by Nick Kempe of Parkswatch
An article (see here) that appeared in the Helensburgh Advertiser on June 13 in the name of Dr Heather Reid, the Convener of the Loch Lomond and Trossachs National Park Authority (LLTNPA), appeared about a month too late.
It states ‘nominations are now open’, when they closed on 4th June, and ‘We’ll be hosting online and in‑person information sessions throughout May and June for anyone who wants to learn more’ when the last information session was on 2nd June.
Although the article may have been based on an old news release, had the Advertiser been informed that the election in Ward 5, the area closest to Helensburgh, will be uncontested, it might not have quoted Dr Reid urging residents to vote:

To vote, there needs to be a choice of candidates and in two out of five wards in the National Park, that hasn’t happened.
Why is democracy in the LLTNPA in such a critical state?
The power of officials has been steadily increasing since Gordon Watson became Chief Executive over a decade ago, and has got worse since Dr Reid, widely known as Heather the weather, became Convener. There is a connection between this history and the lack of candidates putting themselves forward for election in Ward 2 and 5.
Dr Heather (The Weather) Reid, Loch Lomond National Park and Sid Perrie.
Dr Reid’s complaint to the Ethical Standards Commission against Sid Perrie, the locally elected member for Balloch, for trying to raise concerns about how the LLTNPA had handled the Flamingo Land planning application, resulted in the Standards Commission for Scotland (SCS) suspending him for the last six months of his term of office (see here).
Sid, who is 75 and is neurodiverse, decided not to stand again, having been silenced every time he tried to raise issues on behalf of the local community. Sid has been fighting on, however, having appealed to the Sheriff Court, which, unlike the SCS, has accepted he has been unwell and has delayed his appeal until October.
Having talked to several people active in local communities within the National Park, they no longer believe it is possible for locally elected members to influence what the LLTNPA does. They also believe anyone who tries to speak out will pay a considerable price for doing so. In other words there is no point standing and doing so risks far more trouble than the £228.69 daily fee is worth. A quote from Heather Reid’s article confirms this:
‘While each member is elected by a local ward, their role is to represent the interests of the whole National Park.’
Nowhere is it written in the National Parks (Scotland) Act 2000 that the function of locally elected members is to represent the Park Authority rather than local constituents. This is, however, what LLTNPA senior management drum into local board members the moment they are elected through an extensive induction programme designed to put them under the thumb of the Chief Executive.
Until Sid Perrie, no one challenged Gordon Watson, pictured left, and he responded by excluding Sid from meetings and by submitting his own complaint against Sid to the Ethical Standards Commissioner (about which more anon).
Another quote from Heather Reid’s article further demonstrates how she does not see any difference between members appointed by the Scottish Government and those elected by residents of the National Park:
‘We’re also really keen to hear from people from all backgrounds.
It is bad enough that we are now picking what sort of person gets appointed by the Scottish Government (see here), but as I argued in an earlier piece, ‘MSPs and local councillors are NOT recruited’, nor should local members be on the LLTNPA board.
Heather Reid’s message, however, is that locally elected members will be treated like appointees and expected to do as they are bidden.
The local members standing for re-election
Apart from Sid Perrie, the other four locally elected board members are all standing again, with David Fettes already elected unopposed for Ward 5:

I don’t recall any of the other locally elected members ever standing up for Sid Perrie, defending his neurodiversity or his right to speak out … but maybe I missed something.
What I do know is that none of those who were present at the board meeting where Sid proposed locally elected members should have their own LLTNPA addresses supported his proposal.
Perhaps they were too cowed to do so, but this makes it very difficult for any local constituent to question their elected representatives at election time on their record over the last four years.
The various flaws in our National Parks’ electoral system (see here) mean all local residents have to decide between candidates, unless they know the person, is a short 250-word statement that is circulated with the postal ballot papers.
With election expenses limited to £100, even candidates keen to communicate with voters in their ward face considerable impediments to doing so.
This electoral system suits those who have no real interest in representing local views, and that, combined with how locally elected members are expected to do the bidding of staff, has resulted in local residents becoming increasingly disengaged with the LLTNPA, undermining its democratic legitimacy.
The LLTNPA’s annual accounts show the attendance record of board members, and in those for 2024/25, the most recently available (see here), I have underlined the record of those local members who have stood for re-election:
LLTNPA have clearly been anxious and perhaps apprehensive re applications for locally elected Board members. Over the last 6 to 8 weeks there have been numerous items/submissions by Heather Reid in the Helensburgh Advertiser. There have also been almost daily adverts recently on Facebook saying how wonderful it is to be part of LLTNPA and reminding folks to consider applying for elected positions to the LLTNPA Board in order to represent their community. How embarrassing it would be for them to have no elected board members, especially in the Balloch area hailed as ‘The gateway to the National Park’. It would say such a lot about the current state of the local opinion of LLTNPA management by the public. I note from you article that there are currently no fewer than 3 councillors from Argyll & Bute on the Board ( 2 nominated and 1 elected, namely Iain Shonny Paterson,- though he is listed on LLTNPA website as being appointed by Scottish ministers on 20th November 2020 following nomination by Argyll & Bute Council). The table in your article shows that this elected councillor (and up for re-election) has only attended 2 out of 4 Board meetings; 2 out of 3 Planning & Access meetings and 1 of 1 Futures Gp. Meetings. Is this representing his constituents? I hope that Sid Perrie, who did his best to speak out for the community he was elected to represent on LLTNPA board, is okay. Perhaps it would be appropriate now to remind readers and the folks he represented, of the ordeal he is going through in doing that, of
https://www.gofundme.com › sid-perrie-his-fight-for-balloch-and-loch…
Sid Perrie – His fight for Balloch and Loch Lomond continues