
Perthshire mum's school dinners petition gathering support
Support for a Perthshire mum's petition demanding better school dinners doubled in 24 hours.
Lauren Houstoun says she's been blown away by the backing for her campaign to bin fake meat from school meals.
More than 2,300 people have now added their names to the online petition.
And the Blairgowrie mum-of-three was reminded why she's doing it on Tuesday.
Lauren launched her crusade after Kirkmichael Primary had no alternatives to processed meat substitutes on the menu last Tuesday.
And on the day The Courier reported on her petition, the same thing happened again with her daughter's nursery school dinners. Lauren Houstoun, with her husband Andrew and children Alasdair (5), Ellen (4) and Duncan (2). Image: Lauren Houstoun.
She says Perth and Kinross Council and Tayside Contracts are letting children down.
And she's urged them to look to the example of Aberdeenshire, where pupils are offered a three-course meal every day with far less processed food.
Support has been pouring in from across Perthshire and beyond.
'The petition is going up all the time,' said Lauren.
'A lot of people seem to be in the same boat. They're all saying this isn't good enough.' School dinners petition is about healthy choices
Lauren runs Glenkilrie Larder, which supplies beef, lamb and venison from husband Andrew's family farm near Blairgowrie.
She insists her crusade is not about putting more meat on the menu.
It's about giving children a choice and providing quality vegetarian and vegan produce, instead of processed foods. Glenkilrie Larder supplies venison to schools. Image: Kim Cessford / DC Thomson
The Houstoun children aren't allowed processed meat substitutes like Quorn and soya mince.
And for the last two Tuesdays, there has been nothing on the Perth and Kinross schools menu that five year-old Alasdair and four year-old Ellen could eat.
Lauren supplied last-minute packed lunches on both occasions.
But she says she's fighting for the children and families who aren't so lucky.
'For some kids that's the only meal they'll get,' she said.
'That's what upsets me.' Authorities defend current menus
Perth and Kinross Council says all of the food served in its schools meets strict nutritional standards, based on scientific evidence and dietary advice.
School meals provider Tayside Contracts says it follows a 'rigorous menu development process'.
The Scottish Government says local councils are best placed to understand local needs, circumstances and priorities.
Lauren's school meals petition can be found at change.org.
Hashtags

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


Glasgow Times
12 hours ago
- Glasgow Times
Glasgow Guides mentor young girls to grow in confidence
The 282nd Glasgow Guides are encouraging Rainbows and Brownies from their local community to move up to Guides by sharing their own experiences and helping them see that the next step in their guiding journey is fun. The unit is supported by Generation CashBack, a Scottish Government-funded scheme. The initiative seeks to ensure young people from deprived areas can benefit from youth work opportunities. Carly, a Guide member with the unit in Glasgow, is one such volunteer who helps out with the Brownies and assists with games, writing, and drawing. She said: "I wanted to start helping because I felt like it was really interesting, because then I get to know about them and what they do. 'The hardest part is when we're setting up a game and none of them can decide who's going to be it. "The best part is helping them set up games, learning all of their names and seeing them run about and have fun.' Anna, CashBack development officer for Girlguiding Scotland, said: "Almost all the Guides in the unit help at Rainbows or Brownies, with some helping at more than one unit. 'This started when one girl was nervous about leaving Brownies (she is autistic and struggles with change), so leaders suggested she helped with Brownies to make the move smoother. "It meant that she could still see her Brownie leaders and have the familiarity whilst dipping her toe into being a Guide. "Three years later, she's still at Guides. "The other girls became interested in this, so also started helping. 'We've seen the girls grow in confidence since they've started volunteering and it helps foster a good sense of community.' Like Carly, Mia, who helps out with both Rainbows and Brownies, said: "I really like working with kids. "I enjoy watching Rainbows learn new things and make friends and watching Brownies have fun. "I'd like to be a leader in the future."


Daily Record
19 hours ago
- Daily Record
Exact date unpaid carers to receive an extra £293 payment on top of benefit this month
The money will be issued to around 90,000 unpaid carers over a two-day period in June. The Scottish Government has confirmed around 90,000 unpaid carers are set to receive an additional payment of £293.50 next month. Carer's Allowance Supplement is only available north of the border and will be issued between June 18 and 19, 2025. The payment is issued by Social Security Scotland for people who receive Carer Support Payment or Carer's Allowance on a specific date. Only carers in Scotland are eligible for the payment if they received Carer Support Payment or Carer's Allowance on April 14, 2025. It's important to be aware that the £293.50 Carer's Allowance Supplement is paid separately from any benefit payment from Social Security Scotland or the Department for Work and Pensions (DWP). Carers eligible for the payment will receive a letter from Social Security Scotland before the payment is made. Nobody needs to apply for the extra money as it is paid automatically to everyone who is eligible. Social Justice Secretary Shirley-Anne Somerville said: 'This benefit was the first that we introduced when we formed Social Security Scotland back in 2018. It's an additional payment to recognise the important contribution of unpaid carers in Scotland. A payment not made anywhere else in the UK. 'It's another example of how we've built a radically different social security system in Scotland, with dignity, fairness and respect at its heart.' Claire Cairns, Director at The Coalition of Carers in Scotland added: 'At a time when many carers are struggling to pay the bills, while providing essential support to loved ones, this payment is a vital acknowledgment of their role and a much-needed financial boost that helps ease some of the pressure they face every day.' If a carer is eligible for Carer's Allowance Supplement but has not received a letter or payment by June 30, 2025, they should contact Social Security Scotland on 0800 182 2222. December 2025 payment The next Carer's Allowance Supplement payment will be issued in December 2025. People will qualify for this payment if they were in receipt of Carer Support Payment or Carer's Allowance on October 13, 2025. Similar to the summer payment, letters will be issued by Social Security Scotland before the money is due to land in bank accounts. If you, or someone you know, is providing at least 35 hours of unpaid care for a friend, family member or neighbour, and not claiming Carer Support Payment, you could be missing out on nearly £5,000 this year. Am I eligible for Carer Support Payment? Carer Support Payment is money you can get if you provide care for someone and meet certain eligibility criteria. You must: be 16 or over usually live in Scotland provide care for 35 hours or more a week, this includes if you provide care all day every day not earn more than £196 a week after tax, National Insurance and expenses The person you care for must already get one of these benefits: Adult Disability Payment – daily living component Child Disability Payment – middle or highest rate care component Pension Age Disability Payment Attendance Allowance Personal Independence Payment – daily living component Scottish Adult Disability Living Allowance - middle or highest rate care component Disability Living Allowance – middle or highest rate care component Constant Attendance Allowance at or above normal maximum rate with Industrial Injuries Disablement Benefit Constant Attendance Allowance at or above the basic (full day) rate with a War Disablement Pension Armed Forces Independence Payment You can find out more about how it might affect other payments here. The type of care you provide To get Carer Support Payment, you must provide care for someone as an unpaid carer for 35 hours or more a week. It cannot be care you provide: as a professional care worker through a volunteering scheme or charity Even if you do not think of yourself as an unpaid carer, you might be eligible for Carer Support Payment. Examples of caring for someone include supporting them: with their mental health during an illness with a disability if they have an addiction Supporting someone with their mental health If you provide care for someone with a mental health condition, you might: comfort them during a panic attack stay close by so they do not feel alone support them through a crisis make sure they're safe keep them company Supporting someone with an illness or disability If you provide care for someone with an illness or disability, you might support them with: getting around getting dressed taking medicines using the shower or toilet cooking meals food shopping translating The person you provide care for You might provide care for: someone in your family a friend a neighbour You do not have to live with them or be related to them. You can only apply for Carer Support Payment for one person. If you provide care for more people, you are not entitled to extra payments. You can check if you are eligible for Carer Support Payment and find full details on the devolved benefit on the website here.


Scotsman
3 days ago
- Scotsman
Readers' letters: Protect our farmers from sea eagles slaughtering lambs
The Scottish Government is paying out £970,000 to farmers this year under the Sea Eagle Management Scheme (Picture:) A reader says action must be taken to stop sea eagles killing livestock with impunity Sign up to our daily newsletter – Regular news stories and round-ups from around Scotland direct to your inbox Sign up Thank you for signing up! Did you know with a Digital Subscription to The Scotsman, you can get unlimited access to the website including our premium content, as well as benefiting from fewer ads, loyalty rewards and much more. Learn More Sorry, there seem to be some issues. Please try again later. Submitting... It is the time of year, with the lambing season, when ghastly photos are appearing in the media of defenceless, bloodied lambs being flown to their doom by an eagle. It is a wake-up call to so many of we urban dwellers, unaware of this daily slaughter, going on, under the radar, in our name. Some farmers and crofters in Inverness-shire confirm they lose an average two lambs a other predator causes losses on this scale. The Scottish Government is paying out £970,000 to farmers this year under the Sea Eagle Management Scheme, but that does not mitigate the barbarity of the white-tailed sea eagles. Farmers are being put out of business. Many talk of the devastating impact on their mental heath. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad The eagles have a wing span of 2.5 metres and were introduced to Scotland from Norway in can be fined £40,000 if your dog kills livestock but the ghastly sea eagles, which also kill puffins and other small birds, kill with impunity and are protected. It will be of no surprise to anyone the Scottish Greens regard this slaughter as a big conservation success story. Both BBC TV and Radio Scotland this week, inexplicably, adopted this slant, proudly proclaiming that there are, perhaps, 220 breeding pairs in Scotland. Indeed, how commendable it is these predators are moving into north England, a conservationist argued. I don't think the Scottish public were ever consulted on this chilling barbarity nor did we MSPs must be told, in no uncertain terms, this abhorrent slaughter must stop. John V Lloyd, Inverkeithing, Fife Ban shooting More than 40 million pheasants and partridges, many of them factory farmed, are released each year in the UK, to be shot out of the sky for fun – most of the birds do not end up being eaten. Of course this is cruel to the birds, but it also damages the environment. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad The scale of the problem is enormous: in fact, in late summer, the weight of all the birds released is greater than that of all the wild birds in Britain. The mass release therefore has a devastating impact upon wildlife and ecosystems. In addition, wildlife is poisoned by the more than 7,000 tonnes of lead ammunition that is discharged into the UK countryside by shooters each year. There is also the danger of bird flu spreading from game farms to wild birds once the farmed birds are released. And finally, there is the issue of gamekeepers illegally killing protected birds of prey. For the sake of our environment – and for the birds themselves – surely it is now time to ban shooting. Fiona Pereira, Campaigns Manager, Animal Aid Numbers game Rural Affairs Secretary Mairi Gougeon states that 54 per cent of respondents were against the setting up of a national park in Dumfries and Galloway and Ayrshire (your report, 30 May). So this 54 per cent are to be respected – but not the 55 per cent that rejected the pie-in-the-sky independence referendum? Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad I would dearly love to be able to cherry pick my choices on a whim. However, life being difficult as it is, this would lead to absolute carnage – in exactly the same fashion as we are governed in Scotland. This really sums up the hypocrisy of the SNP. The truth of the matter is they couldn't have put it into practice – like all the other policies they spout and never see through. David Millar, Lauder, Scottish Borders Wasted money In 2015, Derek Mackay, Transport Minister and John Swinney, Deputy First Minister, signed a fixed-price contract for two ferries at a cost of £97 million, it has now been reported that the total outlay to the shipyard is now just under £1 billion. Mackay is long gone but Swinney is still hanging around, seemingly totally unconcerned about this national scandal. What have the taxpayers got for this outlay? One ferry with much reduced capacity and another which may or may not enter service. Imagine, for a moment, if the SNP had stuck to the original fixed price. Imagine if the SNP had used the difference between that price and the latest, (but not final) price. Imagine how much state-of-the-art equipment could have been purchased for our hospitals, thereby saving lives and cutting waiting times. Think how many people could be back at work instead of waiting for an NHS Scotland appointment. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Or maybe, it could have been used to build a super highway (let's call it the A9), all the way from Perth to John o' Groats, thereby opening up half the land mass of Scotland to much needed inward investment and perhaps allow the sick and elderly in half of Scotland easy access to hospitals. Ever since Nicola Sturgeon launched the Glen Sannox, for political gain, with painted-on windows and cardboard funnels, this has been nothing short of a vanity project for a party which has long since lost touch with the people who voted them in and demonstrates a complete lack of financial responsibility on the part of the SNP. Bruce Proctor. Stonehaven, Aberdeenshire Markets in charge 'TACO' ('Trump Always Chickens Out') has become the policymakers' acronym of choice for the disruptive on-off policies that are coming to define President Trump's second term. Furthermore, imposition of blanket reciprocal tariffs by the White House has now been deemed unconstitutional by a US federal court. This ruling faces immediate challenge in the US Supreme Court. The balance of expectation, however, is that the Court's decision will be upheld. Consequently, 'tariff' may be losing its lustre as 'the most beautiful word in the dictionary' for the Donald. This looks like good news, especially for trade negotiators. But every silver lining has its own cloud: selective high tariffs on steel, aluminium, cars, semiconductors and pharmaceuticals etc can/will still be legally imposed by Presidential executive order under the US Constitution; and the main overriding concern remains the heightened uncertainty, instability and risk for international businesses and government policymakers engendered by Trumpenomics. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Stock exchange reaction to current developments has been relatively sanguine. The reaction of bond markets is more concerning with yields staying high on long-term government bonds (both US Treasuries and UK Gilts). As a result, the cost of government borrowing remains worryingly high. If future tax hikes prove politically too damaging, more swingeing cuts will be forced on Rachel Reeves. The bond markets, it seems, hold the ultimate trump card! Ewen Peters, Newton Mearns, East Renfrewshire Big bills Can somebody please explain how the NHS arrives at the costings of their procedures, as quoted by Alan Hinnrichs (Letters, 30 May)? To the uninitiated some of the figures seem simply incredible! Chris Forrest, Polmont, Falkirk Remember seamen It is of enormous credit to the Norwegian people that the D/S Hestmanden has been preserved and maintained as a museum and tribute to the 30,000 Norwegian war sailors who served with the Allies during World War Two (your report, 28 May). The large Norwegian fleet and, in particular, their fast modern tankers proved to be invaluable in the transport of oil and oil products to every theatre of the war. Following on so closely behind the commemoration of VE Day it is of importance to note that, in the last attack carried out by a U-boat in World War Two, the Norwegian ship Sneland 1 was torpedoed near the May Island, with the loss seven lives. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad How tragic it is that these Norwegian sailors, who must have known that the war in Europe was almost over and they would soon be able to return to their beloved country after five long years, had their lives and futures snatched away. Amongst those lost was the ship's master Johannes Bernhart Laegland, aged 46. Also lost was a 17-year-old British Mess Room Boy, William Ellis from Hull. Young William and two members of the crew of the Avondale Park, which was torpedoed in the same attack, added to the huge number of almost 32,000 casualties suffered by the British Merchant Navy in the Second World War. I found it somewhat strange that in the various commemorations for VE Day I did not hear one mention of the Merchant Navy or see a 'veteran" from the Merchant Service being interviewed. Perhaps we, like our seafaring cousins the Norwegians, should pay more attention to the enormous sacrifice made by our merchant seamen. I wish Captan Klungtveit and the D/S Hestmanden a pleasant return voyage to Norway. James Simpson, Lower Largo, Fife Scots words The translator of Danish books into English, Barbara J Haveland, confessed in an article that she likes to 'sneak' Scots words into her translations. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad As examples she offered 'outwith', 'swither' and 'forenoon'. My dictionary acknowledges the Scottish origins of the former two. However, there is no such comment about 'forenoon'. This word is designated as a 'modifier' with the example offered 'a forenoon meeting'. Totally unrelated is the recollection that the word 'outwith' always reminds me how, from childhood, I used to sing 'There is a green hill far away, without a city wall' and I actually pitied this poor hill that lacked a boundary wall. The third edition of the Church of Scotland hymnary clarifies the situation and reads 'outside a city wall'. We live and learn. Bill Greenock, Netherlee, East Renfrewshire Write to The Scotsman