Another one bites the dust. The Lady C Boutique on Dumbarton High Street has closed its doors for the last time.

The owner, Catherine Walsh, is quoted on the Reporter website, as saying: “The overhead costs are just too expensive, everything’s increased and I’m no longer getting full-rates relief which I was getting when I started out.  The small business rates relief being gone is having an impact on small businesses.

“We are dependent on people coming through the doors, and the cost of living is having an impact.”

Catherine says she no longer receives the small business relief rate which is provided to properties with a rateable value less than £15,000.

She says Lady C was the only independent clothes shop on the High Street, but now it’s gone. It closed its doors for the final time on November 5.

Catherine said that  for small independent businesses to survive in the High Street now it’s a real, real struggle — “Given the downturn in footfall on the High Street, it’s just no longer financially viable.”

That’s a pity. Maybe the Council should have helped Catherine out by giving her a discount on the rates she found impossible to pay. Perhaps they could do that for other small businesses who find themselves in a similar position? Now that’s worthwhile public relations.

Or they could have offered Catherine the services of their PR Department, the spin doctors they use to promote with useless guff, ventures such as the one referred to in the opening article in this column.

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I see Balloch Library is on the property market as a site for housing. The people protesting at the Council meeting which decided that the key would be going in the door of the library for good told me that would happen. I’m not surprised. My experience of covering local government goes back more than 60 years to the middle of last century. I have never known in all that time a group of public representatives to be so out of touch with the people who elected them.