
Evanton: New social housing built
Housing and property committee chairwoman Glynis Campbell-Sinclair said: "Highland Council will continue to work collaboratively alongside partners to build a portfolio of housing stock.""New housing can have a transformational impact for people and place, and I wish all the tenant every happiness in their new homes."
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


BBC News
3 hours ago
- BBC News
How Martindale's cup mindset has changed
Livingston manager David Martindale's League Cup mindset has shifted since the arrival of new owner Calvin great great grandson of Ford Motor Company founder Henry Ford acquired all of John McIlvogue's shares in Baycup Ltd, who had held a controlling interest in Livi for around two years, earlier this Martindale extended his Livi contract until 2027 earlier this week, and says he is now hoping for favourable draws, not financially lucrative host Hibs in the second round on Sunday and Martindale said: "A cup run always brings that financial element to the tie, but again my mindset has changed slightly here as well."Because historically I'd be sitting here going, 'I hope we get Rangers, Celtic, Hearts, Hibs, and if we can't get that I hope we've got a home tie.'"I'm not sitting watching draws with that kind of mindset now. I'm sitting watching draws saying, 'I wonder who we could get that would be the best opportunity to progress to the next round?'"Historically, you were probably looking at going, 'What's the best financial outcome for the football club?'"So I'm looking at my viewpoint now slightly changed, and that comes from Calvin coming in."


Daily Mail
4 hours ago
- Daily Mail
How much has Ted Scott earned this year? Scottie Scheffler's caddie's incredible 2025 pay revealed
While Scottie Scheffler continues to dominate the fairways in 2025, it's now been revealed that his caddie Ted Scott has raked in nearly $1.5million along the way. Scheffler, 29, has cemented his place as the undisputed World No.1 with four tour wins already this season - including a fourth Major title at the Open Championship. Much of that success has come with Ted Scott by his side. The veteran caddie, who previously worked with Bubba Watson, joined Scheffler's team in 2021. Since then, the pair have formed one of the most effective partnerships in the modern game and it's proving to pay dividends for both men. GolfMonthly have now estimated - based on the standard PGA Tour arrangements for caddies - that Scott is believed to have pocketed $1.4million this year alone. Caddies are typically entitled to 10 per cent of the winner's cheque, and between 5 to 7 per cent for high finishes throughout the year. This year, things started strongly with Scheffler picking up more than $1.8 million in February thanks to two top-10 finishes and a T25. That early-season run likely earned Scott around $125,000 in bonus pay before the year had really even got going. March saw a a runner-up finish at the Houston Open and two more results inside the top 20. That three-tournament stretch probably netted Scott an extra $93,000. Between tournaments seven and nine of the season, the World No.1 landed two more top-10s and piled up $3.37 million in prize money. For Scott, that likely translated to a further $290,000 in earnings. Scheffler finally broke through with his first win of the year at the CJ Cup Byron Nelson in May. That victory lit the fuse for a run of form that saw him win three times in four starts, including a stunning triumph at the PGA Championship for his third Major title and a $3.42 million payday. He followed it with another win at the Memorial Tournament, where he took home $4 million and between those three victories, Scott is estimated to have collected a $742,000 cut of the spoils. Three more top-10 finishes in the same period saw Scheffler bank around $1.7 million, likely adding another $121,000 or so to Scott's growing total. By the end of June, Scott is believed to have earned $1.4million alongside Scheffler. However, Scheffler will be without his caddie Ted Scott when he tees it up at this week's BMW Championship in a huge blow for golf's world No 1. Scott has been a mainstay in Scheffler's professional career for the past four years, but a family emergency last weekend saw him rush back to his home in Louisiana. The change in circumstance led to Scheffler turning to a chaplain and close friend to help him out with the final round of the FedEx St Jude on Sunday, and now it'll be all change again this week. The recent Open champion and four-time major winner will have Mike Cromie on his bag instead, as he continues his foray into the FedEx Cup playoffs. Scott's personal matter has so far not yet been disclosed, but it is expected Scheffler will field questions about his close friend's absence as the week progresses.


Telegraph
10 hours ago
- Telegraph
Scotland's fiscal calamity is a harbinger for all of Britain
It should be noted that this particular tax break was much cited by Labour when defending its decision last autumn to make farms subject to inheritance tax. What are they complaining about, some ministers said, when farms can still be handed down from father to son tax-free via the seven-year rule? Now, even this concession seems to be in the Chancellor's crosshairs. Wealth and aspiration are under attack across the UK as a whole, not just in Scotland. But it's even worse north of the border, where higher-rate taxpayers pay significantly more than their English counterparts on a greater proportion of their income. The quid pro quo for a more highly taxed economy is meant to be better public services, but you'd be hard-pressed to argue this is the case in Scotland. Total public spending last year at 52pc of GDP is at Scandinavian levels, but without Nordic-style welfare and services. NHS waiting lists are longer than much of the rest of the UK, social services are a disgrace, life expectancy is lower and even educational standards – once the highest in the UK – have slipped badly under Scotland's high spending regime. State education in Edinburgh is so poor that one in four families makes the financial sacrifices needed to send their children to privately funded independent schools, far higher than the UK average. Now they face the additional cost of VAT on school fees, though that one is down to Westminster, not Holyrood. And to be fair, also down to Westminster is the completely insane decision to essentially close down the North Sea oil and gas sector in pursuit of the net-zero pipe-dream. It might have been SNP policy too, but for an opportunistic change in stance just ahead of the general election aimed at saving seats in Aberdeen and beyond. The Scottish Government's current position is now a more nuanced one in which new licences for development would be assessed on a case-by-case basis, rather than the current outright ban imposed by Westminster. It's one of the few things that Holyrood seems to have done right, even if, with the overarching decision made down south, it makes no difference to the outcome. In any case, the ban steepens Scotland's fiscal challenge. Offshore oil and gas provide some of Scotland's highest-paying jobs; Ed Miliband's assault on the sector threatens lasting damage to income tax receipts, with the growth in renewables unlikely to provide a complete substitute. The smart thing to have done in maximising jobs and revenues would be to allow the two industries to run side by side, but when did either Westminster or Holyrood last practice common-sense politics? As it is, Scotland is in the same rut of rising taxation, excessive spending and declining public services as the rest of the UK, but magnified several times over. The SNP offers no answers on how it would correct the shortfall in the public finances should it ever succeed in freeing Scotland from the English teet. You might imagine that the cause of Scottish independence would have been finished for a generation or more by the SNP's inept record in government, topped off as it was by the tragicomedy of Humza Yousaf's short-lived reign as first minister. But then along came Reform UK, which threatens to split the unionist vote and thereby gives the SNP another leg up in next year's Holyrood elections.