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Traders' freezing vigil pays off



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Published Date: 04 January 2008
ROYAL Mile traders camped outside council offices for six days throughout Hogmanay and freezing winter weather to ensure they got a pitch.
Ten market stall holders set up a rota system to save their places at the front of the queue and claim a prized licence. Their long, cold vigil paid off when the High Street offices opened at 8.30am yesterday, leaving several people waiting behind th
em disappointed.
ROTA SYSTEM: Stall holders in the queue for street traders licences at the council headquarters on the Royal Mile. Picture: ED JONES
ROTA SYSTEM: Stall holders in the queue for street traders licences at the council headquarters on the Royal Mile. Picture: ED JONES


But the traders immediately hit out at the council for not making more pitches available and pushing them to such extremes.

Aileen Kelly, 32, from Morningside, has sold jewellery from her stall for 12 years, and was determined not to lose her spot.

Some traders had come along over the past week to try to grab a place in the line, but were told the first ten places were taken.

"The queue has been going on outside for six days, because it's first come first served," she said. "We have a rota and people take it in turns doing three hours at a time. There used to be seven places in the Royal Mile, but they've cut that back to four, plus the six we've got in Hunter Square.

"Every major European city has a vibrant street market but we have virtually nothing. We are legitimate businesses but people have been forced to queue at night. Women have been standing from 1am to 4am – it's not safe."

Elaine Davidson, of Nicolson Street, who sells jewellery and paintings, added: "I think the council needs to go back to the drawing board. They say 'first come, first served' but there are people who have had stalls for 12 or 15 years, and the new people coming in have no chance."

The street traders have an uneasy relationship with Royal Mile shopkeepers, many of whom want to see fewer market stalls.

Thom McCarthy, committee member of the Old Town Business Association, and owner of Golden and Crystal Clear shops, said: "I pay £10,000 a year in business rates for my two shops. I am now going to close down my shops and open one in the High Street to cut down on my overheads."

And Abi Denoon, manager of Pie in the Sky, in Cockburn Street, said: "The street traders do take away from our business. We have six shops in Cockburn Street and the cost of running them for the year is astronomical, then people come along for four weeks, with no overheads, and sometimes the same stock as we've got."

A city council spokesman said the number of pitches available to street traders had been reduced by two in 2006. He added: "The first come, first served policy has worked well in previous years. While street traders add to the atmosphere of the Royal Mile and Hunter Square, we also have to bear in mind the interests of other traders, and keep the area relatively clear for pedestrians. It is a balancing act and we keep the situation under review."





The full article contains 504 words and appears in Edinburgh Evening News newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 04 January 2008 11:41 AM
  • Source: Edinburgh Evening News
  • Location: Edinburgh
  • Related Topics: Royal Mile
 
1

Paul Voltaire,

04/01/2008 12:34:41
It's all tourist tat really both in and outside the shops of the Royal Mile.
2

alex paterson,

04/01/2008 12:47:56
They must make a few bob selling what they do,to camp out in all weathers must be really worthwhile.
3

Acorn,

Edinburgh 04/01/2008 14:01:02
I entered the Chambers by the very door in the photograph on Hogmanay, and there was no-one waiting there at all. The 6 days would appear to be the usual type of unfounded and unchecked claim we expect to see in the News.
4

The Genuine Mario Antoinette,

04/01/2008 14:26:15
3. Aye , sounds right. Why not do it by post ?

Is there a good reason why this mental ridiculously bloody stupid way of working goes on ?
5

raythebear,

edinburgh 04/01/2008 14:48:30
what are they complaining about, they must be the only people in the city centre who seem to be able to park their cars on the Royal Mile all day for free, with never a warden in sight
6

Finbarr Saunders,

04/01/2008 15:56:55
They should have auctioned the pitches on eBay to the highest bidders to prevent all this unseemly queuing malarky.

And it would have generated a bit of cash for the cash-strapped Council!

If it's worth spending six days queuing for a pitch, the Council should be able to make a tidy sum for ten of them!

And if the Council needs a wee hand listing them on eBay, I'll be happy to help.

For a wee consideration, of course.
7

Sassenach Observer,

04/01/2008 16:30:03
I think they need to tighten up on this queuing business. Rota system ? You are either in the queue or you aren't. It's as simple as that. Of course you could always pay a "homeless and hungry - please help" person to queue for you so there would need to be some form of identity card system to prove that the person queuing was genuinely the same person who would actually be selling overpriced sh!te on the Royal Mile. Maybe they should have a machine which dishes out little numbered tickets like they do at the cheese counter ?
8

Finbarr Saunders,

04/01/2008 16:45:46
#7- Sassanach Observer - Your ideas are flawed. They generate no additional income for the Council and there would be a queue at the wee cheese-counter ticket machine.

eBay is the way to go.
9

MadeinChina.co,

Bejing 04/01/2008 18:27:56
I think that the 10 licenses currently granted to sell the tat that these traders sell at these stalls is already 10 too many - if they want to be market traders then I suggest that they go to a market and trade there... the quality of the material on sale is just awful and I would be surprised if any or little of it came from Scotland... never mind the traders who buy these licenses what about all those people pitching up blankets on the ground and selling beads... why these ten people bother with a license at all is a wonder to me when another hundred or so illegal traders seem to be selling beads, bird whistles and a variety of low quality environmentally friendly goods on the streets without a license... I have even seen one such trader selling a plastic rat on a string... yip... the High Street certainly is the place for these people... let the tourists enjoy all they have on offer....
10

simpleton,

the big house... 04/01/2008 19:41:46
And i bet that the, new street traders, well how can i put this, not really people born in our CITY..e,bay is the fair way, or is that golf...
11

Haggis MacBagpipes,

Central Canada ex-Perth and Glesca' 05/01/2008 10:00:56
#8 - Finbarr Saunders

And what of the people who don't own a computer?

Not everyone has the dosh to buy a computer.
Cheers,
Haggis MacBagpipes™©
12

Haggis MacBagpipes,

Central Canada-ex Perth and Glesca' 05/01/2008 10:24:56
#9 - MadeinChina.co

"...I would be surprised if any or little of it came from Scotland..."

Probably made in China and not recalled when it should've been!

Cheers,
Haggis MacBagpipes™©
13

OLD GIN,

METHIL LEVEN 05/01/2008 14:31:40
come on EVERY CITY SMALL OR LARGE AS TRADERS THEY PAY SOME CASH TO CITYS OVER WORLD LET THEM BE . THEY CAN IF THEY TRY WITH GREEDY SHOPKEPERS TO WORK HAND IN HAND GIVE ALL A GOOD DEAL

 

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