amendment 2 would allow ministers to specify by regulation a species or kind of animal that is to be regarded as included in or excluded from such a list. The negative procedure would be the process for doing that. Amendment 3 is consequential to amendments 1 and 2.
All my amendments respond to the view that was expressed in the committee report and during the stage 1 debate that a list of wild animals that might perform in travelling circuses should be placed in the bill. The amendments would usefully enhance the clarity of the bill, but they can also be regarded as probing amendments. I welcome the fact that the cabinet secretary has lodged amendment 12 in response to my amendments and Mark Ruskell’s amendments 14 to 18.
I note Mark Ruskell’s intention to create a list of domestic animals. That seeks to achieve the same objective as my list but approaches the end point from a different direction. I believe that Mr Ruskell’s list, even at a cursory glance, has some omissions, most notably that of reindeer, which were much discussed by the committee and which are much in service at this time of year. Perhaps Mr Ruskell’s list highlights the point that has been made regarding the difficulty of providing exhaustive lists in the bill.
On the cabinet secretary’s amendment 12, I welcome the Government’s further consideration of the need for greater clarity and I look forward to the cabinet secretary’s explanation of what additional clarity the amendment will provide. I note the use of “may” in subsections (1) and (3) of the proposed new section introduced by the amendment. I wonder whether “may” should be substituted with “will” in order to take matters forward.
I look forward to hearing members’ comments.
I move amendment 1.
Mark Ruskell
We have a definition of domestication in the bill. However, at the end of stage 1, we came to the conclusion that there were problems with it: that it was interpretable in different ways, particularly with regard to wild animals that have come from captive breeding stock and have been tamed over a number of generations. The definition creates a loophole in the bill that could result in certain wild birds, reptiles and small mammals being used in circuses, even though they are wild species.
The question in this grouping is about how to close that loophole. I appreciate John Scott’s amendments. I was initially on the same page as John in wanting to define “wild animal” and create a negative list. However, there are problems with that, and the definition that John Scott has provided results in significant omissions including that of raccoon dogs, which I gather are increasingly used in performances and circuses.
The cabinet secretary’s amendment 12 is welcome on one level, but it does not effectively deal with the issue in the bill. The approach is to put in a regulation-making power that can be used at the Government’s discretion when a particular problem arises. However, we have time now, during the passage of the bill, to get a much clearer definition. Whether that is a list that includes or does not include reindeer, raccoon dogs or whatever, let us bottom that out now, rather than leave it to the courts to decide or for future regulation to be required at a later date as a result of a legal action.
In essence, I am presenting the committee with two options, both of which would provide the clarity of a list of domestic animals. That would be a positive and much shorter list of domestic animals that could be used in circuses, which would be introduced before section 1 comes into force.
The first option, which is set out in amendments 14 and 20, is to provide a list and a way of updating that list over time. The list has been drawn up on the basis of the culture of how animals are used in circuses in this country, and is also based on other countries’ lists. It acknowledges that some animals have a long history of use and breeding and are fundamentally altered from the wild type. The second option is to create a power to introduce a list. I would go a little further than the cabinet secretary and would suggest that that needs to happen before section 1 is implemented.
We need that clarity. Whether there is a list in the bill, which is approved at this point, or a list that must be generated before section 1 comes into force, that clarity is important.
Roseanna Cunningham
I will come to amendment 12 after I have spoken to the other amendments in the group. That would make more logical sense.
This debate is about the committee’s concerns regarding clarity in the definition of a “wild animal”. I understand the committee’s recommendations about including a list. I understand the motivation and why people would think that a good thing. However, that kind of definition in legislation often becomes incredibly problematic, which is why it does not happen in general terms.
I thank the committee for its consideration of the issue, and I will deal with the amendments, starting with those in the name of John Scott. His idea is to refer to existing lists of wild animals under the habitats directive and the Dangerous Wild Animals Act 1976 to help define the kinds of animals that are and are not considered wild. He is taking a similar approach to mine in proposing, in addition, to provide a power for the Scottish ministers to specify whether a species or a kind of animal is wild or not. However, I rather fear that the approach that has been taken in John Scott’s three amendments would render the bill ineffective without extensive secondary legislation. In its current form, the approach would automatically exclude any wild animals that are not considered dangerous wild animals or animals of particular conservation importance in Europe. In particular, it would exclude foxes and raccoons, which are currently used in one particular circus. It would also exclude other animals that might conceivably be used, including woolly lemurs, tamarins, guanacos, vicuñas, night monkeys, squirrel monkeys and all the other different kinds of monkeys that are and can become popular in circuses.
Secondary legislation listing a wide range of animals would indeed be required immediately the act came into effect, but it would be difficult to provide and keep up to date. It would have to be exhaustive, and it is difficult to see how it could be an exhaustive list. It would have to include not just wild animals but the hybrids that a travelling circus might possibly use. It would create constant problems, as we would constantly have to monitor the animals used.
Mark Ruskell’s amendments lie on the other side of the coin. Mark Ruskell is trying to list the domesticated animals that can be used, as opposed to the wild animals that cannot be used. Listing domestic animals may seem simpler than listing wild animals, but that would still require debate on and updates to legislation, should the status of certain animals in the British islands change—not least as the offence would be triggered with the use of any animal that was not listed.
Many of the animals listed in amendment 20 are clearly commonly domesticated animals, and there is little need to list them, as such animals will already be exempt from the ban under section 2(2) of the bill. However, some of the animals included in the list in amendment 20 are not commonly domesticated. They are what we would consider to be wild: for example, Pallas’s cats, sand cats and the Scottish wildcat.
Furthermore, many commonly domestic animals are missing from the list in amendment 20, including llamas and alpacas, which are examples of changing culture around animals. I guess that, 20 or 30 years ago, we would not have regarded llamas and alpacas as commonly domesticated in the UK, but most of us recognise that they are now. Also missing are various small animals commonly kept as pets.
If the list is not absolutely accurate, some travelling circus operators could conceivably be prosecuted for using a kind of animal that is indeed commonly domesticated in the British islands, while others might legally use what are in reality wild animals.
In a sense, it comes back to the issue of lists. I stand by my previous advice that a list of animals by species, subspecies and hybrids would not be practical because it would be difficult to ensure that it was exhaustive and anything not on the list would remain legal to use, which would provide a way for travelling circuses to keep using wild animals by constantly adjusting the kind of animal that they use. There would also be a requirement for frequent updates to the list, with each update no doubt causing significant debate among stakeholders. Listing domestic animals that are not to be covered by the ban would simply give rise to the same problems, because it would be difficult to ensure that the list was exhaustive, any wild animals inadvertently captured by the list would remain legal to use and circus operators who used clearly commonly domesticated animals that were not caught by the list would then be open to prosecution.
To summarise my views on amendments 1 to 3, I see no advantage in restricting the tried and tested meaning of “wild animal” in the bill by referring to lists in other legislation, such as the habitats directive or the Dangerous Wild Animals Act 1976. In regard to amendments 14 to 18, and 20, I consider that the risks to law-abiding travelling circus operators would be too great if a list of domestic animals was adopted. Ensuring that any such list was comprehensive and up to date would be critical and difficult, with potentially serious consequences if that was not achieved.
Those examples illustrate clearly the dangers of trying to construct a list of animals that are or are not wild for the purposes of the bill and underline why the definitions in the bill provide what we consider to be the correct approach.
I move on to amendment 12. I understand the committee’s concerns regarding the need for clarity on this matter and I fully accept that there might be occasional cases of genuine doubt as to whether a type of animal is of a kind that is commonly domesticated in the British islands or is wild, since where a type of animal sits in those two categories is not fixed but can change over time, as I have indicated with the obvious examples of alpacas and llamas. I have therefore lodged amendment 12, which would provide the Scottish ministers with a power to make regulations to include or exclude specific kinds of animals as wild animals for the purpose of the legislation. As I stated at the stage 1 debate, the regulations would be subject to the affirmative procedure, which is consistent with the procedure that is used for other animal welfare secondary legislation and would allow full consideration of any future regulation by the committee.
We would use the power in cases of genuine doubt. That approach would have the advantage of retaining the tried and tested definition of “wild animal” that is currently used in the Animal Health and Welfare (Scotland) Act 2006, the equivalent Zoo Licensing Act 1981 in England and the more recent Welfare of Wild Animals in Travelling Circuses (England) Regulations 2012, thereby keeping consistency. However, the approach would go further by allowing the Scottish ministers to exclude or include specific kinds of animals as wild animals in a targeted manner to remove any doubt in particular cases where there was uncertainty. I think that amendment 12 addresses the committee’s concerns about definitions, without bringing in the difficulties that would arise with the alternative approaches that have been proposed. I therefore respectfully ask John Scott and Mark Ruskell not to move or press their amendments and ask the committee to agree to amendment 12.
Stewart Stevenson
I have come to this matter quite late, but I have had an intensive weekend of study on it. The cabinet secretary has slightly pre-empted me in that I have identified that I have llamas 3 miles from my home and there are vicuñas and alpacas 10 miles from where I live. Those species are not covered in any lists and I think that they now might be regarded as commonly domesticated in the British islands.
There is perhaps a bigger issue with regard to feral animals. For example, the dingo, which is now regarded as a wild dog in Australia, is in fact descended from and genetically linked to the dogs that are still here in the UK. One could have an interesting debate as to whether a dingo imported into the UK was commonly domesticated, because genetically it might be a very close cousin. I just give that as an example.
There are also examples such as the wild horses on Exmoor, which could be brought to Scotland—although they are semi-domesticated in some ways, I think—and there are colonies of wild goats and sheep, and cats that go feral. There is a range of ambiguities.
11:30Roseanna Cunningham
And, indeed, there are wallabies.
Stewart Stevenson
The cabinet secretary says wallabies—my experience is comprehensive, but not total. I have not yet met any wallabies.
One could even consider rabbits, which are actually domestic animals that were introduced by the Romans 2,000 years ago but are now regarded as wild animals. There are ambiguities associated with the production of lists—which, of their very nature, cannot be comprehensive in their coverage—but, more fundamentally, they create loopholes and enable circuses to exploit omissions from the lists.
I support what the cabinet secretary has said and the approach that she has taken, while understanding and sympathising with the underlying motivation of John Scott and Mark Ruskell. In particular, amendment 20 is a safety net for that which we cannot currently know and may only discover in the future.
Richard Lyle
I agree with the comments that Stewart Stevenson just made, and also with what the cabinet secretary said. I can see where Mark Ruskell and John Scott are coming from, but I think that a list would set the whole thing back. Remember that we have 32 councils that will have to make the legislation work, and 32 different council officers who may have differing views. I am reminded that there are some domesticated camels and also wild camels. We could go through every species and say which are wild and which are domesticated and, before we know it, the list will be endless and it will need to be reviewed. We will also have circus owners who will sit with a list and say, “Oh—I can have a circus with that animal because it ain’t on the list.” As far as I am concerned, a list is wrong and I will not be supporting any of those amendments.
Claudia Beamish
I find this issue quite complicated, if I am open about it. Lists often have their dangers and, although I was keen to support the possibility of a list of wild animals, as set out in John Scott’s amendment, in order to provide strong clarification, in view of what the cabinet secretary said I now have concerns about that and will not be supporting John Scott’s position.
I have had concerns right the way through about supporting an alternative list for domestic animals, which would further complicate matters. Although I understand the sentiment behind Mark Ruskell’s amendments, and it is very important that we are as clear as possible, I am not clear myself that those amendments would clarify what is or is not a domestic animal, so I will not be supporting his amendments at this stage either.
It may well be necessary to revisit the idea of lists, although not in the bill because of the difficulty of changing them. However, I would not rule out consideration of the idea at stage 3 after further clarification. At this stage I am keen to support amendment 12, which leads to further clarity.
Mark Ruskell
I listened carefully to what the cabinet secretary said. I would like clarification over amendment 12, because it enables ministers to make a regulation about a kind of animal that is regarded as wild and a kind of animal that is not. Does that, in effect, draw up a list of those animals that are wild and those that are commonly domesticated? If it does, there still has to be consideration of where to draw the line—when it is acceptable to have an animal performing in a circus, based on the three ethical considerations that are at the heart of this bill.
I want to briefly go back to the issue of frequent updating of lists or consideration. It is the nature of domestication that it happens over multiple generations; indeed, the cabinet secretary mentioned the changing use of alpacas and llamas. Given that that has occurred over at least a human generation—in other words, 30 years or so—the updating of any kind of list yearly, whether under amendment 12 or under the other amendments in the group, simply would not happen. Domestication happens over a very long period of time, as does the culture of how we use animals, so I do not believe that this issue needs to be revisited all the time. That said, I seek some clarification from the cabinet secretary on how the Scottish Government might bring in regulations and where one draws the line in a list of species.
Roseanna Cunningham
I think that there is a slight misunderstanding here. Most of us will agree on pretty much all the animals that are domesticated and all those that are wild; what we are talking about is the small number of animals where there might be real dubiety or an animal that no one has heard of or met before or which is not normally used here in these circumstances. As a result, we might have a slightly ambiguous situation in which there is real doubt as to whether an animal is domesticated or wild.
The expectation, therefore, is that the regulations would come into play only if we were confronted with that real doubt. They would not come into play if a lion, say, or a dog was being used, as one is clearly wild and the other clearly domesticated. They would apply only in the situation that I highlighted. I made a joking comment about wallabies earlier, but there actually are wallabies in Scotland; they got free and have now colonised a small part of the Loch Lomond and the Trossachs national park. I do not know whether wallabies have been domesticated by now in Australia, but you can understand how we might get confronted from time to time by that kind of anomaly—in other words, an animal that we had not previously thought of as being an animal that lives in Scotland. It is those anomalies that we would look to the regulations to deal with, not the widely understood categories of domesticated and wild. The vast majority of the animals that John Scott and Mark Ruskell have listed are clearly what they are defined as, but you can see straight away that the minute you listed specific animals, the people at this table and in this room would be highlighting examples of animals that had been left off those lists. If we can bring up such examples, you can bet your boots that everyone else will be able to as well.
We are using the common understanding of wild and domesticated animals. Mark Ruskell is quite right to point out that the regulations would not be used every six months or every year; they would be used only when a very particular anomaly arose and when there was real doubt as to whether a particular animal fell into a particular category. It would involve consideration of that particular animal, about which we would get evidence and information.
Stewart Stevenson
It strikes me that paragraph (a) of subsection (2) of the proposed new section in amendment 12 makes it very clear that the generality of the phrase “commonly domesticated” and other parts of section 2 is in no way undermined or replaced by any list that might be created in secondary legislation. That is perhaps the most important part of amendment 12: it protects the generality, even though at some point in the future it might produce what I suspect will be quite a short list. It complements but does not replace the generality.
The Convener
It is worth nothing that the amendments lodged by John Scott and Mark Ruskell are constructive and well intentioned in what they set out to achieve but, as we have heard, they immediately throw up difficulties. I think that that reflects the committee’s wisdom in handing the matter back to the Scottish Government in its stage 1 report and asking it to reflect on the issue of lists, although I know that some members have kindly attempted to assist in that process. On that basis and having reflected on the matter, I cannot support the amendments lodged by Mr Scott and Mr Ruskell, although I stress again that I think they were offered in a constructive spirit.
John Scott
I thank the cabinet secretary for her explanation of the apparent weaknesses of my three amendments, which I think has convinced me of the dangers of seeking to create lists. Indeed, she named species that I was certainly not aware of. My intention was to include, not exclude, animals and definitions. Moreover, I would not wish to foist the burden of frequent updates through subordinate legislation on future generations of parliamentarians.
I welcome the fact that the cabinet secretary has lodged amendment 12 and that it will be subject to affirmative procedure. I believe that the probing amendments that Mark Ruskell and I have lodged have served their purpose of encouraging the Government to refine its approach, and I welcome the cabinet secretary’s explanation of how amendment 12 will work.
Although I share some of Mark Ruskell’s remaining concerns, I will, with the committee’s permission, seek to withdraw amendment 1, given that the view of the committee is, I believe, to support amendment 12 instead.
Amendment 1, by agreement, withdrawn.
Amendments 14 to 16, 2, 17, 18 and 3 not moved.
Section 2 agreed to.
Before schedule 1
Amendment 20 not moved.
Section 3—Meaning of other key terms
The Convener
Amendment 19, in the name of David Stewart, is grouped with amendments 8 to 11 and 13.
David Stewart
Although OneKind initially took the view that the Scottish courts would be well able to interpret the word “circus” in any proceedings under the new legislation, it accepts the point made at stage 1 that it is not particularly practical for enforcement agencies to have to wait for a judicial definition when addressing possible breaches of the legislation. Cases in court are the tip of the enforcement iceberg, and the local authority needs to be able to act quickly and work with clear and comprehensive legislation at all times. Understanding of the word “circus” was complicated by discussions that the committee had at stage 1—and which are set out in detail in section 3 of the committee’s stage 1 report—and I therefore believe it essential to have a clear definition on the face of the bill. Amendment 19 reflects the previous discussion, covers the necessary elements and will aid interpretation of the legislation at all stages from consideration of enforcement through to the court process.
I move amendment 19.
11:45Roseanna Cunningham
The bill’s definition of “travelling circus” has been the subject of some conversation and deliberation. The committee considered that the term “place to place” could inadvertently capture wild animal use in a static circus that relocates. Part of the concern raised by the committee regarding what constitutes a travelling circus related to parallel concerns about the bill’s lack of a definition of the word “circus”.
I will speak to amendments 8 to 11, dealing with the wider definition of a travelling circus first, and then come back to amendments 13 and 19, dealing with the more complex topic of defining the word “circus”.
Amendments 8 to 11 in my name amend section 3 in relation to travelling circuses to clearly target the ban on travelling circuses, so that static circuses and any other enterprises that are not considered to be travelling circuses are not caught by the ban.
I thank the committee for its close scrutiny of section 3 and for raising members’ concerns. The amendments address the committee’s concerns that the phrase “from place to place” could inadvertently capture enterprises that are not travelling circuses by replacing it with the phrase
“from one place to another”.
The amendments provide more clarity on the type of travel that is necessary to make a circus a travelling circus under the bill by describing travel as being
“regularly or irregularly, from one place to another”
for the purposes of providing entertainment. They also specifically mention a relocated static circus as an example of what would not be included in the definition of a travelling circus. The changes go a significant way towards addressing the committee’s concerns about the definition of a travelling circus.
I move on to the topic of defining the word “circus” and will outline why I recommend that the committee supports Graeme Dey’s amendment 13 and why I cannot recommend that it supports David Stewart’s amendment 19. The committee’s stage 1 report recommended that the Scottish Government should include a definition of a circus in the bill. The committee’s view was that such a definition is crucial to the correct targeting of the ban and that, without it, the legislation would be difficult to enforce. That view came through strongly in the stage 1 debate.
I understand the concerns about the targeting of the bill and the intention is to ensure that the ban on the use of wild animals is effectively focused on travelling circuses. However, a specific definition in the bill such as that which would be provided by amendment 19 would be frozen. I remain concerned that such an approach would risk the unintended consequence of capturing or excluding certain enterprises precisely because of its rigidity.
A narrow definition would provide travelling circuses with a clear blueprint for how to avoid the ban by making adjustments to their shows, rather than by stopping using wild animals. That could inadvertently provide travelling circuses with a continuing opportunity to bring wild animal acts to Scotland and use them in performances or displays. Conversely, a wide definition could capture the use of wild animals in many sectors that it is not intended to ban.
I therefore thank David Stewart for lodging his amendment 19, but I am concerned that the wide definition that he proposes would ban the use of wild animals in a much broader range of activity than just travelling circuses. It could capture wild animal use in many sectors where it is not intended for the ban to have any effect. For example, filming, bird of prey exhibitions and festive reindeer could be said to involve animals
“performing tricks or manoeuvres”
or
“being displayed or exhibited”.
However, I recognise that the committee and some stakeholders remain concerned by the issue and I also acknowledge that there might be occasions when enforcement authorities will need to consider carefully whether a particular enterprise is a travelling circus and should be included under the ban. I expect the guidance that we will issue to local authorities will assist with making such decisions, but amendment 13, which we will deal with later, provides powers to address such concerns conclusively in cases of doubt, and we would provide a power to make regulations to include or exclude
“a particular type of undertaking, act, entertainment or similar thing”
within the meaning of travelling circuses
“for the purposes of this Act.”
Convener, I appreciate that you will be coming back to amendment 13.
The Convener
Can you do it now?
Roseanna Cunningham
Okay. The regulations will be subject to the affirmative procedure, consistent with the procedure used for other animal welfare secondary legislation, to allow the committee to fully consider individual cases. Again, that power would be used only in the case of genuine doubt.
Amendment 13 does that while avoiding the significant challenges that would accompany a requirement for a complete list of all the types of undertakings, acts, entertainments or other similar things that are to be included or excluded from the definition of travelling circus. Any such list is unlikely ever to be comprehensive, and it is highly likely that some types of enterprise would be omitted. Amendment 13 also avoids the overly wide net that would be provided by the definition in amendment 19. The adoption of amendment 13 would mean that, in the majority of cases, the bill would rely on the commonly understood meaning of circus and on section 3 to define a travelling circus, which we believe is a strategy that is already working well for other legislation. However, in cases of genuine doubt about a particular kind of enterprise, we would have the power to come back and revisit it.
Amendment 13 is the more effective way of addressing the committee’s concerns and I am grateful to the committee for its work in considering the issue and to Mr Dey for lodging the amendment.
I need to add one small but important note about amendment 19, which is that we have doubts about its legislative competence. I feel that I ought to draw that to the committee’s notice. We feel that it is outwith legislative competence and may put the whole bill in jeopardy. I can expand on that if you want me to at this point.
The Convener
I see heads nodding. That would be useful.
Roseanna Cunningham
The definition in David Stewart’s amendment 19 widens the type of activity that is caught by the offence to include any peripatetic or travelling animal display activity. That could include, as I indicated before, festive reindeer displays or birds of prey displays. The Scottish Government position is that there is insufficient evidence of moral opprobrium or welfare concerns associated with all travelling animal display activities such as to justify a complete ban on the use of wild animals in such ventures. Without evidence of a legitimate justification for such a ban, there could be a risk of acting incompatibly with rights under the European convention on human rights or European Union law.
The Convener
I will speak to my amendment 13. In our stage 1 report, the committee raised concerns about the bill’s lack of a definition of a circus and how that could impact on what might or might not be viewed as a travelling circus. In responding to the stage 1 report, the cabinet secretary indicated a willingness to consider any amendment aimed at bringing clarity, provided that it did not have unintended or unwanted consequences. Amendment 13, complemented by clarifying guidance, will get us as far as we can reasonably go towards addressing the committee’s concerns, while not creating wriggle room to allow either activities that should be captured by the scope of the bill to escape it, or acts or entertainments that were never intended to be captured by the bill to be caught by it. I hope that the amendment addresses the unanimous concerns expressed by the committee.
In essence, amendment 13 would give ministers a power to introduce regulations either to define an activity that was contending that it was not a travelling circus, when it was indeed intended to be subject to the bill, or to define an activity that was never intended to be captured but which might become the subject of efforts to contend that it was. I am thinking of such things as reindeer visiting shopping centres or wild bird shows. The amendment calls for such regulations to be introduced under the affirmative procedure, which would afford this committee, or any relevant successor committee, the opportunity to properly interrogate them. Clearly, we would wish that there was never a need for those powers to be exercised, but if amendment 13 is accepted and if the accompanying guidance is as clear as possible, we can get where we need to go.
Stewart Stevenson
I have no particular difficulty with what David Stewart intends with amendment 19, which addresses recommendation 8 in the committee’s report, but the wording blows the whole thing wide open. The amendment says:
“in relation to which animals are kept or introduced wholly or mainly for the purpose of—”
How would I get around that provision? I would simply get my animals by leasing them from a zoo for no more than 182 days per year. Therefore they would be in the zoo for 183 days per year and so would be mainly zoo animals and only subsidiarily circus animals.
Secondly, there is the wording “kept or introduced”. I am not quite sure what “introduced” means in this context, but as for “kept”, if the animals are normally kept by another enterprise that is not the circus, such as a commercial zoo—and there are commercial zoos—then again, the whole thing would escape.
I am sure that further examination could find other ways in which the particular words that are used can be got around; that is an issue that the member might consider further. Because of the quite straightforward ways that we can see someone getting around the particular words that we have before us, I think that it would be extremely unwise for us to accept and agree this amendment.
Donald Cameron (Highlands and Islands) (Con)
I have two points, the first of which is on legislative competence. I am interested to know what provisions of European Union law or the ECHR the cabinet secretary has in mind when she says that amendment 19 is “outwith legislative competence”.
My second question is also in relation to David Stewart’s proposed amendment 19. I take on board what the cabinet secretary said about various issues with the wording of the amendment, and I therefore find it difficult to support, but the principle of defining the word “circus” is worthy of further consideration. This bill goes to great trouble in section 3 to define not just “travelling circus” but the phrase “circus operator”. The “circus operator”, we are told, means
“the owner of the circus”,
and we are then told that it is
“any person ... with overall responsibility for the operation of the circus”.
Does the cabinet secretary think that it is sustainable to pass legislation regarding wild animals in travelling circuses without defining the very word “circus”?
The Convener
We will come back to that point. I want to let Kate Forbes come in.
Kate Forbes (Skye, Lochaber and Badenoch) (SNP)
It is a very brief comment. I understand the intention of David Stewart’s amendment. My main concern is that it would mean that the legislation went beyond its intention. One of the main concerns raised during the course of evidence was that the legislation would capture, for example, travelling reindeer. However, I see the temptation to define “circus”.
The Convener
Do any other members wish to speak?
Mark Ruskell
Amendment 13 is a constructive amendment to lodge, but perhaps it falls into the same trap as amendment 12, which we have already debated, on the definition a wild versus a domestic animal.
The cabinet secretary says that there may well be situations where there is genuine doubt with regard to the definition of a wild animal or of a travelling circus. Amendment 13 seems to be drafted in a very similar way to amendment 12 in that it relies upon the generality of a definition that is already in the bill—a generality that this committee has already had concerns is not tight enough.
I have the same lingering concerns that we just had in the previous debate. In a way, amendment 13 pushes the issue into the future. It says that if there is a legal challenge over a definition, we will come back and regulate it at that point. I would expect the definitions of a wild animal and a travelling circus to come back at some point, possibly through the courts, and possibly then through further regulation by this committee.
I do not know whether that is the most appropriate way to deal with the concerns. If there are tighter, more accurate, relevant definitions of both terms that could be included in the bill, why not do so now and enable them to be changed over time, if evidence arises that they need to change?
12:00The Convener
If no other member wants to comment, I will bring in the cabinet secretary again, to answer questions.
Roseanna Cunningham
I do not want to be drawn into the broader discussion about definitions in legislation. The issue is not specific to this bill; in the context of almost any legislation we hear arguments being played out about definitions and the likelihood of challenges.
We accept that, in future, there might from time to time be a determination to try to challenge the bill, but the bill is no different from any other legislation in that regard. I cannot think of any legislation in relation to which there is no hypothetical possibility of challenge in future. The fact of that being a possibility is not a reason for going into the kind of contortions that would be necessary—I think that committee members can already see what kind of contortions we get into when we try to make definitions in legislation work in practice.
I am content that where we are at the moment does not freeze a definition of circus, the common understanding of which might change over time, as happens in many cases, any more than our current approach freezes the definitions of a wild animal and a domesticated animal. There is a need to future-proof legislation, and that is what we are doing. I am not saying that what we do here will absolutely guarantee that there will never be a challenge—one can never say that—but we are trying to ensure that we capture the right things in the right way.
That takes me back to the very start. Members need to remember that the legislation is predicated on not welfare but ethical grounds, so we need to make our arguments on ethical grounds, and in future the legislation will be looked at on ethical grounds. If it were welfare legislation, it would look and sound rather different.
On Donald Cameron’s point, I indicated that we had doubts about legislative competence—I do not know whether David Stewart has had conversations about that. Under EU law, there is the freedom to provide services; members should remember that we are interfering with businesses, so we must have regard to that and to ECHR article 1, protocol 1, on the right to property. We have concerns, which can be overcome by making the arguments—and that takes me back to the point about reminding ourselves that the basis for the bill is ethics and not welfare. [Interruption.]
I am being reminded that clear guidance to local authorities is to be provided on the back of the bill. The guidance will come to the committee, I presume, so the committee will be able to consider whether it is sufficient before it goes out to local authorities.
David Stewart
The objective of amendment 19 was to improve the bill. At stage 1 we heard criticisms about the vagueness of the definition. I was particularly concerned—as I think were other members—to ensure that we did not just wait for a definition to come through a court process and various test cases and that advice and guidance would immediately be given to the 32 local authorities.
However, I understand the points that other members and the cabinet secretary made. On that basis, I will not press amendment 19.
Amendment 19, by agreement, withdrawn.
Amendments 8 to 11 moved—[Roseanna Cunningham]—and agreed to.
Section 3, as amended, agreed to.
After section 3
Amendment 12 moved—[Roseanna Cunningham].
The Convener
The question is, that amendment 12 be agreed to. Are we agreed?
Members: No.
The Convener
There will be a division.
For
Beamish, Claudia (South Scotland) (Lab)
Cameron, Donald (Highlands and Islands) (Con)
Carson, Finlay (Galloway and West Dumfries) (Con)
Dey, Graeme (Angus South) (SNP)
Forbes, Kate (Skye, Lochaber and Badenoch) (SNP)
Lyle, Richard (Uddingston and Bellshill) (SNP)
MacDonald, Angus (Falkirk East) (SNP)
Scott, John (Ayr) (Con)
Stevenson, Stewart (Banffshire and Buchan Coast) (SNP)
Stewart, David (Highlands and Islands) (Lab)
Abstentions
Ruskell, Mark (Mid Scotland and Fife) (Green)
The Convener
The result of the division is: For 10, Against 0, Abstentions 1.
Amendment 12 agreed to.
Amendment 13 moved—[Graeme Dey].
The Convener
The question is, that amendment 13 be agreed to. Are we agreed?
Members: No.
The Convener
There will be a division.
For
Beamish, Claudia (South Scotland) (Lab)
Cameron, Donald (Highlands and Islands) (Con)
Carson, Finlay (Galloway and West Dumfries) (Con)
Dey, Graeme (Angus South) (SNP)
Forbes, Kate (Skye, Lochaber and Badenoch) (SNP)
Lyle, Richard (Uddingston and Bellshill) (SNP)
MacDonald, Angus (Falkirk East) (SNP)
Scott, John (Ayr) (Con)
Stevenson, Stewart (Banffshire and Buchan Coast) (SNP)
Stewart, David (Highlands and Islands) (Lab)
Abstentions
Ruskell, Mark (Mid Scotland and Fife) (Green)
The Convener
The result of the division is: For 10, Against 0, Abstentions 1.
Amendment 13 agreed to.
Sections 4 and 5 agreed to.
Schedules 1 and 2 agreed to.
Sections 6 to 8 agreed to.
Long title agreed to.
The Convener
That ends stage 2 consideration of the bill.
At our next meeting, which is on 28 November, the committee expects to take evidence ahead of the Scottish Government’s draft budget for 2018-19.
Meeting closed at 12:07.21 November 2017
Additional related information from the Scottish Government on the Bill
Revised explanation of the Bill (Revised Explanatory Notes)
More information on the powers the Scottish Parliament is giving Scottish Ministers to make secondary legislation related to this Bill (Supplementary Delegated Powers Memorandum)
Stage 3 - Final amendments and vote
MSPs can propose further amendments to the Bill and then vote on each of these. Finally, they vote on whether the Bill should become law.
Final debate on the Bill
Once they've debated the amendments, the MSPs discuss the final version of the Bill.
Final debate transcript
The Deputy Presiding Officer (Christine Grahame)
The next item of business is a debate on motion S5M-09648, in the name of Roseanna Cunningham, on the Wild Animals in Travelling Circuses (Scotland) Bill at stage 3.
Before the debate begins, I remind members that the Presiding Officer is required under standing orders to decide whether, in his view, any provision of the bill relates to a protected subject matter. Put briefly, that is whether it modifies the electoral system and franchise for Scottish parliamentary elections. If it does, the motion to pass the bill will require support from a supermajority of members: that is, a two-thirds majority, which is 86 members. In the case of this bill, the Presiding Officer has decided that, in his view, no provision of the Wild Animals in Travelling Circuses (Scotland) Bill relates to a protected subject matter. Therefore, the bill does not require a supermajority to be passed at stage 3.
15:43The Cabinet Secretary for Environment, Climate Change and Land Reform (Roseanna Cunningham)
I am pleased to open this brief debate. At the outset, I thank all stakeholders who provided evidence and the committee members involved for their detailed and constructive consideration of the issues raised.
First, I deal with a very formal matter. I advise the Parliament, for the purposes of rule 9.11 of the standing orders, that Her Majesty, having been informed of the purport of the Wild Animals in Travelling Circuses (Scotland) Bill, has consented to place her prerogative and interests, so far as they are affected by the bill, at the disposal of the Parliament for the purposes of the bill. It turned out that the bill required Crown consent.
The principle of a ban on wild animals in travelling circuses has had cross-party support for many years, although such circuses rarely visit Scotland now. The bill is therefore a preventative measure, based on ethical concerns about the use of animals in travelling circuses in general. It makes a clear statement to the world that the Scottish people respect the innate character of wild animals and will not tolerate their being subjected to a nomadic lifestyle in order to provide a spectacle for entertainment.
The Environment, Climate Change and Land Reform Committee raised some concerns about the bill’s wording in its stage 1 report. I responded by explaining the reasoning behind the wording and supporting some changes to the bill at stage 2, when the definitions of “wild animals” and “travelling circuses” in particular were debated vigorously and also, on occasion, humorously. Suitable amendments were, however, agreed, to avoid requiring lists of types of animal or characteristics of a circus in the bill.
I do not have much time, so I will deal with one substantive issue that has arisen more recently and subsequent to my appearances at committee. I believe that the Delegated Powers and Law Reform Committee regarded as unusual the new powers to specify whether a kind of animal is or is not wild and whether a kind of undertaking is or is not a travelling circus. The scenarios covered by the powers are themselves unusual. Guidance on the meaning of “wild animal” and of “travelling circus” and how those phrases should be applied in practice will, of course, be provided. However, the Environment, Climate Change and Land Reform Committee felt that guidance alone was insufficient, given the crucial role of the definitions in the bill. There is a huge variety of forms of entertainments using wild animals and of kinds of wild animals. Although the bill’s definitions will be sufficient in the majority of cases, the additional powers provide a mechanism to provide clarity in marginal cases where there is uncertainty, confusion or disagreement about whether or not particular kinds of animals or undertakings fall within the definitions.
The powers in the bill to specify a kind of animal as wild or not and an undertaking as a travelling circus or not are for the purposes of the bill. It is expected that a court would, in the case of that animal or undertaking, apply the act on the basis that the specified animal is a wild animal and the specified undertaking is a travelling circus. The regulations specifying what is a wild animal or a travelling circus are, however, expressly without prejudice to the general definitions in sections 2 and 3 of the bill. It is possible that, after regulations came into force, difficult issues could arise in a specific case because, for example, circumstances relating to that status of the animal have changed; for example, we often refer to that happening in our lifetime for llamas and alpacas. We therefore accept that a court would have to construe the act on the basis that sections 2 and 3 have determinative effect and regardless of what previously had been specified by regulations. In that sense, we accept that the regulations would have been indicative only.
Those powers, and specifically the way in which they were drafted to protect the generality of the definitions in the bill, were supported by Environment, Climate Change and Land Reform Committee members at stage 2. The powers would be used only after looking at the evidence case by case and would be subject to the affirmative procedure after consideration by a parliamentary committee.
I believe that those powers, backed up by the clear guidance that we will issue, will ensure that we have a robust bill that is practical and easy to enforce. Again, I thank all those who have been involved in the bill process and those who tested the notion of having a list one way or the other in terms of wild or domesticated animals and who came to the same conclusion that we did, which is that it is extremely difficult to do that.
John Scott (Ayr) (Con)
Will the cabinet secretary take an intervention?
The Deputy Presiding Officer
It has to be very brief, Mr Scott, as the cabinet secretary is over her time.
John Scott
Thank you. Will the guidance be issued timeously?
Roseanna Cunningham
Yes, it will.
I move,
That the Parliament agrees that the Wild Animals in Travelling Circuses (Scotland) Bill be passed.
15:48Donald Cameron (Highlands and Islands) (Con)
Here we are again, ringside, at stage 3 of the bill. In sincerity, I am delighted that, as we reach the end of what has been an eventful year in politics, we are here today to discuss legislation that will protect many wild animals and prohibit their use in Scotland within the realm of a travelling circus. With the bill likely to receive royal assent, we are catching up with the 18 other European countries that presently have restrictions on the use of wild animals in circuses; and it appears that United Kingdom Government legislation on the matter will be forthcoming.
I think that we have all agreed, on both animal welfare and ethical grounds, that it is correct that we now ban the use of wild animals in travelling circuses. Although there is no evidence that such circuses have recently operated in Scotland, I think that everyone acknowledges that it remains imperative that we pass legislation to ban their using wild animals.
This is a bill in which the Environment, Climate Change and Land Reform Committee has played an important role, and although it cannot be said that it is a landmark bill, it is one that highlights the necessity of our committee system and the rigour and scrutiny that it provides.
When this bill was first discussed at stage 1, we collectively raised a variety of concerns about legal definitions, which were primarily concerns of the many and varied industries that potentially could have been affected by such legislation. At the time, we raised the fact that the bill risked criminalising some shows and events that have high standards of animal welfare, such as llama displays at the Royal Highland Show or organisations in my region of the Highlands and Islands, such as the Cairngorm reindeer centre.
We raised the fact that there was a problem around the definitions of the terms “circus” and “travelling circus” and a lack of clarity about what constituted a “wild animal”.
All in all, those areas presented many legal issues with the bill as it stood. However, it is a testimony to the Environment, Climate Change and Land Reform Committee that it was able to listen to the evidence and work with the Scottish Government to implement needed changes. I would like to thank my colleagues John Scott, Mark Ruskell, David Stewart and the convener, Graeme Dey, who I hope will not mind being described as veterans of the system and who helped guide us novices through the intricacies of stage 2 and the amendments that were lodged either to improve the definitions or to provide assurances of one kind or another.
Although several amendments were not moved in their original form, it is clear that they prompted a response from the Scottish Government. I thank the cabinet secretary for the clarity that she has provided both today and on past occasions.
I should also comment on the input of the Delegated Powers and Law Reform Committee, which raised several points last week around similar issues. I again thank the cabinet secretary for clarifying, today and on the record, those issues in relation to definitions and accompanying guidance. Those matters are not just of arcane legal interest to lawyers such as herself and me; they are very important and I am glad that they have been taken on board.
It is abundantly clear, Presiding Officer, that the Environment, Climate Change and Land Reform Committee has played an important role in ensuring that the bill is fit for purpose and in addressing many of the concerns that operators had with the initial wording of the bill. As a result, the Scottish Conservatives are satisfied that the bill will deliver what it sets out to achieve and we will vote for it at decision time. It will ensure that shows and exhibitions that adhere to the high standards that are presently set out will be able to continue operating, while it ensures that the exploitation of wild animals in the arena of travelling circuses is now at an end.
As a result of the passage of this historic bill on to the statute book, we will in Scotland, finally and at last, truly be able to say:
“Nellie the elephant has packed her trunk and said goodbye to the circus.”
The Deputy Presiding Officer
I know that there is more of that to come.
15:52David Stewart (Highlands and Islands) (Lab)
Labour will support the Wild Animals in Travelling Circuses (Scotland) Bill at decision time.
As a member of the Environment, Climate Change and Land Reform Committee and a strong supporter of a number of animal welfare organisations such as OneKind, I moved a number of amendments that I felt would have improved the bill. I am grateful to the cabinet secretary and the committee for supporting my amendment on the offence ground.
At one level, one could argue that we are attempting to restrict something that does not happen, as we have no travelling circuses in Scotland. However, once passed, the bill will futureproof that position as it will be introduced on ethical rather than welfare grounds.
As the Scottish Parliament information centre paper makes clear, “circus” is Latin for a circle or a ring. One of the first major entertainment complexes in ancient Rome was the circus maximus, which held up to 300,000 spectators. Moving to more modern times, in 2014 the Scottish Government public consultation received more than 2,000 responses. A strong majority of 98 per cent were in favour of the ban, while 96 per cent were opposed to the performance or exhibition of wild animals.
As we have heard, the bill proposes to prohibit the performance, display or exhibition of wild animals in travelling circuses. The policy memorandum lists the Scottish Government’s view of the ethical challenges to society of using wild animals in travelling circuses, which are basically the impact on people’s respect for animals, the impact of travelling environments on the animals, and the ethical costs versus the benefits of such animal use.
On a technical point, the bill does not seek to prohibit circuses from travelling with wild animals but seeks to create a criminal offence of travelling with or transporting such animals for the purposes of performance, display or exhibition. The offender is liable, on summary conviction, to a fine not exceeding level 5, which is currently £5,000.
Enforcement will be by local authorities, but the philosophical underpinning is based on the five freedoms that were set out by the Farm Animal Welfare Council in 1979, which are basic freedoms relating to environment, diet, normal behaviour, housing with or apart from other animals, and protection from suffering, injury or disease.
As I said during the stage 1 debate, animal welfare organisations such as OneKind believe that there are strong animal welfare justifications for a ban on the use of wild animals in travelling circuses. OneKind’s excellent petition to the Public Petitions Committee said:
“A travelling circus combines a number of specific characteristics (including extreme confinement, frequent transport and relocation, and training for performance) which create an environment where the needs of wild animals cannot be met. This combination is not found elsewhere, even in zoos where wild animals are kept captive. It increases the risk of stress and, in some cases, ill-treatment of the animals, and makes effective inspection and regulation very difficult.”
Investigations into United Kingdom circuses in recent years have documented shocking examples of severe habitual abuse of animals. For example, in 1999, individuals from Chipperfield’s circus were found guilty of cruelty to a chimpanzee and an elephant and, in 2009, the beating of elephants prior to performance was filmed in the Great British Circus by Animal Defenders International. Earlier this year, a further exposé by Animal Defenders International showed an arthritic elephant named Anne being repeatedly beaten and abused by a member of staff in the Bobby Roberts circus.
As OneKind has argued, it is crucial that, in the future, there are no gaps in legislation covering performance, display or exhibition of animals in Scotland. The Scottish Government has announced its intention to develop new licensing requirements to protect the welfare of wild and domesticated animals in areas that are not covered by legislation.
I am pleased to support and endorse the bill.
15:56Graeme Dey (Angus South) (SNP)
The road to the point at which, in less than a couple of hours, we will, I hope, pass the bill has been long, to say the least. It was 13 years ago that the Scottish Executive consulted on the Animal Health and Welfare (Scotland) Bill and, in the process, identified significant concerns regarding the use of wild animals in travelling circuses, and it will be three years next month since the Scottish Government launched its consultation on introducing a ban. However, we are here now and rightly so. As children, many of us will have attended travelling circuses and marvelled at the lions, tigers and elephants, but times change and so does society’s view on what is and is not ethically or morally justifiable.
The scrutiny process that the Environment, Climate Change and Land Reform Committee undertook highlighted a number of issues, and I want to reflect on some of those. Criticisms were made about the justification for the bill, including its assertion that it was harmful to young people to see animals being used in such a way. It was pointed out that the opinion of children and young people had not actually been sought. Helpfully, however, in parallel with the committee’s consideration, the Scottish Parliament’s education service used the bill as a live example of the passage of legislation and asked school groups visiting Holyrood for their views on whether wild animals in travelling circuses should be banned. Of over 1,000 votes cast by nine to 13-year-olds, 81 per cent were in favour of introducing a ban.
As we head into the year of young people, the Parliament might do well to consider how we ought to more formally build on that sort of engagement. Young people have opinions—very often considered, valid and well-formed opinions—and we as MSPs ought to take those on board as we consider legislative change. I am pleased that the bill is widely supported by the next generation.
As we have heard, definitions were perhaps the main concern for the committee. We considered definitions to make clear what is and is not a circus and what therefore, when travelling, would or would not be captured by the bill, and what is and is not a wild or indeed a domesticated animal. In the absence of such definitions being offered by the Government in response to the committee’s stage 1 report, a number of members lodged amendments at stage 2. The amendments that were lodged by David Stewart, John Scott and Mark Ruskell were entirely constructive and well intentioned and they sought, in line with the committee’s stage 1 report, to secure helpful clarity. Unfortunately, as the stage 2 process unfolded, it became clear that none of them would achieve their laudable intentions and overcome the challenges that are involved in seeking to define circuses, wild animals or domesticated animals.
The exchanges on those matters were splendidly and humorously captured in a Holyrood magazine sketch that was penned by Liam Kirkaldy. If members have not read it, I highly recommend getting online and doing so. The discussions on the omissions of raccoon dogs, woolly lemurs, tamarins, vicuñas, night monkeys and squirrel monkeys and on the ambiguities surrounding wallabies in the context of John Scott and Mark Ruskell’s amendments were quite amusing at the time, and are even more so when wrapped up in a superbly written piece.
Of course, there is a serious side to the issue. Where possible, we needed to find some mechanism of addressing the legitimate concerns that had been highlighted. In the case of the definition of a circus at least, I appreciated the support of colleagues and of the cabinet secretary in backing a stage 2 amendment that I lodged, which affords ministers a power to bring forward regulations, either to define an activity that was perhaps contending that it was not a travelling circus, when it was indeed intended to be subject to the bill, or similarly, to define an activity that was never intended to be captured but might become the subject of efforts to contend that it was.
In moving the amendment, I made the point that, if accompanied by clear guidance, it would go some way to addressing the committee’s concerns and would not create wriggle room either to allow activities that should be captured by the scope of the bill to escape it, or to allow what might be described as acts or entertainments that were never intended to be captured to be caught.
I understand the concerns that were raised by the Delegated Powers and Law Reform Committee, but I hope that the cabinet secretary has addressed those in her comments.
In conclusion, Presiding Officer, let me acknowledge, as others have, the contribution made by a raft of individuals and organisations in getting us to the point that we are at today, and I welcome the cross-party support that it appears the bill will command at decision time.
16:00Finlay Carson (Galloway and West Dumfries) (Con)
In the stage 1 debate there were plenty of puns. My contribution will certainly not be as slick as Donald Cameron’s, but I ask members to bear with me, as it will certainly not be irrelephant. Perhaps the Labour group should have been leading today’s debate, with the bill going through Parliament at a time when the only circus to look forward to is the next Labour leadership election. Since Kezia Dugdale’s trip to visit the wild animals in the jungle, she certainly has the koalafications.
However, as I have said previously, the light-hearted manner in which members across the chamber have approached this and previous debates in no way reflects the serious manner with which we have dealt with the bill, or indeed the importance with which the committee and my colleagues treat any subject relating to animal welfare.
The Scottish Conservatives supported the general principles of the bill at stage 1 and lodged amendments at stage 2, reflecting the commitment that my colleagues and I have to ensuring we have good laws to secure the highest standard of animal welfare. We support a ban on the use of wild animals in travelling circuses on ethical and welfare grounds by delivering robust legislation.
Across the chamber, we have heard of a number of concerns over the drafting of the bill, which we now believe the cabinet secretary has taken on board. Those concerns were chiefly around definitions of a wild animal and a travelling circus. Our concerns have always been founded on the desire to see the most effective legislation without either leaving wriggle room for those who would seek to continue to use wild animals in this type of activity or outlawing other types of activity that were never intended to be covered by the bill, including llamas and raptors at country fairs or even sheepdog trials. Vague definitions risked criminalising those who put on a show or event where animals have to be transported to the event, and that needed to be clarified.
The committee’s view was that the bill as introduced did not fully address the issues that it set out to cover and that it was at serious risk of capturing animal performances and shows that it may not have been intended to cover. The bill as amended should now not result in another piece of weak legislation from the Scottish Government that will fall down or be ineffective in the courts.
The fact that little time was spent exploring the use of the ethical argument behind the bill indicates that right across the chamber, whether on welfare or ethical grounds, we believe that public performances by wild animals are no longer acceptable. The debate surrounding the bill has largely centred on poor drafting and fears that it had the potential to fail in what it sets out to achieve. We on these benches believe that significant progress has been made and we will be supporting the bill this evening.
16:03Colin Smyth (South Scotland) (Lab)
I am pleased to have the opportunity to contribute to what I hope will be the next step in ending cruelty and distress inflicted on animals in travelling circuses. Like you, Presiding Officer, I am a deputy convener of the cross-party group on animal welfare, so I was delighted that we unanimously agreed the principles of the bill when it was previously debated. I am sure that today we will also unanimously make it clear that the days of exploiting wild animals for human gratification in Scotland will soon be nothing more than a shameful memory, sending a welcome, powerful message about the value that we place on animal welfare.
The use of wild animals in travelling circuses is fundamentally cruel, and a full ban is the only way to stop that mistreatment returning to Scotland in future. Highly respected animal welfare charities such as OneKind have rightly made the powerful case that there are strong ethical and animal welfare grounds to ban the practice.
The mobile nature of travelling circuses means that they invariably fail to effectively recreate a wild animal’s natural environment. Animals are often subjected to restrictive conditions and uninteresting surroundings, without the space to recreate their natural behaviour, to explore, to socialise or to find food as they would in the wild. That can have a wide range of serious physical and psychological implications for the animals.
Likewise, the performances and tricks that animals are forced to do require intensive training and can inflict significant amounts of pain and distress on the animals. There is widespread use of negative reinforcement and, in some instances, abusive training techniques. Even in instances of best practice, the very act of forcing wild animals to perform on command alters their natural behaviour and suppresses their natural instincts, which is directly in opposition to their welfare and is fundamentally unethical.
There is a great deal of research into the impact of travelling circuses on the welfare and wellbeing of wild animals that supports that view. The conclusion of research that was undertaken by the Welsh Government was that
“captive wild animals in circuses and other travelling animal shows do not achieve their optimal animal welfare requirements”
and
“the evidence would therefore support a ban”.
Those are not problems that can be fixed through increased regulation or strengthened guidelines; they are inherent to travelling circuses and must be addressed with a full ban.
We now have considerably more insight into the intelligence and sentience of wild animals than we did in the past, yet the appalling use of wild animals for entertainment continues. By reducing wild animals to a source of entertainment at the expense of their wellbeing, travelling circuses contribute to a culture that undervalues the welfare and rights of animals.
The bill as introduced was by no means perfect. I thank the Environment, Climate Change and Land Reform Committee, which has tried to tackle those imperfections and shortcomings through its commendable work on the bill, which has pre-empted many of the potential problems that the bill might have faced. It is vital that the laws that we pass are legally watertight and easily enforceable, and the changes that have been made in line with the committee’s recommendations have significantly improved the bill. The inclusion of more clearly defined terms and the establishment of ministerial powers to clarify those definitions protect against wilful misinterpretation and potential loopholes, although more could have been done to incorporate that message in the bill itself. Likewise, I am pleased that David Stewart’s amendment clarifying what constitutes an offence was also agreed.
However, I am disappointed that the Scottish Government has failed to respond to other points that were raised by the committee and by members during the stage 1 debate. In particular, serious concerns were raised by council officials and the Scottish Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals about the practicalities of enforcement. The discretionary nature of local authorities’ enforcement duty, combined with the continued cuts to their budgets, pose serious questions about the bill’s enforceability. Enforcement on the ground must be closely monitored and the possibility of an inspector appointed by ministers must be revisited should there be any evidence of problems in that regard.
There is also a need to ensure that there are no gaps in legislation covering performance, display or exhibition of animals in Scotland, and I look forward to the Scottish Government coming forward with new licensing requirements to further protect the welfare of all animals that are used for public performances, including those that are not covered by the bill.
The bill is a positive step forward that finally consigns this archaic, outdated cruelty to the history books where it belongs.
16:08Mark Ruskell (Mid Scotland and Fife) (Green)
I declare an interest as a member of the British Veterinary Association.
I welcome today’s stage 3 debate, which marks a watershed moment. For years, there have been incremental improvements in welfare legislation to protect key freedoms and place responsibilities on animal keepers, but this is the first time that ethical reasons have been used alongside the welfare evidence to bring about a change, and that is welcome.
The bill fundamentally recognises that meeting basic welfare needs is not enough and that for a wild animal to be unable to display its natural behaviours for its entire life is unethical and unacceptable. The educational benefits of seeing wild animals in a travelling circus and the conservation benefits are non-existent. There might have been educational benefits in an age before the internet or TV, but we live in a different world in which the power and grace of a hunting tiger or the social intelligence of an elephant is displayed on prime-time TV or on the digital whiteboard of a school classroom.
Today, an important precedent is being set for anyone who is concerned about the rights of animals. and it begs the question about where we go next. I welcome the Government’s commitment to review further the regulations of all performance animals. It would have been better to have conducted the full review in advance of the introduction of the bill, as the Welsh Government did, with clear conclusions as to which animal performances to ban, regulate further or leave alone. The use of wild animals in travelling circuses is the starkest example of a practice that needs to be banned, but we should not have closed minds when it comes to reforming how domestic and wild animals are used in other performances, particularly in static circuses.
Although some members might poke fun at the idea of Christmas reindeer or birds of prey displays at garden centres being further regulated, I ask them to look at the evidence with an open mind. If there are welfare issues that need to be answered, why would we not want to regulate further?
I turn to the bill’s consideration at stage 2. It is clear that there were concerns about which animals should be included in the ban and about the definition of a circus. The fact that the cabinet secretary pointed out that there were omissions in John Scott’s amendment and my amendment suggested to me that there probably is a list of animals that the Government considers are captured by the ban but that the Government just does not want to include it in the bill.
However, the committee’s central argument that there needed to be greater definition has been acknowledged, and I welcome the fact that draft guidance has been produced by the Government and a commitment has been given that it will be finalised and introduced at the same time as the act is implemented.
I believe that officials have written out to stakeholders stating that the guidance cannot give a definitive interpretation of the law and that questions of interpretation are ultimately determined by the courts. I hope that we do not get to the point of a court test and that the eventual guidance proves adequate.
The bill is a further step in our journey towards having a society that respects and values animals. There are many more steps to take, but I look forward to approving the bill at decision time tonight.
16:11Liam McArthur (Orkney Islands) (LD)
As Mark Ruskell did, I declare that I am an honorary member of the BVA. Unlike most other speakers in the debate, I do not have the benefit of having sat through the committee’s deliberations. Therefore, I am all the more grateful to the ECCLR Committee for its efforts and to all those people who submitted evidence on the bill, which is an important piece of legislation that the Scottish Liberal Democrats strongly support and look forward to voting for later on this afternoon.
The concerns that I outlined at stage 1 were shared by most members. I concentrated on a couple of areas—the decision to pursue an ethical approach rather than a welfare approach, and the definitional problems that others have already articulated. I am pleased that considerable progress appears to have been made on the latter since the stage 1 debate. I think that David Stewart and Graeme Dey have had a hand in that. I acknowledge the movement from the Government in addressing many of those concerns, and I note that OneKind and Animal Defenders International believe that a combination of regulation-making powers and draft guidance have successfully addressed a number of the concerns that they identified at stage 1.
I note that the cabinet secretary has clarified that the ban is targeted at travelling circuses, so that static circuses and any other enterprises that are not considered to be travelling circuses are not caught by the ban, and that the ban applies only when animals are being transported. I know from correspondence that I received from a constituent that there are people who wish the legislation to be extended to cover a far wider range of circumstances, including fixed animal shows involving sea mammals, falconry or other animals. I understand why the Government and the committee were reluctant to go down that route in the context of this bill, but I acknowledge that the Scottish Government has since announced its intention to develop new licensing requirements to protect all wild and domestic animals that are involved in displays or performances that are not addressed by the bill or in those that take place in licensed zoos. I look forward to considering those proposals in due course.
In the meantime, the use of a regulation-making power—which will be subject to the affirmative procedure—to establish and amend the types of animals that will be covered seems to me to be a sensible approach. As the cabinet secretary said, it is also the approach that is taken to secondary legislation on animal welfare. It seems to be a logical approach and one that will allow the committee to scrutinise any such regulation in due course.
As for the debate about whether an ethical or a welfare approach should be taken, the cabinet secretary expressed concern about the lack of evidence that existed for a welfare approach and the fear that the adoption of such an approach could leave the bill open to legal challenge. I am not entirely sure that I know where the committee got to in that debate, but the issue did not seem to present a reason to delay or reject the bill.
In conclusion, the Scottish Liberal Democrats welcome the ban on using wild animals in travelling circuses, which reflects our values as a society and the importance that we attach to the highest standards of animal welfare.
16:15Angus MacDonald (Falkirk East) (SNP)
I am sure that I speak for all members of the committee when I say that I am pleased to see the bill finally being put to sleep at the end of stage 3, not least because the issues relating to the use of wild animals in circuses have been the subject of deliberation by campaigners, policy makers and legislators for decades. As we know, part of the existing framework for regulation in this area is covered by the Performing Animals (Regulation) Act 1925, and the issue was raised again in responses during the passage of the Scottish Government’s Animal Health and Welfare (Scotland) Act 2006.
There are some clear reasons why the scope of the bill that we are debating today has been purposely focused on wild animals in travelling circuses, but it is mainly because the use of wild animals in travelling circuses involves animals whose nature is still genetically and behaviourally hardwired; the performance of behaviours or tricks for entertainment that are not natural behaviours; and inadequate temporary or mobile accommodation that does not allow animals to act naturally. It is also because there is little or no educational or conservation value in such animals’ appearance in a travelling circus. All those issues combine to present a cumulative ethical challenge to Scottish society, giving strong ethical reasons for the ban.
I am delighted that Scotland is leading the way on improving animal welfare, not just through this bill but through plans to develop new licensing requirements to protect the welfare of wild and domestic animals that are used for public performances or display in circumstances that are not covered by the bill. I understand that that will be achieved through a Scottish statutory instrument under the 2006 act, which will require further consultation and an affirmative resolution. There is more work to do, although that legislation is intended to apply to all wild and domestic animal displays or performances except for those that are already banned under the bill or those taking place in zoos that are already licensed under zoo legislation. Hopefully, that means that there will be no gaps once the legislation is introduced.
At the start of the passage of this bill, concerns were voiced by those who felt that a more comprehensive approach would be preferable to what they saw as the piecemeal approach that was being taken. Andrew Mitchell from the City of Edinburgh Council called for there to be one piece of legislation. However, it was acknowledged, not least by Nicola O’Brien of the Captive Animals Protection Society, that a comprehensive review of legislation would be a lengthy process, and that taking action now would have more immediate impact. I am content that the so-called piecemeal action is delivering the desired outcome much more quickly than would otherwise have been the case. The bill will enable the ban to be put in place immediately.
Colin Smyth raised the issue of inspections and enforcement. Earlier in the process, I had concerns about that, but I am satisfied that we have got it right at this stage.
I was pleased to see the inclusion of children and young people in the consultation process; the committee did not just go through a box-ticking exercise, but ensured that their opinions were heard. One of the key ethical concerns on which the bill is based includes the adverse impact that seeing wild animals in travelling circuses might have on children and young people, with regard to the development of respectful and responsible attitudes to animals in general. An overwhelming majority of respondents to the Scottish Government’s consultation—94.7 per cent—agreed that that was a concern, which is why the committee identified the importance of engaging with children and young people on the issue. The committee convener, Graeme Dey, alluded to that. As a result, 1,045 children and young people were asked, through the Scottish Parliament education service, whether it should be an offence to use wild animals in travelling circuses, and 815 responded in favour of a ban. In addition, an online survey that was conducted with Young Scot last September asked young people aged 11 to 25 the same question. Some 80 per cent of the respondents agreed or strongly agreed with the proposed ban, and 57 per cent agreed or strongly agreed that seeing wild animals in travelling circuses would make young people respect them less.
Judging by the verdict of the next generation of decision makers, it is clear that we have taken the right steps to tackle this important ethical issue in the most timely way possible. I am pleased that we are leading the way in the UK.
16:19Claudia Beamish (South Scotland) (Lab)
Scottish Labour welcomes the passing of the bill, which is, I hope, imminent. As the cabinet secretary stated, wild animals in circuses should not be a spectacle.
Today the subject was travelling circuses. This must surely lead to a similar position being taken on static circuses. In the committee, there was much discussion about the protection of wild and domestic animals performing in other venues, whether travelling or not, and that must be addressed in future. Mark Ruskell and others stressed that point.
David Stewart highlighted welfare issues, as did others. Scottish Labour has a robust approach to animal welfare and ethics under his leadership in that brief, and animals in circuses is one of a range of issues that we must go on to tackle. Ensuring that the legislation on hunting with dogs is fit for purpose, banning shock collars, fighting to reverse tail docking exemptions, consulting on a ban of culling mountain hares, and tackling the exotic animal trade are a few of those issues.
Today, Emma Harper has a members’ business debate called adopt don’t shop, which is timely, coming before Christmas. That and many other actions across the chamber show that there is cross-party support for many of the animal welfare and ethics issues that Parliament will address in the rest of the session. Angus MacDonald and Graeme Dey spoke about the next generation’s interest in and concern about those issues.
Definitions in bills always take up committee and Scottish Government time—rightly so—and this bill was no exception. Sometimes we revert to commonsense approaches and, at other times, it seems to be correct to define or have lists in secondary legislation. That has been challenging in the consideration of this bill. The committee grappled with definitions throughout the bill process, as did the Scottish Government. We discussed circuses with or without tents, definitions of wild and domestic animals, and lists. It is reassuring that the bill was amended at stage 2 to grant Scottish ministers the power to
“by regulations describe a particular type of undertaking, act, entertainment or similar thing”
that is or is not to be regarded as a travelling circus
“for the purposes of this Act.”
On the definition of a wild animal, I am convinced that the power that was agreed at stage 2 provides certainty in difficult or borderline cases to ensure that circus operators know what kind of animal may or may not be used in travelling circuses in order to avoid committing an offence. It is also reassuring that the regulations will be subject to the affirmative procedure.
The lawyers among us, including the cabinet secretary and Donald Cameron, made the point that it is not just that the definitions were arcane; definitions must be as exact as possible. The cabinet secretary’s earlier remarks relating to the Delegated Powers and Law Reform Committee’s deliberations were reassuring.
The committee heard evidence from local authorities about enforcement procedures and Angus MacDonald gave us some reassurance on that. Absolute clarity in regulation and guidance is essential to ensure that action can be taken. Cuts to budgets could cause challenges for local authority officers. However, in its briefing for stage 3, OneKind states:
“The Scottish Government has issued clarification on a number of points raised in the Stage 1 report, has created regulation-making powers to clarify definitions, and has produced draft guidance that clarifies some of the most significant policy areas. OneKind is grateful to the Scottish Government and to Members of the ECCLR Committee for probing these issues.”
I think and hope that we have got it right. In the words of my colleague Colin Smyth, having wild animals in travelling circuses is fundamentally cruel. We strongly support a ban and look forward to the passing of the bill and to the Parliament debating and acting on animal ethical and welfare issues in the future.
16:23John Scott (Ayr) (Con)
I declare an interest as an honorary member of the British Veterinary Association. Along with it, I welcome the passage of the bill.
The BVA and the Scottish Conservatives believe that the needs of non-domesticated wild animals cannot be met in the environment of a travelling circus, where their ability to express normal behaviour is likely to be restricted. We therefore welcome the passing of the bill, which builds on the five welfare needs of animals as detailed in the Animal Health and Welfare (Scotland) Act 2006 and which allows Scotland to be first in developing such legislation in the United Kingdom.
We welcome the cabinet secretary’s assurances that she will develop guidance as required in the bill, and the Environment, Climate Change and Land Reform Committee is grateful to the Delegated Powers and Law Reform Committee for picking up the Government’s oversight in that regard when lodging its stage 2 amendment on definitions of wild animals.
We acknowledge the hard work of our clerks in the ECCLR Committee and the Parliament’s bill team, who have supported us by helping with amendments as well as with the bill. We also thank the many witnesses who gave evidence to us in committee as well as those who responded to our call for evidence at stage 1, and we trust that the bill will prevent wild animals from ever performing in travelling circuses in Scotland again.
I joined the committee in the autumn, when discussions about the definitions of travelling circuses and wild animals and about lists of animals were still going on. David Stewart, Mark Ruskell, Donald Cameron, Graeme Dey and I can perhaps call ourselves survivors of that debate. We have all referred to that today and, like them, I had residual concerns over those definitions. The amendments that the Government lodged at stage 2 were a welcome response to the probing amendments that were lodged by David Stewart, Mark Ruskell and me at that time.
I also acknowledge that the Government has endeavoured to respond to the concern of the DPLR Committee and others that the effect of the powers in new sections 3A(1)(a), 3A(2)(a), 3B(1)(a) and 3B(2)(a) is unusual in principle because the provisions are indicative only and the regulations are apparently not sufficient or the appropriate form of instrument to deliver the interpretations that the amendments seek to provide. I welcome the cabinet secretary’s detailed assurances today that guidance, which is a more appropriate form of instrument, will be developed to address the concerns of the DPLR Committee and to make clearer the intentions of the bill. The guidance should be put in place forthwith, and it should be available when the bill becomes law after receiving royal assent. I welcome the cabinet secretary’s assurance today that the guidance will be available timeously.
Our work is done with regard to the Wild Animals in Travelling Circuses (Scotland) Bill. Again, our grateful thanks go to those who have contributed in any way to the passage of the bill, and I look forward to the cabinet secretary’s closing remarks. The Conservatives will vote for the bill at decision time.
The Deputy Presiding Officer
Thank you, Mr Scott. I call Roseanna Cunningham to close for the Government. Cabinet secretary, you can have seven minutes if you want. You obviously do not—well, six minutes then.
16:27Roseanna Cunningham
I will speak very slowly, Presiding Officer.
I thank all the members who are here today and who have taken part in a lively, informed and very interesting debate. The subject is of intrinsic interest even to those who may simply have wandered into the chamber or who are on chamber duty—as it is known—to listen to some of the concerns and issues, which people may not have thought were anything to do with this particular bill. A number of members commented on the fact that that is precisely the kind of thing that happens when a committee begins to unpack something that looks relatively straightforward on the surface. The minute that one begins to look at it with some care and detail, one understands that it is not as straightforward or as simple as it looked at first sight.
The debate has been constructive, as was the engagement all the way through the process, and it is a joy—sometimes a rare joy in a parliamentary set-up—to be able to say that. It reflects the concern that people have and demonstrates the extent to which we all agree on the importance and value of the good intentions behind the bill.
I have been struck today, as I was at stage 1, by members’ passion for this issue. However, I am grateful that they have looked beyond a purely emotional response, which would have been the easy approach, in order to fully unpack the practicalities around the proposed prohibition, some of which I dealt with in my opening speech. Those issues reflect the fact that this is not a fixed situation. I referred to llamas and alpacas in my opening speech, but that was not meant to be a joking reference. Those animals would have seemed exotic and wild to our parents’ generation but look like domesticated animals to us now. They have undergone a change in how they are viewed and treated and in how they live in our country.
I thank the Parliament and all the members of the Environment, Climate Change and Land Reform Committee—indeed, all the members of the Delegated Powers and Law Reform Committee, too—for their constructive comments and invaluable support during the bill’s passage.
Furthermore, I thank all the organisations and stakeholders in the animal welfare sector and the circus industry, local authorities and representatives of our screen industry who made constructive contributions to the debate. I look forward to including them in continuing dialogue as we hopefully move forward to implement this landmark bill.
I cannot mention everyone, but I pay particular tribute to OneKind for lodging the petition that brought the issue of wild animals in circuses sharply back into focus in 2011 and to the Convention of Scottish Local Authorities for its continuing help to make the bill and the accompanying guidance fit for purpose.
John Scott
Colin Smyth raised the matter of local authorities. Is the cabinet secretary optimistic that the amendments that she lodged at stage 2 and the guidance that she will issue after today will be sufficient to ensure that local authorities are less likely to have to go to court?
Roseanna Cunningham
We will continue to engage with stakeholders including COSLA. I thank the ever-gallant John Scott for his intervention, which helped to use up some time.
I pay tribute to the travelling circus industry. This has been a difficult issue for it. The few circuses in the UK that still use wild animals are small family-run operations for which the circus is not so much a business as a way of life. They have debated and co-operated throughout the development of the bill with courtesy and openness, and I remind them that travelling circuses without wild animals will always be welcome in Scotland. Our circus sector is an example of how circus can develop as an art form and remain popular without using wild animals.
I will take a minute or two to go through some of the speeches that we have heard this afternoon. A couple of members—Donald Cameron and Finlay Carson—tried to bring some humour to the debate. I have to say that Donald Cameron carried that off a little better than Finlay Carson, whose own colleagues looked perplexed and then somewhat bemused by his attempts to inject some humour into proceedings. However, they did try, and that has been a mark of how engagement on the bill has proceeded throughout the process.
Donald Cameron rightly flagged up the role of the Environment, Climate Change and Land Reform Committee. If members think that the jokes that have been cracked here are funny, they should look up the proceedings of the committee and read the Holyrood magazine article that Graeme Dey mentioned.
David Stewart attempted a lesson in Roman history, which was interesting, but he also highlighted abuses and reminded us of the reason why we are here.
Graeme Dey referred helpfully to the views of young people. It is easy to forget about the extensive survey work that was undertaken and how important it was in the early stages of the bill.
I say to Mark Ruskell that there really is no list. The committee and the member himself must surely be aware of how difficult compiling a list would be, having attempted the exercise themselves. Peter Jolly’s circus had a list of wild animals that the circus was using, one of which was a zebu. I have no idea what a zebu is—I would guess that it is a hybrid of a zebra and something else—but it is an example of what would have been left off any attempted list of wild animals, which shows why there is no list.
Mark Ruskell
Will the cabinet secretary take an intervention?
Roseanna Cunningham
I am at the limit of the time that I have for my closing speech.
I ask members to support the motion and agree that the Wild Animals in Travelling Circuses (Scotland) Bill be passed.
20 December 2017
Final vote on the Bill
After the final discussion of the Bill, MSPs vote on whether they think it should become law.
Final vote transcript
The Presiding Officer (Ken Macintosh)
There are four questions to be put as a result of today’s business.
The first question is, that motion S5M-09648, in the name of Roseanna Cunningham, on the Wild Animals in Travelling Circuses (Scotland) Bill at stage 3, be agreed to. Because it is a stage 3 decision, we will have a division.
For
Adam, George (Paisley) (SNP)
Adamson, Clare (Motherwell and Wishaw) (SNP)
Allan, Dr Alasdair (Na h-Eileanan an Iar) (SNP)
Arthur, Tom (Renfrewshire South) (SNP)
Baillie, Jackie (Dumbarton) (Lab)
Baker, Claire (Mid Scotland and Fife) (Lab)
Balfour, Jeremy (Lothian) (Con)
Ballantyne, Michelle (South Scotland) (Con)
Beamish, Claudia (South Scotland) (Lab)
Beattie, Colin (Midlothian North and Musselburgh) (SNP)
Bibby, Neil (West Scotland) (Lab)
Bowman, Bill (North East Scotland) (Con)
Briggs, Miles (Lothian) (Con)
Brown, Keith (Clackmannanshire and Dunblane) (SNP)
Burnett, Alexander (Aberdeenshire West) (Con)
Cameron, Donald (Highlands and Islands) (Con)
Campbell, Aileen (Clydesdale) (SNP)
Carlaw, Jackson (Eastwood) (Con)
Carson, Finlay (Galloway and West Dumfries) (Con)
Chapman, Peter (North East Scotland) (Con)
Coffey, Willie (Kilmarnock and Irvine Valley) (SNP)
Cole-Hamilton, Alex (Edinburgh Western) (LD)
Constance, Angela (Almond Valley) (SNP)
Corry, Maurice (West Scotland) (Con)
Crawford, Bruce (Stirling) (SNP)
Cunningham, Roseanna (Perthshire South and Kinross-shire) (SNP)
Denham, Ash (Edinburgh Eastern) (SNP)
Dey, Graeme (Angus South) (SNP)
Doris, Bob (Glasgow Maryhill and Springburn) (SNP)
Dornan, James (Glasgow Cathcart) (SNP)
Dugdale, Kezia (Lothian) (Lab)
Ewing, Annabelle (Cowdenbeath) (SNP)
Ewing, Fergus (Inverness and Nairn) (SNP)
Fabiani, Linda (East Kilbride) (SNP)
Fee, Mary (West Scotland) (Lab)
Finnie, John (Highlands and Islands) (Green)
FitzPatrick, Joe (Dundee City West) (SNP)
Forbes, Kate (Skye, Lochaber and Badenoch) (SNP)
Fraser, Murdo (Mid Scotland and Fife) (Con)
Freeman, Jeane (Carrick, Cumnock and Doon Valley) (SNP)
Gilruth, Jenny (Mid Fife and Glenrothes) (SNP)
Golden, Maurice (West Scotland) (Con)
Gougeon, Mairi (Angus North and Mearns) (SNP)
Grahame, Christine (Midlothian South, Tweeddale and Lauderdale) (SNP)
Grant, Rhoda (Highlands and Islands) (Lab)
Gray, Iain (East Lothian) (Lab)
Greene, Jamie (West Scotland) (Con)
Greer, Ross (West Scotland) (Green)
Griffin, Mark (Central Scotland) (Lab)
Harper, Emma (South Scotland) (SNP)
Harvie, Patrick (Glasgow) (Green)
Haughey, Clare (Rutherglen) (SNP)
Hepburn, Jamie (Cumbernauld and Kilsyth) (SNP)
Hyslop, Fiona (Linlithgow) (SNP)
Johnson, Daniel (Edinburgh Southern) (Lab)
Halcro Johnston, Jamie (Highlands and Islands) (Con)
Johnstone, Alison (Lothian) (Green)
Kelly, James (Glasgow) (Lab)
Kerr, Liam (North East Scotland) (Con)
Kidd, Bill (Glasgow Anniesland) (SNP)
Lennon, Monica (Central Scotland) (Lab)
Leonard, Richard (Central Scotland) (Lab)
Lindhurst, Gordon (Lothian) (Con)
Lochhead, Richard (Moray) (SNP)
Lockhart, Dean (Mid Scotland and Fife) (Con)
Lyle, Richard (Uddingston and Bellshill) (SNP)
MacDonald, Angus (Falkirk East) (SNP)
Macdonald, Lewis (North East Scotland) (Lab)
MacGregor, Fulton (Coatbridge and Chryston) (SNP)
Mackay, Derek (Renfrewshire North and West) (SNP)
Mackay, Rona (Strathkelvin and Bearsden) (SNP)
Macpherson, Ben (Edinburgh Northern and Leith) (SNP)
Maguire, Ruth (Cunninghame South) (SNP)
Martin, Gillian (Aberdeenshire East) (SNP)
Mason, John (Glasgow Shettleston) (SNP)
Mason, Tom (North East Scotland) (Con)
Matheson, Michael (Falkirk West) (SNP)
McAlpine, Joan (South Scotland) (SNP)
McArthur, Liam (Orkney Islands) (LD)
McKee, Ivan (Glasgow Provan) (SNP)
McKelvie, Christina (Hamilton, Larkhall and Stonehouse) (SNP)
McMillan, Stuart (Greenock and Inverclyde) (SNP)
McNeill, Pauline (Glasgow) (Lab)
Mountain, Edward (Highlands and Islands) (Con)
Neil, Alex (Airdrie and Shotts) (SNP)
Rennie, Willie (North East Fife) (LD)
Robison, Shona (Dundee City East) (SNP)
Ross, Gail (Caithness, Sutherland and Ross) (SNP)
Rumbles, Mike (North East Scotland) (LD)
Ruskell, Mark (Mid Scotland and Fife) (Green)
Russell, Michael (Argyll and Bute) (SNP)
Sarwar, Anas (Glasgow) (Lab)
Scott, John (Ayr) (Con)
Scott, Tavish (Shetland Islands) (LD)
Simpson, Graham (Central Scotland) (Con)
Smith, Elaine (Central Scotland) (Lab)
Smith, Liz (Mid Scotland and Fife) (Con)
Smyth, Colin (South Scotland) (Lab)
Somerville, Shirley-Anne (Dunfermline) (SNP)
Stevenson, Stewart (Banffshire and Buchan Coast) (SNP)
Stewart, Alexander (Mid Scotland and Fife) (Con)
Stewart, David (Highlands and Islands) (Lab)
Stewart, Kevin (Aberdeen Central) (SNP)
Todd, Maree (Highlands and Islands) (SNP)
Tomkins, Adam (Glasgow) (Con)
Torrance, David (Kirkcaldy) (SNP)
Watt, Maureen (Aberdeen South and North Kincardine) (SNP)
Wheelhouse, Paul (South Scotland) (SNP)
White, Sandra (Glasgow Kelvin) (SNP)
Whittle, Brian (South Scotland) (Con)
Wightman, Andy (Lothian) (Green)
Yousaf, Humza (Glasgow Pollok) (SNP)
The Presiding Officer
The result of the division is: For 112, Against 0, Abstentions 0.
The motion has been agreed to and the Wild Animals in Travelling Circuses (Scotland) Bill has been passed. [Applause.]
Motion agreed to,
That the Parliament agrees that the Wild Animals in Travelling Circuses (Scotland) Bill be passed.
The Presiding Officer
The next question is that, motion S5M-09682, in the name of Joe FitzPatrick, on approval of a Scottish statutory instrument, be agreed to.
Motion agreed to,
That the Parliament agrees that the Police Investigations and Review Commissioner (Application and Modification of the Criminal Justice (Scotland) Act 2016) Order 2017 [draft] be approved.
The Presiding Officer
The next question is that, motion S5M-09683, in the name of Joe FitzPatrick, on designation of a lead committee, be agreed to.
Motion agreed to,
That the Parliament agrees that the Economy, Jobs and Fair Work Committee be designated as the lead committee in consideration of the legislative consent memorandum in relation to the Financial Guidance and Claims Bill (UK Legislation).
The Presiding Officer
The final question is that, motion S5M-09681, in the name of Joe FitzPatrick, on approval of the Criminal Legal Assistance (Miscellaneous Amendments) (Scotland) Regulations 2017, be agreed to. Are we agreed?
Members: No.
The Presiding Officer
There will be a division.
For
Adam, George (Paisley) (SNP)
Adamson, Clare (Motherwell and Wishaw) (SNP)
Allan, Dr Alasdair (Na h-Eileanan an Iar) (SNP)
Arthur, Tom (Renfrewshire South) (SNP)
Baillie, Jackie (Dumbarton) (Lab)
Baker, Claire (Mid Scotland and Fife) (Lab)
Beamish, Claudia (South Scotland) (Lab)
Beattie, Colin (Midlothian North and Musselburgh) (SNP)
Bibby, Neil (West Scotland) (Lab)
Brown, Keith (Clackmannanshire and Dunblane) (SNP)
Campbell, Aileen (Clydesdale) (SNP)
Coffey, Willie (Kilmarnock and Irvine Valley) (SNP)
Cole-Hamilton, Alex (Edinburgh Western) (LD)
Constance, Angela (Almond Valley) (SNP)
Crawford, Bruce (Stirling) (SNP)
Cunningham, Roseanna (Perthshire South and Kinross-shire) (SNP)
Denham, Ash (Edinburgh Eastern) (SNP)
Dey, Graeme (Angus South) (SNP)
Doris, Bob (Glasgow Maryhill and Springburn) (SNP)
Dornan, James (Glasgow Cathcart) (SNP)
Dugdale, Kezia (Lothian) (Lab)
Ewing, Annabelle (Cowdenbeath) (SNP)
Ewing, Fergus (Inverness and Nairn) (SNP)
Fabiani, Linda (East Kilbride) (SNP)
Fee, Mary (West Scotland) (Lab)
Finnie, John (Highlands and Islands) (Green)
FitzPatrick, Joe (Dundee City West) (SNP)
Forbes, Kate (Skye, Lochaber and Badenoch) (SNP)
Freeman, Jeane (Carrick, Cumnock and Doon Valley) (SNP)
Gilruth, Jenny (Mid Fife and Glenrothes) (SNP)
Gougeon, Mairi (Angus North and Mearns) (SNP)
Grahame, Christine (Midlothian South, Tweeddale and Lauderdale) (SNP)
Grant, Rhoda (Highlands and Islands) (Lab)
Gray, Iain (East Lothian) (Lab)
Greer, Ross (West Scotland) (Green)
Griffin, Mark (Central Scotland) (Lab)
Harper, Emma (South Scotland) (SNP)
Harvie, Patrick (Glasgow) (Green)
Haughey, Clare (Rutherglen) (SNP)
Hepburn, Jamie (Cumbernauld and Kilsyth) (SNP)
Hyslop, Fiona (Linlithgow) (SNP)
Johnson, Daniel (Edinburgh Southern) (Lab)
Johnstone, Alison (Lothian) (Green)
Kelly, James (Glasgow) (Lab)
Kidd, Bill (Glasgow Anniesland) (SNP)
Lennon, Monica (Central Scotland) (Lab)
Leonard, Richard (Central Scotland) (Lab)
Lochhead, Richard (Moray) (SNP)
Lyle, Richard (Uddingston and Bellshill) (SNP)
MacDonald, Angus (Falkirk East) (SNP)
Macdonald, Lewis (North East Scotland) (Lab)
MacGregor, Fulton (Coatbridge and Chryston) (SNP)
Mackay, Derek (Renfrewshire North and West) (SNP)
Mackay, Rona (Strathkelvin and Bearsden) (SNP)
Macpherson, Ben (Edinburgh Northern and Leith) (SNP)
Maguire, Ruth (Cunninghame South) (SNP)
Martin, Gillian (Aberdeenshire East) (SNP)
Mason, John (Glasgow Shettleston) (SNP)
Matheson, Michael (Falkirk West) (SNP)
McAlpine, Joan (South Scotland) (SNP)
McArthur, Liam (Orkney Islands) (LD)
McKee, Ivan (Glasgow Provan) (SNP)
McKelvie, Christina (Hamilton, Larkhall and Stonehouse) (SNP)
McMillan, Stuart (Greenock and Inverclyde) (SNP)
McNeill, Pauline (Glasgow) (Lab)
Neil, Alex (Airdrie and Shotts) (SNP)
Rennie, Willie (North East Fife) (LD)
Robison, Shona (Dundee City East) (SNP)
Ross, Gail (Caithness, Sutherland and Ross) (SNP)
Rumbles, Mike (North East Scotland) (LD)
Russell, Michael (Argyll and Bute) (SNP)
Sarwar, Anas (Glasgow) (Lab)
Scott, Tavish (Shetland Islands) (LD)
Smith, Elaine (Central Scotland) (Lab)
Smyth, Colin (South Scotland) (Lab)
Somerville, Shirley-Anne (Dunfermline) (SNP)
Stevenson, Stewart (Banffshire and Buchan Coast) (SNP)
Stewart, David (Highlands and Islands) (Lab)
Stewart, Kevin (Aberdeen Central) (SNP)
Todd, Maree (Highlands and Islands) (SNP)
Torrance, David (Kirkcaldy) (SNP)
Watt, Maureen (Aberdeen South and North Kincardine) (SNP)
Wheelhouse, Paul (South Scotland) (SNP)
White, Sandra (Glasgow Kelvin) (SNP)
Wightman, Andy (Lothian) (Green)
Yousaf, Humza (Glasgow Pollok) (SNP)
Against
Balfour, Jeremy (Lothian) (Con)
Ballantyne, Michelle (South Scotland) (Con)
Bowman, Bill (North East Scotland) (Con)
Briggs, Miles (Lothian) (Con)
Burnett, Alexander (Aberdeenshire West) (Con)
Cameron, Donald (Highlands and Islands) (Con)
Carlaw, Jackson (Eastwood) (Con)
Carson, Finlay (Galloway and West Dumfries) (Con)
Chapman, Peter (North East Scotland) (Con)
Corry, Maurice (West Scotland) (Con)
Fraser, Murdo (Mid Scotland and Fife) (Con)
Golden, Maurice (West Scotland) (Con)
Greene, Jamie (West Scotland) (Con)
Halcro Johnston, Jamie (Highlands and Islands) (Con)
Kerr, Liam (North East Scotland) (Con)
Lindhurst, Gordon (Lothian) (Con)
Lockhart, Dean (Mid Scotland and Fife) (Con)
Mason, Tom (North East Scotland) (Con)
Mountain, Edward (Highlands and Islands) (Con)
Scott, John (Ayr) (Con)
Simpson, Graham (Central Scotland) (Con)
Smith, Liz (Mid Scotland and Fife) (Con)
Stewart, Alexander (Mid Scotland and Fife) (Con)
Tomkins, Adam (Glasgow) (Con)
Whittle, Brian (South Scotland) (Con)
The Presiding Officer
The result of the division is: For 86, Against 25, Abstentions 0.
Motion agreed to,
That the Parliament agrees that the Criminal Legal Assistance (Miscellaneous Amendments) (Scotland) Regulations 2017 [draft] be approved.
20 December 2017