Visit Peterhead, welcome to the Peterhead Town Trail.
Visit Aberdeenshire, welcome to the Peterhead Town Trail.
Visit Aberdeenshire, welcome to the Peterhead Town Trail.
This service is for the elderly, vulnerable, shielding and self isolating
Information about our doorstep deliveries within 15 miles of the store. They are separate from Home delivery .
You phone your order in to the call centre, and it gets delivered next day.
You pay the driver for your shopping by chip & pin or contactless.
Do you know someone who might need this service, please pass it on.
You can order on any day as we deliver 7 days a week.
There is no maximum spend, just phone in and order your groceries.

Delivery charge: £2.50
Give the a call to Peterhead on – 03456116111 or visite Morrisons website.

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A temporary ban on eviction orders will be extended until the end of March.
Regulations will be laid in the Scottish Parliament on 14 January to extend the current ban, which is in place at present until 22 January. The extended ban – will apply to all evictions in areas subject to level 3 or 4 restrictions, except cases of serious anti-social behaviour, including domestic abuse. Subject to review every three weeks to ensure it remains necessary to protect against the spread of coronavirus (COVID-19), it will remain in force until 31 March.
This will provide renters with safe homes during the pandemic. It will reduce the burden on local authorities, who have a duty to rehouse people made homeless through evictions, and will also make it easier for people to follow the guidelines during the current lockdown.
Housing Minister Kevin Stewart said:
“Extending the temporary ban on the enforcement of eviction orders in the private and social rented sectors in areas subject to level 3 and 4 restrictions will support tenants, and offer people protection from transmission of the virus by being able to stay safe in their homes.
“It will also prevent additional burdens being placed on health and housing services during a time where they are already working hard due to the impact of the pandemic. This is a proportionate response to an extremely challenging set of circumstances.
“In the case of serious anti-social or criminal behaviour – including domestic abuse – eviction orders can still be enforced.
“We have been clear that no landlord should evict a tenant because they have suffered financial hardship due to the pandemic. Tenants in difficulty should engage with their landlord and seek advice on the options open to them.”
Background:
Other measures to protect renters in Scotland during coronavirus were taken in the Coronavirus (Scotland) Act 2020.
These apply to all eviction notices issued on, or after, 7 April 2020. The original end date was 30 September 2020.
A number of actions have been taken to support tenants through the pandemic, including increasing the Discretionary Housing Fund from £11 million to £19 million to provide additional housing support and the introduction of the Tenant Hardship Loan Fund.
To minimise the risk of spreading the virus, you must stay at home as much as possible. By law, in a level 4 area, you can only leave your home (or garden) for an essential purpose.
There is a list of examples of reasonable excuses below. Although you can leave home for these purposes, you should stay as close to home as possible.
Shop on-line or use local shops and services wherever you can.
Travel no further than you need to reach to a safe, non-crowded place to exercise in a socially distanced way. To minimise the risk of spread of Coronavirus it is crucial that we all avoid unnecessary travel.
Examples of reasonable excuses to go out:
Amongst the limited reasonable excuses to leave your home are provisions for caring, outdoor exercise and to go to work, but only if that work cannot be done from home.
In a statement to Parliament, the First Minister said a steep increase in coronavirus (COVID-19) infections and the intensity of pressure on the NHS have created a race between the virus and the vaccines now coming online.
As a result, she said it was now imperative that everyone should comply with the message to “Stay at Home” for the duration of January.
The First Minister said:
“We are now seeing a steeply rising trend of infections. Indeed, it is no exaggeration to say that I am more concerned about the situation we face now than I have been at any time since March last year.
“As a government our clear duty right now is to act quickly and decisively to safeguard health, save lives and protect the NHS.
“The advice of our clinical advisers is very clear that the increased transmissibility of the new variant means that the current level 4 measures may not be sufficient to bring the R number back below 1.
“It is essential that we further limit interaction between different households to stem the spread and bring the situation back under control, while we vaccinate more people.
“In short, we must return for a period to a situation much closer to the lockdown of last March.”
In the week from 23 to 30 December the seven day incidence of cases per 100,000 of the population increased by 65% – from 136 to 225.
Mainland Scotland the new measures will make it a legal requirement to stay at home unless there is a reasonable excuse for leaving such as essential shopping, education, childcare or to support the vulnerable. Everyone must now work from home where they can.
Mainland Scotland other key changes include:
The First Minister also told parliament that from Friday, 8 January a number of other measures will be taken including:
Mainland Scotland the restrictions are expected to be in place for at least four weeks, but will be kept under review.
Brexit deal means drop in key fishing stocks
TO BE HEARD IN THE Neighbourhood GALAXY
Ice is likely to form on untreated surfaces during Monday night and Tuesday, especially where showers move well inland.
Some of the showers will be wintry and could produce 2 to 5 cm lying snow above 250 metres, mostly over the Pennines and North York Moors where up to 10 cm is possible.
Elsewhere, most places will see little or no snow, but a slight covering of a centimetre or so is possible in a few places.
Heavy snow effecting roads such as the #A93, #A90, #A96.

Central, Tayside & Fife
Grampian
Orkney & Shetland
SW Scotland, Lothian Borders
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To minimise the risk of spreading the virus, you should stay at home or in your local area as much as possible and only travel out with your Local Authority area for essential purposes.
Level 4 rules are similar to the nationwide lockdown scotland we experienced in March, however there are some differences this time around.
Non-essential shops, pubs and restaurants will have to shut except for takeaways, drive-throughs and deliveries.
Following a rule change on what is classed as an essential shop – meaning garden centres, homeware and furniture shops like B&Q will have to shut – the First Minister has suggested that stricter restrictions, enforced by law, could follow.
Lockdown Scotland, The measures entail:
Rules indoors
People should not be meeting in each others houses, however six adults from two separate households can meet in a public place. Children under 12 do not count towards that total.
Exceptions to the ban on household meetings include another household providing care and support to a “vulnerable person.”
The extended household rule applies in level four, which allows people who live alone – or who are a single adult with children under 18 – being considered part of another household to reduce loneliness and isolation.
Where parents do not live in the same household, children can move between their parents’ homes.
Outdoor meetings
You can meet people from other households outdoors in a private garden or in a public place such as a park. The maximum number of people who can meet outdoors is 6 which can be from up to 2 separate households.
Children under the age of 12 from these households do not count towards the total number of people counted in a gathering. Children under 12 do not need to maintain physical distance from others. This is to allow children under 12 to play with their friends outside.
Young people aged between 12 and 17 can meet up in groups of up to 6 at a time outdoors and are not subject to the 2 household limit. Physical distancing is required.
Where an individual household includes more than 6 people, they can continue to meet outside as a household even if the total number of people exceeds 6.
Education
Schools, colleges and universities can remain open in level 4, however this time around, Scotland faces a new period of disruption to schooling.
Most pupils will not return on 11 January, with online learning reintroduced until at least 18 January.
Hospitality
All restaurants, cafes and bars will close in Level 4.
Takeaways can continue to operate and hotels can serve food to overnight guests up to 10pm.
Travel
The Scottish Government website states that you cannot travel into or out of Level 3 and 4 local authority areas except for essential reasons.
Supermarkets, clothes shops and markets
All non-essential shops will shut from Boxing Day for three weeks.
Shops that can remain open include supermarkets as well as click and collect and on-line services. This no longer includes homeware, furniture or garden centres.
Hairdressers and barbers:
Any service which involves “close contact” cannot operate. This includes hairdressers, barbers, hair removal and massage therapies. It also includes dress-fitting, tattoo and piercing and indoor portrait photography.
Sport, leisure and entertainment:
Indoor sports facilities, including gyms, will close from Boxing Day. You can still meet others outdoors for informal exercise or sport and outdoor gyms can remain open.
Outdoor non-contact sports are permitted for all age groups.
All leisure and entertainment premises, including cinemas, must also close.
Film and TV production can continue however all public buildings such as libraries have to shut. Click and collect services can still operate.
Places of worship:
Indoor acts of worship are limited to a maximum of 20 people providing there is sufficient space to maintain safe 2 metre distancing.
Wedding ceremonies and civil partnerships, with a maximum of 20 people including the couple, are permitted providing the venue is large enough for 2m distancing. Face coverings are compulsory except for the couple getting married and person conducting the service, however receptions cannot follow a ceremony.
Funerals and wakes can take place with maximum of 20 guests.
A historic deal on the UK’s future trading and security relationship with the European Union has been struck on Christmas Eve, a week before the end of the Brexit transition period, triggering a victory cry from Downing Street and sombre reflection in Brussels.
UK voters opted to leave the EU in a referendum in 2016 by a margin of 51.9% to 49.1%. In Scotland, 62% of the electorate voted to remain.
The deal means businesses in the UK will be able to continue trading with EU countries without paying tariffs, although there will be new barriers such as increased paperwork and checks on imports and exports.
Travellers will soon see new controls as they exit and enter the country and from January 1 will no longer qualify for the European Health Insurance card.
A points-based immigration system for people who want to move to the UK will also begin on new year’s day.
Prime Minister Boris Johnson and European Commission president Ursula von der Leyen were in close contact over recent days to help get the deal over the line.
But negotiations led by the EU’s Michel Barnier and the UK’s Lord Frost continued throughout Thursday as final details were hammered out.
Johnson said: “We have taken back control of our laws and our destiny. We have taken back control of every jot and tittle of our regulation in a way that is complete and unfettered.
“From January 1 we are outside the customs union and outside the single market.
“British laws will be made solely by the British parliament interpreted by British judges sitting in UK courts and the jurisdiction of the European Court of Justice will come to an end.”
Announcing the agreement at a press conference in Brussels, von der Leyen said a “fair and balanced” deal had been struck after months of talks.
She added: “It was a long and winding road, but we have got a good deal to show for it.
“We are long-standing allies. We share the same values and interests, whether it be the Cop26 [climate] summit in Glasgow, or the upcoming UK G7 and Italian G20 presidencies.
“The EU and the UK will stand shoulder to shoulder to deliver on our common global goals.”
Also, Nicola Sturgeon said there was no available deal better than EU membership.
Her tweeted: “Before the spin starts, it’s worth remembering that Brexit is happening against Scotland’s will. And there is no deal that will ever make up for what Brexit takes away from us.
“It’s time to chart our own future as an independent, European nation.”
David Lonsdale, director of the Scottish Retail Consortium, said a tariff-free agreement was “positive news”, although said firms still wanted to see fewer barriers to trade.
“It will protect Scottish consumers from hundreds of millions of pounds of import tariffs on everyday goods, and help retailers to keep down prices at a time when the economy is under enormous pressure.
“Given that four-fifths of food imports come from the EU, this announcement should afford Scots households a collective sigh of relief.
“The UK and EU governments have taken a crucially important step in agreeing a zero-tariff agreement, to the benefit of customers.
“They must now work to implement this new arrangement as soon as possible, and seek to minimise the checks and red tape on imports that are expected from January onwards.”
Douglas Ross, leader of the Scottish Conservatives, said the deal meant jobs in Scotland had been protected and fishing communities would be “far better off”.
Scottish Secretary Alister Jack added: “We have an agreement on fisheries which will ensure that our fishermen, and our coastal communities, will flourish outside of the EU’s unfair Common Fisheries Policy. The UK will once more be a sovereign coastal state.”
However, the Scottish Salmon Producers Organisation warned that while it welcomed a deal, its members still had concerns.
Chief executive Tavish Scott said: “Brexit means the Scottish salmon sector now face the reality of lots more red tape, bureaucracy and paperwork which are the reality of the extra trade barriers which come with Brexit.”
Seed potato farmers in Scotland have also been angered after EU exports of their product was banned, with industry leaders warnings jobs and businesses faced uncertainty.
National Farmers Union Scotland president Andrew McCornick said: “It is good news and a huge relief that a deal has been done.
“The delay in getting agreement has meant that farmers and crofters, who had been forced into making big business decisions for 2021 in a void, now have a degree of certainty that European markets will be accessible next year for most of their products.
“No-deal would have been no good to Scottish farming, food and drink, and the worst-case scenario of crippling tariffs for some sectors, particularly sheep and cereals, has now been averted.
“We will now need to see the detail of what has been agreed and scrutinise it closely.
“On the deeply disappointing news about seed potatoes, NFU Scotland has been highlighting this issue over the course of this year with both UK and Scottish governments. It has been recognised by all as a problem that needs sorted.”
Scottish Labour leader Richard Leonard said the Brexit process should have been extended to keep the focus on the coronavirus pandemic.