Today's News | Sport | Features | Email Contacts | Letters | The Tele | D C Thomson | Annuals | Subscriptions | Old Dundee

Headlines
Sport Stories
Get the Tele from...

03 June 2005
A blue flag day for Broughty
 

Jill Shimi and John Summers unfurl the blue flag as Forfar Academy pupils enjoy a paddle in Broughty Ferry’s now pristine waters.

 
Broughty Ferry beach is officially one of the best in the country after being awarded Blue Flag status for the first time today.
The flag has been awarded to just six others in Scotland this year — Aberdour Silversands, Burntisland, Elie, St Andrews east and west sands and, the other newcomer, Montrose.

In addition, 40 beaches have gained Seaside Awards for their cleanliness, facilities and good management.

Broughty Ferry beach has been rejuvenated in recent years, thanks to a drive to remove litter from the shore and tackle the water quality with the £100 million Tay Waste Water Project.

“Over the last five years the council has been working hard with our partners and the local community to secure this fantastic beach award,” said leader of the administration, Councillor Jill Shimi.

“Scottish Water started the ball rolling with their £100 million investment to upgrade the waste water facilities for the Tay coastline.

“In a concerted effort to improve facilities at the beach, Dundee City Council invested over £30,000 in upgrading the car parking and public toilet facilities, as well as introducing safety measures with lifeguards and signage.

“An animal exclusion zone was also introduced in the beach award area to help keep it clean.

“There has also been a tremendous amount of community involvement through well-attended beach cleans.

“Generations of Dundonians have enjoyed Broughty Ferry beach, and this new status confirms a clean, safe seaside environment for future generations.”

The Blue Flag and Seaside awards are organised by FEE (Foundation for Environmental Education) and administered in Scotland by Keep Scotland Beautiful.

As the blue flag fluttered in the sunshine, Keep Scotland Beautiful chief executive John Summers described it as “a memorable day” for Broughty Ferry.

“It is also a record-breaking day, as seven is the highest number of blue flags we have ever had in Scotland,” he said.

“We have been working towards this with Dundee City Council for three or four years now, and they have done all the right things and approached it logically and professionally.

“The community has also played an important part and we have been working with the Broughty Ferry Beach Management Group.

“Winning the blue flag is a credit to everyone concerned.”

Mr Summers added that, as an internationally recognised mark of quality, blue flag status offered opportunities to promote tourism and inward investment that extended beyond the beach itself.