“Natural Retreats” goes bust – HIE’s legacy for Cairngorm Mountain and the Highlands

March 7, 2020 Nick Kempe 9 comments

Just 14 months after Cairngorm Mountain went bust, the company that operated it and got away scot free has gone into administration.  That should come as no surprise to anyone who has followed the Natural Retreats saga in the Highlands.  This post takes a look at the latest financial losses attributable to Highland and Islands Enterprise’s promotion of Natural Retreats.

Events leading up to Natural Retreats entering administration

On 9th January 2020 Matthew Spence, Ewan Kearney, and Anthony Wild, the Directors of Cairngorm Mountain Ltd before it went into administration in November 2018 (see here), resigned from no less than 20 subsidiary companies belonging to Natural Assets Investment Ltd (NAIL).  These companies included John of Groats Highland Ltd and NA Lews Castle Ltd, both of which have received significant financial assistance from HIE (JOG Highland £1.8m and Lews Castle £1.7m).   HIE sold  Cairngorm Mountain Ltd to NAIL in 2014, only to buy it back out of administration for twice the price in November 2018, just after its ultimate owner, the hedge fund manager David Michael Gorton, had certified it as a going concern for another year in September 2018  (see here).  

It was clear from the Director’s resignations something serious was going on, but what?

Humbert’s, another company owned by Spence, Kearney and Wild, went into administration in December 2019.  This “Heritage” Estate Agency, had been bought by the trio in May 2018.     Press publicity in 2018 had suggested that Humbert’s had been taken over by the “Natural Retreats” group and the two were “a perfect fit and there will be mutually beneficial crossovers” (see here).   Spin! Interestingly, I can find NOTHING on the Companies House website to suggest  there were any legal connections between the two companies in terms of ownership. According to the statement from the Administrator (see here), in the 18 months they were responsible for running the company Spence, Kearney and Wild ran up debts of £897,773 to HSBC and £517,303 to HMRC while the UK Government appears to be left with picking up the redundancy tab of £383,845.   96 people appear to have lost their jobs (see here).

Following this, on 11th February 2020, the UK Great Travel Company, the new name for the company previously known as “Natural Retreats”, went into administration.  HIE had appointed NR/UKGTC to run Cairngorm Mountain Ltd but without any contract, hence why it was able to get away from Cairn Gorm scot free.  It had the same three Directors, Spence, Kearney and Wild.

The Administrator for the UKGTC subsequently published their account of what led to the administration and their proposals for winding up the company, on 24th February (see here).   It confirms some of the concerns expressed on Parkswatch about how HIE outsourced and managed Cairngorm Mountain Ltd but also contains a new bombshell of much wider significance for the Highlands.

HIE’s mismanagement at Cairn Gorm

When recommending that Natural Retreats should take over Cairngorm Mountain, HIE staff claimed they had “Demonstrable management experience in operating, marketing and growing resorts” (Board Paper Feb 2014).  The fanfare of press coverage announcing the appointment referred to Natural Retreats having experience in US ski resorts.  The truth is that Natural Retreats had almost no experience of running resorts, were in fact a holiday lettings company (whose US arm appears to have operated some ski chalets) and a very new one at that:

Introduction from Administrator’s Statement

This confirms Natural Retreats NEVER should have been considered as a suitable company to take over Cairn Gorm.

The Administrator’s statement also re-inforces the suspicions,first voiced on parkswatch over three years ago (see here), that “Natural Retreats” used  Cairngorm Mountain Ltd (CML) as a cash cow:

Para 1.14 can only be a reference to CML though that company went into administration in November, not September 2018

The importance of the income from CML is shown by the fact that Natural Retreats had to “restructure” and take out a loan of £400k once it had gone.  The final paragraph appears to be a reference to NAIL, which owned most of the properties which the “Natural Retreats” holiday lettings business then let out.  The suggestion that NAIL, however, was an (independent) customer is far from the truth, as Spence, Kearney and Wild were also Directors of all these NAIL companies.  Effectively, the claim in the Adminstrator’s statement appears to be that the three Directors fell out with themselves!  Smoke and mirrors!  Rather it appears they fell out with NAIL’s owner, David Michael Gorton, hence the resignations.

The Administrator’s Statement then reveals that at the very beginning of February 2020 the UKGTC sold off most of their assets to a company called Archibo for £38K.  This effectively finally cut the Directors’ ties with NAIL:

Archibo appears to have been a shell company, which was owned by NAIL’s owner David Michael Gorton through a company called Moore Place Holdings Ltd (see here).  One of its Directors is Timothy Dennis,  who was a Director of the UKGTC until January 2017, and is a Director of many of NAIL’s subsidiary companies, including John O Groats Highlands and NA Lews Castle.  This sale was therefore to a “connected company”.  That is important because under the Insolvency Act 1986 selling of assets to a connected company just before going into administration is normally unlawful (see here). This raises further concerns about the fitness of Spence, Kearney and Wild to act as company directors.  It will be interesting to see if the Adminstrator investigates further or whether HIE submits evidence about how it was conned at Cairn Gorm!

The financial impact of the UKGTC going into administration in Scotland

Having sold the assets for £38k, the Administrator’s Statement reveals that UK Great Travel Company was left owing £963,844 to other parties, including HSBC which had bankrolled some of NAIL’s acquisitions.   A number of small Scottish Companies were affected, including for example Highland Laundries £248.76 and Quintfall Forest Products £206.16.  However, after from HSBC, the organisations that have been hit hardest are Public Authorities in Scotland:

  • Cairngorm Mountain Ltd is owed £5052.13.  This amount appears never to have been collected after CML went into administration in November 2018.   How CML could have been owed money by the UKGTC,  a company that was supposed to be servicing  it, is worthy of further investigation. It provides evidence to support the suspicion that money ,may have been siphoned out of Cairngorm by Natural Retreats.
  • Highland Council is owed £6,011.56.  Its not clear at this stage what this money is for.
  • The “site owner” of John O Groat’s Scotland is owed £2,257.78.  It is not clear who this might be but some of the site occupied by JOG Scotland appears to be leased from Highland Council.

As concerning as all this is, given the HIE connections at CML and JOG Scotland, by far the largest sum of money is owed to Scottish Canals, the public authority responsible for the canal infrastructure in Scotland:

Extract showing money owed to Scottish Canals and three other Scottish companies

The Scottish Canals bombshell

A key section of the Administrator’s report is about “Natural Retreats” and Scottish Canals.  In 2017 “Natural Retreats” were granted a lease for 17 holiday properties owned by Scottish Canals.  They then apparently failed to rent from late 2018 (I say apparently as the figures suggest this might have been earlier).  As a result Scottish Canals instigated court proceedings in October 2019 and it was as a consequence of this that Natural Retreats/UKGTC went into administration:

This significant financial loss by Scottish Canals doesn’t appear to have been reported in the media. That is not surprising as there appears to have been no news release and Scottish Canals, like many of our secretive undemocratic Scottish public authorities, fails to publish Board Papers routinely, only agendas and minutes.   An item entitled “Holiday Cottage Portfolio Update and Recommendations Report” was presented to the Scottish Canals Board in January.  You would never know from this that SC had entered into a disastrous lease with Natural Retreats.

My suspicion is the loss will be significantly greater than £142,506 as “All responsibility for the fabric of the properties and the holiday customers sit with the tenant, Natural Retreats”.   Natural Retreats/UKGTC have had a history running down properties in Scotland, not just Cairn Gorm (see here for example), but also according to local reports passed on to parkswatch, John O’ Groats.

This came as a bombshell.  I had first discovered that Scottish Canals had decided to lease their properties to Natural Retreats in May 2018 and I asked them then about the basis for that decision because I was so concerned about their mismanagement at Cairn Gorm   I then received a series of evasive  and contradictory answers:

  • First I was told that “Our properties are leased to Natural Retreats through a commercial property lease and they operate their own holiday letting business” (email 19th June)
  • Then when I asked why the outsourcing of the canalside properties had not been advertised on the Scotland Contracts Portal I was told that:  “There are no goods purchased or service provision in this instance so it does not fall under the regulations or remit of procurement.” (email 5th July 2018)
  • When I queried this I received the following response “Natural Retreats do not operate any business on behalf of Scottish Canals or provide us with any service” (email 26th July 2018).
  • I then asked why, if this was the case, Scottish Canals had a link on their website (now gone of course) which stated  “Book your canalside cottage with Natural Retreats today”.

Another, less than transparent reply prompted me to make an FOI request asking for a copy of the lease and all Board Papers about the decision.  The lease turned out to be 25 years, for a fixed rent of £75k PLUS 10% of any profits.  The 10% profit mechanism, while similar to that HIE agreed at Cairn Gorm, was extremely naive given that by 2017 it should have been clear to anyone who bothered to look that none of the NAIL/Natural Retreats companies ever made a profit or paid tax.  The £75k rental also suggests that Natural Retreats failed to pay rent almost two years before Scottish Canals  instigated court proceedings since £142,506.80 was owed. It may be that Natural Retreats failed to pay rent right from the start.

In terms of the Board papers, I was sent a link to a single document, the minute of the Board Meeting of 14th August 2014,  which took place AFTER the lease had been agreed:

“7. Quarterly Business Report
The Board reviewed the Q1 Business Report presented in the context of the core themes of financial sustainability; public value; and empowering and motivating people as set out in the Corporate Plan 2017-2020 and as reflected in the Business Plan 2017/18.

The Board noted the positive financial sustainability highlights reported, in particular the lease
arrangement agreed with Natural Retreats for the marketing and operation of the holiday cottage
portfolio and transactional spend above plan for the quarter at The Falkirk Wheel.”

It seems incredible to me that staff could have been allowed to agree a lease that was potentially worth £1,875,000 over 25 years – described as a “positive financial sustainability highlight” – and has caused a loss of at least £142,506.80 without any Board scrutiny or going through a proper procurement procedure.  The questions of just how Scottish Canals decided to hand the lease to Natural Retreats, whether their response to the non-payment of rent was timeous and the total loss incurred need to be answered and in public.

A possible explanation of Scottish Canal’s folly, however, apart from the neo-liberal thinking that continues to drive outsourcing in Scotland, is what I have heard through campaigners furth of Scotland.  That is that one of the Directors of Natural Retreats had bragged about their lease with   Scottish Canals and stated this was granted after they had been given a favourable reference by HIE.   I have submitted an FOI to HIE in order to ascertain if this is true or not.   If HIE did indeed provide a reference,  that raises further serious questions about their judgement  and their role in enabling Natural Retreats to win so much business in the Highlands.

Its worth noting here that by August 2017, when Scottish Canals awarded the lease to Natural Retreats, it should have been quite clear to HIE that Natural Retreats were doing a terrible job at Cairn Gorm and that contractually the outsourced Cairngorm Mountain Ltd was failing to meet its maintenance obligations under the lease.

What needs to happen?

I have alerted Audit Scotland to the Administrator’s report into the collapse of the UKGTC and the concerns described in this post.  While many of these concerns go beyond the scope of Audit Scotland’s current inquiry into what has gone wrong at Cairn Gorm, they are I believe relevant to it.

Its time, I believe, for a much wider inquiry into how Natural Retreats, a new company based in Cheshire, won so much business across Scotland in such a short period of time.  Some bids/plans never came to fruition (see here) but a surprising number did.  One, Comhairle Nan Eilean Saar’s  award of the Lews Castle contract to Natural Retreats, has already been contested in the Court of Session and highlighted serious procurement irregularities.   Add to this HIE’s procurement irregularities at Cairngorm Mountain (see here for example) and Scottish Canals award of their property lease to Natural Retreats, and there are now strong grounds for a much wider investigation.

It is surely time too that Highland MSPs, some of whom to their credit asked Audit Scotland to look at what had gone wrong at Cairn Gorm, demand that HIE fully accounts for their role in these disasters across the Highlands and Islands and seeks re-assurances about how both Lews Castle and John O’Groats are now being managed.

The issues are, however, wider than Scotland. “Natural Retreats” was involved in managing several other developments owned by NAIL in England and Wales where things have gone badly wrong, including in the Yorkshire Dales and at Plas Pistyll in North Wales.  With none of the companies ever apparently paying corporation tax and the significant cost of paying for redundancies, its time public authorities and our politicians in Scotland asked for a wider investigation by the Inland Revenue and Companies House into how the Natural Retreats/NAIL group of companies has been managed.

9 Comments on ““Natural Retreats” goes bust – HIE’s legacy for Cairngorm Mountain and the Highlands

  1. Yet another terrific expose by Parkswatch. HIE’s incompetence knows no bounds and the Scottish Government very urgently needs to take control here before any further damage is done. The link, in this post, that shows how NR failed to undertake any maintenance to the exterior and environs of the Daylodge and how HIE didn’t take any enforcement action is perfectly clear and 100% correct. HIE were recently asked to provide a maintenance priority list in respect of the carpark surfaces and the Daylodge exterior and environs given that they have now had over a year to bring about remedial action and nothing has been done. The interim CEO, Carroll Buxton, replied to the effect that such a list does not exist and that maintenance is carried out on a day to day basis as the need arises. It has now been several years since any worthwhile maintenance has been carried out to these public assets but HIE continue to be oblivious. We will soon come to the season when ,many people visit CairnGorm……and take away impressions of decay, neglect and dilapidation. The time for decisive action is most certainly here now and if the CabSec with responsibility for HIE, Fergus Ewing MSP, is unable or unwilling to intervene then the First Minister should simply go over his head.

  2. I think I emailed you my analysis of NR & David Gorton’s various shell companies a few years back. I know I posted on a forum at the time NR took over that I bet NR would go bust & HIE would have to bail out CGML to the tune of £££. HIE just believed the marketing & the “name” of a hedge fund manager, but that is HIE all over. These events were plain to see to anybody with half a decent understanding of accounts & business acumen & just by looking into Gorton’s existing businesses & shell companies & the lodged accounts at Companies House, as I did.

  3. It is now crystal clear that a Scottish Parliamentary investigation into the performance of HIE on Cairn Gorm is long overdue. That investigation should also include input from two UK bodies, HMRC and Companies House, and a range of HIE staff, past and present. But it should not be restricted to the Natural Retreats fiasco. It should examine the full nightmare that led to the construction of the funicular railway, its non-maintenance and its potential demise. It should include evidence on the roles played by Fraser Morrison, as HIE chairman and Iain Robertson, as HIE Chief Executive, which led to the decision to build a funicular railway and to award the construction contract to Morrison Construction Ltd, the company chaired by Fraser Morrison. And it should investigate all aspects of the process which then led to Robertson resigning from HIE in July 2000 and becoming an employee of Morrison Construction soon after they were awarded the contract. Some of these problems were summarised by Alan Blackshaw in his submission of 7 Sept 2000 (“Are the Nolan Standards Working”) to the Auditor General of Scotland when he resigned from Moray, Badenoch and Strathspey Enterprise (part of the HIE network) on 9 August 2000. The principle reason for Blackshaw’s resignation was the move of Robertson from HIE to Morrisons and Robertson’s role in refusing to reassess the funicular against other possible development options. According to Blackshaw this potentially led to the Accounting Officer (Robertson), knowingly committing public funds to a project which was unviable.
    The last time a parliamentary investigation was carried out on Cairn Gorm, including a site visit and evidence taking, was by the House of Commons Select Committee on Scottish Affairs – report published in 1985. This was an investigation into the performance of the Highlands and Islands Development Board, predecessors of HIE and owners of the Cairngorm Estate from 1971. HIDB forced the Forestry Commission to relinquish their ownership of the upper slopes of the mountain – a disastrous development which has led directly to the current crisis. None of the key problems exposed by that investigation were subsequently addressed by HIDB or HIE. The time for the Scottish Parliament to get a grip of this shambles has arrived.

  4. Where is the ministerial accountability for HIE and SC? Surely its inconceivable that this can happen without awareness?

    1. Well Scottish Ministers in February awarded an extra £8.2m to Scottish Canals – its for capital projects, to maintain the built heritage, a good thing but its a valid question to ask whether when agreeing to this Ministers were aware of how much was lost letting out the heritage properties to Natural Retreats and what work now needs to be done on those properties. Luckily, Natural Retreats was ousted quite quickly, unlike Cairn Gorm, and that will have limited the amount that Scottish Canals may now need to fork out on restoration work

      1. Financial limits. There would normally be a financial threshold above which a an NGO like HIE or SC would have to consult Scottish Ministers. I wonder what they are for both bodies? This might point to a ministerial consultation.

  5. In fairness to HIE staff it should be recognised that its political masters will hear nothing but ambitious positive messages from them. Especially when it’s pushing the “all is well” economic myth of government.
    There is no place for staff who dare to bring realism and common sense to the appraisal process. Time and again the sickening sense of “I told you so” emerges with yet another project in trouble.

  6. Well as a former ‘Long-Term’ tenant living in a Scottish Canal cottage with a promise of lengthy let then to be given notice to quit for lucrative deal with ‘grass is greener’ Natural Retreats, I have no sympathy for the predicament they find themselves in. By trying to make quick money it has cost them dear and it will be the poor understaffed canal staff that will have to bear it

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