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Chamber and committees

Citizen Participation and Public Petitions Committee

Meeting date: Wednesday, February 22, 2023


Contents


Continued Petitions


Unexplained Deaths (PE1948)

The Deputy Convener

Our first continued petition today is PE1948, lodged by Alex O’Kane, which calls on the Scottish Parliament to urge the Scottish Government to encourage Police Scotland to review its practices for dealing with unexplained deaths, from initial recovery through to the support that is offered to family members.

We are joined this morning by Stephanie Bonner, who is here to tell us about what change she believes is needed, following her own personal experience. Thank you for your courage in coming to give evidence this morning, Stephanie. We appreciate you taking the time to speak with us.

I also welcome members of the public who are here to support the petition and Stephanie.

Stephanie, I believe you have a brief opening statement. Would you like to read it out? Just take your time.

Stephanie Bonner

It is a few pages. Is that okay?

That is okay.

Stephanie Bonner

I thank the committee for giving me this opportunity to speak and share my experience and journey with you.

Before I continue, I want to assure you that I will not go off track and that I intend to use this valuable time wisely, so please bear with me. I intend to cover the following: who Rhys Bonner was—he was my son; what happened; what I believe went wrong; how this has impacted my family and me; and what changes could be made for the better.

When I speak, you will hear my voice. When I speak, I hear my son Rhys Bonner’s voice coming within my heart. [Interruption.] I am sorry.

It is okay. Just take your time.

Stephanie Bonner

Hopefully, both voices can be heard as one today. Hopefully, changes can be made for the better after today.

Who was Rhys? Rhys was my first-born child. He was healthy, he was happy and he was loved by his family and friends. He looked forward to living his life to the fullest and shared the ambitions and dreams of many 19-year-olds, but his life ended at 19, just before his ambitions and dreams could start to come to fruition. Rhys was a loving, caring boy. He did not bother anyone, no one bothered him and he did not get into trouble. He was a happy-go-lucky teenager who had his whole life ahead of him. He had a career to establish, he had a future, he had true love to find and a family to build—he had his whole future ahead of him.

Rhys was 19 years old when he was taken from me. The day he went missing was the day that my nightmare started and my world changed for ever. The loss of a child is every parent’s worst nightmare.

What happened? Rhys went missing on 24 July 2019. His half-naked teenage body was later discovered on Thursday, 8 August 2019. Items of his clothing were scattered and missing. Police Scotland closed the investigation into the death on Monday, 12 August 2019—four days but only one full working day later. I believe that those times speak volumes. That was one day spent investigating my son’s death. My son’s life was worth one full working day to Police Scotland. Just to repeat that: Rhys’s half-naked teenage body was found on a Thursday afternoon and the investigation was officially closed on the following Monday. It was categorised as a missing person now found with no suspicious circumstances. My family and I were left to conduct door-to-door inquiries and build up a timeline of Rhys’s final movements. We were also left to chase and secure closed-circuit television footage and statements from different local sources.

We discovered video footage of my son Rhys’s body being dragged by ropes across open land—two football yards—in broad daylight by the police. I will never forget seeing these images as they will haunt me for ever. The police did not bother to try to prevent the public from filming this.

If the body of a half-naked 19-year-old girl had been discovered in an affluent area, I believe that the investigation would have looked a lot different. I believe that the victim’s family would have been treated a lot differently. I believe that the approach of the police would have been completely different.

What do I believe went wrong? When a body is initially discovered, there is a vital window of time where important decisions are made by the police. At this point, if the police cannot see any obvious signs of criminality or a clear cause of death, they have to make a decision despite the cause of death being unknown or, as they say, “unexplained”. In other words, the police have to form a theory based on what they see at the time at the scene, what evidence is clear to them and what the circumstances seem to be. This is where the theory is often made without the cause of death actually being officially established, without post-mortem and toxicology results being consulted. In fact, the investigation into Rhys’s death was closed before he was even formally identified.

I believe there is pressure on the police in terms of time and resources to make those decisions quickly and move on, and that is where mistakes can be made, which cannot be undone, leaving families without answers or closure—leaving families tormented forever.

I believe that postcodes play a significant factor in the decision making of the police and the theories that they form. I also believe that what is going on at the time of a discovery influences the police’s theory. For example, in the summer of 2019, when Rhys’s body was discovered, there seemed to be a high number of suicides and drug-related deaths being reported in the media and many of those involved younger men. So, I believe that, given the climate at that time, when they discovered Rhys’s body in that postcode area, the police’s theory was drawn towards a suicide or drug-related death. I think the police thought, “Just another young man from a housing scheme who lost his life through suicide or an overdose, so let’s not waste any time—just close the investigation and move on”.

Police Scotland failed to fully investigate Rhys’s death. That is not my opinion; it is a fact, as it was upheld by Police Scotland within my complaint in December 2020. Police Scotland did not even bother to conduct door-to-door inquiries. It is the basic stuff like that that could have made a difference both in terms of securing vital evidence and trust and confidence in the police investigation. My family and I were left to conduct door-to-door inquiries and build up our own timeline of my son Rhys’s last movements. Police Scotland then failed to fully investigate my complaint regarding the flawed investigations into my son’s death. Four key points were upheld by the Police Investigations and Review Commissioner recently.

How has this impacted my family and me? I am a mum from a housing scheme—a wee mammy from Barlanark—and I am not accustomed to talking to politicians, especially in such surroundings. I want to connect with you and describe my pain, the void left when a child, a loved one, dies and there is no explanation given. I want to try to explain what it feels like when a loved one is the subject of an unexplained death.

Take a few seconds to think of someone you love, bravely hold that image of that person in your minds, concentrate on that person’s image. As distressing as this may be, imagine the police contacting you and informing you that the person is dead and their body has been discovered half naked in open land—in my case, after the initial shock, I felt like I had been struck by a bow and arrow straight through my heart. The first question you would ask is, “What happened?” You have lost your loved one. You need answers. You need an explanation. You need closure. You need that to start the grieving process and try to move on.

But imagine that there was no explanation given to you. Imagine how you would feel. You have lost your loved one forever and there is no explanation whatsoever. That is what the families face when they lose their loved one to an unexplained death. They cannot move on. They are left thinking about every possible scenario, night after night, week after week, as months turn into years.

Imagine discovering that the police had closed their investigation into the death of your loved one four days—or one working day—later, even before the body had even been formally identified, before a pathology report was made, before a toxicology report was made, before establishing a timeline of your loved one’s last movements—[Interruption.] Sorry.

Just take your time. It is okay. Do not worry. You have as much time as you want.

Stephanie Bonner

Imagine discovering that the police had closed their investigation into the death of your loved one before doing all of that, before establishing who they were with or why they were with them. Imagine discovering that the basics like door-to-door inquiries were not even carried out. I ask you to consider how you would feel. Would you consider that to be reasonable? Would you accept that? In my case, I did not consider that to be reasonable. I did not accept that, so I made a formal complaint. Three years later and the complaint has still not fully been concluded. This is all part of the journey that I have travelled due to my son’s death being unexplained.

I still do not know with any certainty where my son’s body was discovered. Police Scotland have at least two different sets of co-ordinates. I tried to leave flowers and tributes at the location I was told about, only to be informed by local people that I was at the wrong location.

When Rhys’s body was found, I asked the police to show me where the body had been discovered. I wanted to know where my son took his last breath. I wanted to see where his eyes closed for the last time. As a mother, I wanted to know that, but I was paralysed by grief.

A police sergeant ended up giving us a map with an X marking the spot where Rhys’s body was discovered. Think about how insensitive that is. I would never have been able to find the place, so my father asked a police sergeant to take him to an open space where Rhys was discovered. The sergeant took him to an area and pointed, saying, “Just over there.”

Could I get a tissue, somebody, please?

10:00  

That sergeant gave me misleading information and tried to stop me getting representation of my choice. I hold that sergeant responsible for causing me a lot of confusion, distress and anguish, and he is directly mentioned in my complaint against Police Scotland. While that complaint was being investigated, that sergeant starred as a contestant on the “Countdown” television game show, boasting about now being an inspector and being in command of officers in my area of the city. I felt physically sick, seeing that man on TV, playing games while at the centre of a high-profile complaint, and knowing that he had been promoted to the rank of inspector.

At this point in time, I have lost all faith in Police Scotland. No matter what the police tell me, no matter what they say, I will struggle to accept it as credible. That is what happens when you are left without answers and are given the wrong information over three years. So, I have lost my son and lost my faith in the organisation that is there to serve and protect my family and me.

To add insult, I have watched Police Scotland repeatedly giving statements to the media about how sympathetic they are towards me and how much support they have offered my family. Every time I read that, I feel like I have been stabbed through the heart again. Police Scotland has not supported me in any shape or form. The second I made a formal complaint, the police closed ranks and I met a wall of silence. I was offered to attend one meeting in December 2022 or request a PIRC review. When I requested a PIRC review, the meeting was taken off the table. I faced a wall of silence for another two years while the police continued to suggest otherwise to the media. I have faced obstructions, and my representative has faced one obstruction after another. It has not stopped.

After PIRC upheld the four key failings—a few weeks ago, in fact—Police Scotland decided that they did not recognise my mandated representative. He had been mandated to represent me for more than three years but all of a sudden the police did not recognise him. He put in a formal complaint and contacted PIRC, and then the police suddenly did a U-turn and recognised him.

So, nothing has changed. I believe that Police Scotland has not learned from past failings and resents the bad publicity that it received due to its failure to fully investigate the death of Rhys Bonner, my son. Both my family and I have lost all confidence and trust in and respect for Police Scotland.

Bear with me. I have nearly finished.

Stephanie, just take your time.

Stephanie Bonner

Thank you so much.

What changes can be made for the better? When a body is initially discovered and the police do not know the cause of death, a reasonable level of evidence should be secured if there are no obvious signs of criminality, In this way, the police can go back after pathology and toxicology findings are available. The basics, such as door-to-door inquiries, should never have been missed. The window of time between when a body is discovered and a theory is formed and a decision is made must be looked at and be improved. It is better to gather evidence and not to have to use it than not to gather evidence and lose it.

Postcode policing has to be acknowledged and addressed. Every life matters, no matter what the postcode is. Right now, I do not believe that Police Scotland accepts that postcode policing exists. Until Police Scotland accepts that, this problem can never be addressed. Do you really believe that if Rhys was the son of a lawyer from an affluent area this investigation would have looked like this? Police Scotland has not supported me or communicated with me or my family. Police Scotland has to support and communicate with families impacted by unexplained deaths. In my case, Police Scotland has spent more time trying to convince the media how much they have supported me than they actually have spent with me. Police Scotland has displayed more spin-doctoring than sympathy.

Finally, I believe that someone had a level of culpability in the death of my son. As the cause of the death cannot be medically determined, and as the police never fully investigated my son’s death or secured potential evidence, I will never know with certainty what happened or be able to prove what happened to my son. That is the conclusion that I face. That is the conclusion that I have to live with every second. That is the conclusion that I will take to my grave. That is what happens when a death is unexplained and a death is not fully investigated by the police.

I want to thank you for this opportunity and for your time. Thank you, each and every one of you.

The Deputy Convener

Stephanie, thank you very much for your opening statement, which must have been really heartbreaking and emotional for you to read out. Members have a number of questions that they would like to explore. If you are happy, I will ask the first question. What are your main concerns about Police Scotland’s current handling of unexplained deaths?

Stephanie Bonner

It is about the impact on families—it is soul destroying. I have four other kids and there are lots of people in my place who do not have an Alex O’Kane in their lives and who do not have trust. It impacts the families tremendously; no one has an idea.

Thank you. I will move to my colleagues.

Carol Mochan (South Scotland) (Lab)

Thank you, Stephanie. I really appreciate you coming along and sharing your story with us.

I am interested in two things. First, could you tell me a wee bit about your experience of the postcode lottery that you felt? It stands out in your statement. Have you made contact with any other families that have had the same experience?

Stephanie Bonner

Yes, I have had contact with a lot of families. When the police said, “Where are youse from?” and I said, “Barlanark”, they went, “Oh!” I went, “What is it?” and they went, “So why would your son be in Easterhouse?” I went, “Because his college and other things are up there—that’s why he goes.” The police said, “Oh, you don’t get young boys his age going to Easterhouse and places like that.” I said, “What dae ye mean?” and they went, “Well, it’s different schemes and things.” I went, “I know, but ma son needs tae go up there. That is his library and things.” I was shocked by that. I said, “Does it really maitter where we stay?” I stay in a back and front door house, and it is fully decorated and comfortable for my kids.

When they came in, they went, “Oh!” I went, “What is it?”, and they went, “Oh, we didnae expect that; we thought we were gonnae be goin up a close. We didnae expect tae be comin intae a house. Aw, yer wee house is nice. We didnae expect that.” They were like that. I was just taken aback by their answers to that kind of question. What has anybody’s house or where they live got to do with it?

Carol Mochan

Okay. Thanks for explaining that a wee bit. I appreciate you doing that.

If there were one, two or three steps that you thought would be important for us to discuss as change, what would those be?

Stephanie Bonner

Every life matters—treat every life the same. Ma boy never drank or anything like that, but they kept on saying, “Will yer boy be out?” and I said, “No, he’ll no be oot wi friends.” I had tae go and find oot who ma son was with, and it was a very bad person, who I have heard lots of things about. I showed the police—sorry about this.

No, take your time.

Stephanie Bonner

What was it you asked me again? Sorry.

It was just if you had one or two things that you would like us to put forward as ideas to change the system at that very first bit.

Stephanie Bonner

I had just had a wee baby. Ma wee baby was four months old. I didnae have a liaison officer—somebody outwith the police. Ma son wis missing for 15 days and a police officer would only call me every two days at 10 o’clock at night, and they didnae interact with me. I used tae say, “Please,” but nobody from CID would come, but the police would come tae ma house. One time—this really impacted me—they came wi a bullet-proof vest, and I was really scared. I was just sitting there myself wi ma wee baby. I was so shocked, so I cried and they went, “Sit down right now.” It was just the way I was treated—nobody ever helped or had any empathy or compassion.

Was that the initial contact with the police?

Stephanie Bonner

Aye. The CID never came to see me and I begged the CID to come and help me.

Thank you.

Alexander Stewart (Mid Scotland and Fife) (Con)

Stephanie, thank you for your bravery today. That is much appreciated.

You talked in your statement about the failings and the trust that has been lost. I can very much appreciate that being the case, but what would you like to see improved with families? That is what you want to see here—that nobody else is put through a similar situation to what you had.

Stephanie Bonner

Yes. See if something is unexplained and there is no circumstance, I want it to be treated like other deaths. My son was found in open land. I do not want things to be treated as unexplained. I want it to be treated as an investigation straight away, so the police have everything they need. I want the family to get a liaison officer. That really needs to be in, because they said, “You’re dead strong,” and they were making me feel, “Oh, I’m a strong mum—I don’t need this.” That is the way they made me feel. You really need a liaison officer.

I had a wee baby, and he was premature, or he wouldnae have met Rhys. It was so hard, so I was just clinging on to my baby. I said, “So what does a liaison officer do?” They said, “Oh, they’ll just come intae yer life, and you don’t really want people in and oot yer hoose and that.” I wisnae aware that a liaison officer would tell me what was happening. It was only every two days that the police would phone me—they didnae want to come to see me. I was looking for my son myself. No police were ever out, and they lied to me. They said that 30 officers were going door tae door that day. Nobody ever went door tae door, and he was only a wee 19-year-old boy.

So you really want to see it embedded in the process that there should be a liaison officer who is seconded and then given the opportunity to support.

Stephanie Bonner

Yes, please.

And support the family.

Stephanie Bonner

Yes.

You also talked about people closing ranks and your belief that you were not given all the facts or information.

Stephanie Bonner

Yes.

Alexander Stewart

As a mother of a family—a grieving mother—it is so important that you are given that respect and support. We have to trust organisations like the police to deliver that service, but obviously in this situation that was a massive failing.

Stephanie Bonner

Oh, yes. I felt like the criminal. Ma wee baby was only four months old and they werenae understandin that he was premature and that I could have other feelings goin through ma body and things like that anaw. They just kept on sayin tae me every day, “Where dae ye think he is?” I said, “Ma son’s up in the field. I know he is. Please gonnae help me—it’s no that big.”

I said, “Where is this lady in question?”, and they would say, “It’s okay, she’s got a red alert on her if she goes and shoplifts or something.” I said, “But please help us. I’ve got kids and I’m terrified. Gonnae go and get her—gonnae get the CID in tae investigate hard so ye can get ma son back tae me just now, please.”

Thank you.

Thanks for coming today, Stephanie. It must be very hard.

Stephanie Bonner

Thank you for the opportunity. I appreciate it.

Fergus Ewing

You are doing very well. We appreciate that this is, as I think you said, every parent’s nightmare. I think we all feel that very profoundly for you.

It seems to me that you have been very badly let down by people who were supposed to help you. We have not heard from the police, so we have not heard what they have to say, but it feels that way to me.

Stephanie Bonner

They do not communicate, ever. I have a representative, Alex O’Kane, and he helps me. The police have just never tried tae help me. They have never came oot. They just told me, “This has happened to your son. Ye’ll need tae accept it, and that’s it.”

Yes. I think we heard that Mr O’Kane was very helpful to you.

Stephanie Bonner

Yes. Oh, God, I wouldnae have been here without him.

That was very good that he did that.

Stephanie Bonner

Oh, yes. I am so proud of him.

I am not in the same party but that does not really matter. We can imagine that he would have done that.

Stephanie Bonner

Oh, yes.

This next question might be too difficult for you to answer.

Stephanie Bonner

No, it is okay.

Have you ever been offered any explanation by the police about why they did not carry out the investigation that you felt was basic—namely, door-to-door inquiries and things of that nature?

Stephanie Bonner

I have never had an answer. I put in complaints with PIRC, and when PIRC came back, they upheld the four complaints—that the police had dragged ma son and different things—but I have never had any answers. Never. My son just went out that day to go to McDonald’s and I am left wi that. It was a lovely summer’s day. They said there was lots of water up there. It is open—nurseries and that came up through it, and it was a really nice summer, so it was all very dry. They never put oot any helicopters. I was scared to speak up in case they didnae want tae look for ma son, so one day my partner said, “Can you get sniffer dogs, helicopters and that?” and they went, “Oh, that’s resources.” Someone said to ma partner, “That’s resources—it’s too much money and that.” Ma partner said, “But it’s ma son—ye need tae dae something.” Naw, there was never any officers.

10:15  

Our purpose is not to carry out an investigation. We cannot do that. I feel guilty saying that, but that is just the way it is. We cannot do that.

Stephanie Bonner

Yes. I just want other families to be helped to not go through this, ever.

Fergus Ewing

We cannot start an investigation now, and I am not proposing to, but what troubles me about the issue is that the evidence that we have had from the police—they put in a written submission—basically says that they have a duty to provide family liaison support in certain circumstances. My question is how, in your case, did they determine that you were not entitled to more support? If it had very clearly been a homicide or if there had been a fatal accident inquiry to be held, the submission we have had is that there would be an obligation to provide support, but it seems that, in your case, from what I have gleaned from the evidence, the police decided that there was not that obligation. Victim Support has also said that it does not provide help. It seems that you fall between the cracks here, between the police and Victim Support. Do you have a sense of what you would like to have happened? Would you have liked the police to have done more?

Stephanie Bonner

Did I tell ye they done nothing?

Fergus Ewing

Can you say what would have been better?

Stephanie Bonner

Somebody coming to my house to see me and somebody to go through things. It is nearly four years now and when my son was just missing for the 15 days, that is the only time I seen the police, as well as the two months after that. I have not seen the police or heard from them for just over three year. They do not talk to me. I have always had just a complete wall of silence, and I do not know why.

So lack of communication was the common theme.

Stephanie Bonner

Yes—100 per cent. There was no communication whatsoever.

And there was no apparent desire to communicate either.

Stephanie Bonner

No.

In fact, it was quite the opposite. Is that right?

Stephanie Bonner

Yes, that is right.

That really is wrong, I think. I would imagine that many of us here feel that way. Thank you again for answering my questions.

Stephanie, before we draw the evidence session to a close, is there anything that we have missed or that you would like to say?

Stephanie Bonner

See the video of them dragging ma son? I think something has to be done about that, please. Please, because it is on video and they have no told me that is ma son, and I want tae know where ma son’s body is, please. I am begging, because they will not tell us where it is. They will no tell me anything. I am begging—please help him. Please have just a bit of empathy and some compassion for ma wee 19-year-old boy. He did matter. He was beautiful.

Can I tell you one mair thing aboot him? He left school and had a job right up tae he passed away, the wee soul. He didnae drink or things and he never had a chance tae. He had a wee brother—I have four other kids. I am scared, and the person still walks aboot the streets and they have a large family and aw that. I am just left there worrying every time there is a knock at the door. I am terrified—that is aw I can say.

The Deputy Convener

Stephanie, thank you very much for coming and giving us evidence. I know it is a really difficult time for you and it is difficult to go back through it.

Thank you also to the people in the public gallery for coming to support Stephanie Bonner and the petition—it is greatly appreciated. I suspend the meeting to allow Stephanie to leave.

10:18 Meeting suspended.  

10:22 On resuming—  


Reusable Water Bottles (PE1896)

The Deputy Convener

The next item is petition PE1896, on providing every primary school child in Scotland with a reusable water bottle, which was lodged by Callum Isted. The petition calls on the Scottish Parliament to urge the Scottish Government to replace the disposable water bottles that are provided with primary school lunches with sustainable, reusable metal bottles.

We previously considered the petition at our meeting on 23 November 2022, when we agreed to invite the Cabinet Secretary for Net Zero, Energy and Transport to give evidence to the committee. We have instead the Minister for Green Skills, Circular Economy and Biodiversity, Lorna Slater, giving evidence on the petition this morning. I thank the minister for coming.

Members have a number of questions that they would like to explore, but first I believe that you have an opening statement, minister.

The Minister for Green Skills, Circular Economy and Biodiversity (Lorna Slater)

I do. Thank you very much.

I congratulate Callum Isted on the incredible effort that he has put behind the petition and the campaign, and for raising £1,400 to buy reusable bottles for his school. His work has been an inspiration to us all.

I and this Government are committed to this agenda and are seeking to dramatically reduce the amount of single-use plastic products that we consume and throw away in Scotland. That is why we are working hard right now to implement Scotland’s deposit return scheme, have banned some of the most problematic single-use plastic products and are introducing a minimum charge on single-use beverage cups by 2025.

Scotland’s deposit return scheme, which will cover the kinds of single-use bottles that we are talking about today, will alone reduce littering by a third and cut emissions by the equivalent of 4 million tonnes of carbon dioxide over 25 years. That is an average of around 160,000 tonnes of CO2 each year, which is the equivalent of taking 83,000 cars off the road in the United Kingdom. However, I agree that that is only part of what we need to do. Education authorities and schools have a key role in leading the way.

Callum’s petition has requested that the Scottish Government provides local authorities with funding to enable schools to give reusable metal water bottles to schoolchildren when they start in primary 1. Although I welcome the spirit of the request made in the petition and absolutely share the same ultimate goal—to reduce to a minimum the consumption of single-use plastics in schools—it is for local authorities, as autonomous and democratic organisations, to agree their annual budgets, taking into account their statutory duties and national and local priorities.

The law says that all schools must make sure that drinking water is available free of charge for all pupils at all times of the day, including at meal times. It is for each education authority and school to decide how drinking water is provided, and it is important that we respect that, so that they can provide water in the way that works best for their school and their pupils.

The Scottish Government is clear that that decision, like others made by schools, should support our broader environmental goals. I know that those who provide catering in schools actively consider sustainability as part of their thinking about the delivery of their services. Sustainability is also reflected in the learning for sustainability cross-curricular theme, which encourages schools to take a whole-setting approach to it. That means that all school buildings, grounds and policies in the school should support learning for sustainability, including making sure that the school is taking steps to be more sustainable, which includes reducing the use of plastic.

I know that, in practical terms, local authorities use sustainable approaches to reduce the use of single-use plastic in schools. That includes the provision of water fountains, ensuring that water jugs and reusable cups are available in dining halls, and encouraging pupils to bring in and use reusable bottles. Furthermore, in direct response to the petition, my colleague Shirley-Anne Somerville wrote to the directors of education at all local authorities, drawing their attention to the petition and their obligations to provide drinking water to pupils, and further encouraging them to do so in an environmentally friendly way. We will continue to build on that progress.

Thank you for inviting me here today. I look forward to answering your questions.

The Deputy Convener

Thank you, minister. Several members have questions. I will start.

Has there been any further engagement with local authorities’ directors of education following the cabinet secretary’s letter regarding the issues raised in the petition?

I am happy to pass that to my colleague Laura Meikle.

Laura Meikle (Scottish Government)

Following the letter, we have not had any further engagement with directors of education. As part of the preparation of the letter, we engaged with the Convention of Scottish Local Authorities, the representative organisation for local authorities, in order to garner its support for it. We have not engaged further with local authorities at this point.

That is partly because there is an on-going duty on education authorities to provide water. Education authorities are also required to have due regard to any guidance provided by the Scottish ministers in relation to the provision for sustainability under the Schools (Health Promotion and Nutrition) (Scotland) Act 2007. That guidance has been in place for some time and, therefore, we would regard that as an on-going requirement of directors of education, rather than something that is new and has arisen specifically in response to the petition.

Carol Mochan

You spoke about the responsibility of local government to provide water for young people. I am interested to know to what extent that is monitored. Do we have any evidence that water is freely available and how well young people can access it?

Laura Meikle

There is on-going monitoring of the duties under the 2007 act. There is formal monitoring and there are specific nutrition inspections as part of the inspection arrangements for schools.

We engage regularly with catering services and education authorities as part of our on-going support for implementation of those provisions. You will recognise that provision of food and drinking water is a very important area and our nutritional standards have been revised recently. We have had significant engagement with educational authorities recently about the standards, and that engagement is on-going. We are well sighted on those provisions.

Our understanding of the position is that there was, of course, an impact on the provision of drinking water during the Covid-19 pandemic, because specific guidance was in place for education authorities at that time. That guidance has been removed now and catering services are returning to a more normal provision in schools. We are still engaging on that as part of our other commitments on the provision of food and drink in schools.

10:30  

You talked about changes in the guidance. Do you know whether schools still give out disposable bottles or whether the provision is more sustainable now?

Laura Meikle

The petition suggests that single-use plastic bottles are provided in Callum Isted’s school. That is not necessarily the practice in every school in Scotland, so we do not start from the position that it is. We are aware that there are other approaches. For example, instead of bottles, there may be reusable cups, cups made out of corn starch or a variety of other options. Single-use plastic is not quite as widespread as might have been presented.

We are pleased that the extent to which schools provide water for pupils is monitored, but what is the upshot of that provision? What evidence do you have from each local authority on it?

Laura Meikle

I do not hold specific evidence. There is on-going monitoring and engagement by nutrition inspectors and we have on-going engagement with catering services. We have not done a specific exercise to monitor the provision, because it is a legal requirement of the Schools (Health Promotion and Nutrition) (Scotland) Act 2007 and the specific regulations.

If you are not able to say what evidence there is, how do we know that children get water?

Laura Meikle

We know that from our discussions with catering services and education authorities. When you used the term “evidence”, I thought that you meant a specific exercise that had been undertaken to establish the position in each education authority, rather than the evidence that we gather through our own on-going and regular engagement with education authorities. We get feedback in that way.

Fergus Ewing

That is appreciated, but what Callum Isted has asked for—the minister said that he has done well, and we all recognise that—is that every primary school child should have a reusable water bottle. If you have your own water bottle, you carry it with you and you have it all day. If it is anything else, whether a fountain or a cup in the canteen, you do not always have that with you.

We are fortunate and privileged here in the committee room, where we all have water at the table, but they do not have that in schools. My point is twofold. First, every child should have access to water—you say that you do not know whether that is the case or not—and secondly, the point of the petition is that that access should be through means of a reusable bottle, so that there is less repetitive use of paper or plastic cups and so on, which are bad for the environment. The sum total of your evidence is that you do not know what is happening and you have not said yes to Callum’s petition. There have been some warm words, but Callum has not really made any progress, has he?

Lorna Slater

I do not think that that is an accurate representation of the situation at all. There are other sustainable ways of providing water and it is up to schools to provide it in the way that works best for them. For example, if schools and local authorities have invested in water fountains and their maintenance and upkeep, that is how they have decided to meet the statutory requirement to provide water and that is how they have decided to spend their budgets. It is for them to make that decision. Equally, if schools have invested in jug and cup schemes, it is absolutely within their purview to decide how to spend that money and how to make the provision. It is not for us to impose upon them how to interpret the requirement to provide water.

We know that water is being provided, as my colleague said, because of our on-going conversations with education authorities.

Fergus Ewing

I would quite like to see the evidence, because it does not seem to me that there is clarity. There really should be clarity from each local authority, which should provide a simple explanation of what it does in each case.

My final question is this. If every child were to be provided with such a reusable bottle, that would enable a form of national procurement for every local authority. The way that procurement goes is that you get a better price with a national procurement scheme, because you are buying many more of exactly the same thing rather than having possibly 32 separate procurement exercises for bottles. Have you considered that? Has the minister had or sought advice about whether a national scheme would offer not only those cost benefits, because you get cheaper unit costs for larger procurements, but certainty that children actually get personal access to a reusable source of water, which they can have all the time? That would provide an answer to Callum’s petition and provide near certainty that every child is properly hydrated, which, with respect, you are not able to say is the case at the moment.

Lorna Slater

Callum Isted’s petition is specifically about a proposal to replace single-use bottles, which were what were being used in his school. Many schools already have in place solutions to that, such as water fountains or jug and cup schemes. That provision is already in place and we do not want to solve a problem that has already been solved in many schools. We know that schools are working towards the sustainability objective. We also have in place national programmes to tackle single-use plastics, such as our deposit return scheme. The process to move away from single-use plastics is well under way.

I recognise Callum Isted’s hard work on the issue and the work that he has done with his school, but it is not necessarily the correct solution for every school, and it is up to schools and local authorities to put in place the correct solution for them.

Thank you for those remarks, but, with respect, you have no evidence and I would suggest that you get evidence from each local authority to find out what is actually happening.

Could the statutory guidance on nutritional requirements for food and drink in schools be revised to address the concerns that Callum Isted raised in the petition?

Laura Meikle

The requirements in the Schools (Health Promotion and Nutrition) (Scotland) Act 2007 and the food and nutrition regulations are already aligned to ensure that sustainability is considered as part of the approach to the provision of food and drink in schools. We would not need to amend the regulations to in order to address sustainability matters or the use of single-use plastic, because that arrangement is already built into the existing legislative arrangements. We have significant on-going engagement with education authorities and catering services on the issue and their arrangements for promoting sustainability.

Minister, you have touched on the deposit return scheme. How would the deposit return scheme operate in schools and what impact could it have on the use of bottled water?

Lorna Slater

Schools may interact with the deposit return scheme in several ways. Large schools that have, for example, a cafeteria that sells drinks would be part of the scheme. They would charge the 20p, as any shop or cafeteria of that style would, and they would have an obligation under the scheme to decide whether they would operate as a return point. They would have the same options as any other cafeteria or similar venue: to operate as a manual return point, to install a reverse vending machine or to apply for an exemption from being a return point based on health and safety grounds or any of the other grounds that are available.

Schools that, for example, do free school meals and provide a free bottle have a couple of options. They could run as a closed-loop system, as many restaurants will. For example, when you buy a bottle of wine in a restaurant, you do not take that bottle away with you—the restaurant takes it back—so you will not pay a deposit on it. That is called a closed-loop system. If schools were to offer an open-loop system with free school meals, they would have to incorporate the price of the deposit in the cost of the meal, because the child would be able to take the container away and collect the 20p when they returned it.

There are different ways in which schools may interact with the scheme. Of course, if schools moved away from using single-use plastics as a way of providing drinks, specifically water, that they are required to provide, they would not be required to participate in the deposit return scheme.

Alexander Stewart

Is any other legislation in Scotland or the UK been raised with the petitioner? He is trying to achieve something, and we know that people are trying to achieve other things as well, such as through the circular economy bill and the UK extended producer responsibility scheme. What impact could they have on the petition and on how you plan to go forward?

Lorna Slater

The member raises excellent points. Those are exactly the sorts of tools that we have as we move towards a circular economy and begin to get rid of waste. We are talking particularly about plastic waste, but waste of any materials or energy in our society is no good.

The extended producer responsibility scheme for plastic is a UK-wide initiative. It was two weeks ago, I think, that we passed at the committee the Scottish statutory instrument to start collecting data for the scheme. From 2024, large packaging producers will need to report on what their packaging is made of and how much packaging they produce—that sort of thing—and in 2025 they will pay fees based on how much packaging they produce. Those fees will be collected and distributed to local authorities to help them pay for recycling. It is another producer responsibility scheme in which the cost of handling materials at the end of their use will be passed to the producers of the materials, rather than being borne by the public purse. It is an exciting initiative that will, I hope, transform our recycling and the design of packaging materials, because it will incentivise producers of packaging to use more sustainable materials, more recyclable materials, and, I hope, less material altogether. It will be advantageous to them to do that under the fee scheme.

The other thing that you touched on was the circular economy bill, which is largely about establishing new powers. One of the things that was consulted on for the bill was powers to put charges on single-use items, and one of the things that we will look at next in the single-use space is single-use beverage cups. The bill is intended to establish powers so that we can be adaptable as we go forward and use targeted approaches, much like was done with plastic bags under our current powers. We know how effective that was in reducing litter and damage to the environment.

Before we conclude taking evidence, is there anything else that you would like to add?

Lorna Slater

I would just say thank you very much to Callum Isted for bringing the matter to our attention. He is absolutely right: we should all be working towards using fewer single-use plastics and using reusable, long-term containers and packaging. I thank him so much for his work.

The Deputy Convener

Minister and Laura Meikle, thank you very much for your time. Members, are we content to consider the evidence that we have heard at a future meeting?

Members indicated agreement.

I now suspend the meeting for a short while.

10:42 Meeting suspended.  

10:44 On resuming—  


Island Community Representation on Boards (PE1862)

The Deputy Convener

Welcome back, everybody. We will now consider PE1862, lodged by Rona MacKay, Angus Campbell and Naomi Bremner on behalf of the Uist economic task force, which calls on the Scottish Parliament to?urge the Scottish Government to introduce community representation on boards of public organisations delivering lifeline services to island communities, in keeping with the Islands (Scotland) Act 2018.

10:45  

At our previous consideration of the petition on 9 November 2022, we agreed to write to the Minister for Transport to seek information on the process for appointments to the board of David MacBrayne Ltd, and to seek an update on communication between the minister and Highland and Islands Airports Ltd—HIAL—about the proposal in the petition.

I am pleased to say that we have now received a response from the minister that sets out details of the advertising campaign to recruit two non-executive directors to the board of David MacBrayne Ltd. The minister highlights that an understanding of island life is a key criterion for those roles and that that will be fully explored and assessed throughout the recruitment process.

On HIAL, the minister notes that an understanding of the communities in which HIAL airports are located is an essential requirement for all board members. It also noted that HIAL has recently recruited a new finance director, who has also been appointed to its board. That person is an island resident.

The committee has also received a submission from our colleague Alasdair Allan MSP. He has reiterated his support for the petition and notes that, although progress is being made, individual appointments to the boards of HIAL and Caledonian Maritime Assets Ltd do not necessarily mean the issues have been resolved.

Do members have any comments or suggestions?

Carol Mochan

I have been approached by people who, although they acknowledge that there has been some movement, consider that there is no great urgency to see the issue as a key priority. I have been asked to raise with the committee that having an islander on HIAL’s board should be a priority. Beatrice Wishart from Shetland has spoken to me about how the community there feels that it is imperative that that happens. I want to share that with the committee.

Alexander Stewart

Progress is being made, but we require more information. I suggest that we write to the Minister for Transport encouraging the Scottish Government to continue to make progress on the issue, which has already been raised by other MSPs and not just by those on this committee. We should also recommend that it explores all available options to formalise the role of community representation on boards of public organisations providing a lifeline service to island communities. We have discussed some of those organisations in the past, when we have talked about the representation on HIAL, David MacBrayne Ltd or CMAL. It is those types of organisations that we would be requesting the minister to give us more information about. With that information, we can then assess what progress is really being made.

Fergus Ewing

I support the recommendation that Alexander Stewart has just made. I would add that specific reference in the letter to the minister could be made to, and perhaps a copy appended of, Alasdair Allan’s submission, because he makes several very good points about the value of having island residents on boards relating to ferries, transportation and health.

Alasdair Allan goes into a couple of reasons for that, which I will briefly set out. First, he says that organisations are improved by having people who rely on the services rather than outsiders who do not use the services. That is a commonsense point and seems to be a practical example of the benefits of having local residents on the boards rather than—without being pejorative—outsiders.

Secondly, he says:

“Having ... island-based board members would also make for a better flow of ideas from communities at an early stage, rather than consultation taking place after decisions have, essentially, already been made.”

That, too, is a very good point, convener, and one that perhaps we could ask that the minister bear in mind with further future appointments to public bodies.

Thank you for that. Do we all agree on those recommendations?

Members indicated agreement.


Adult Disability Payment (People Undergoing Cancer Treatment) (PE1913)

The Deputy Convener

PE1913, which was lodged by Wendy Swain, calls on the Scottish Parliament to?urge the Scottish Government to create a separate department in Social Security Scotland that will fast-track future adult disability payment applications for people with a cancer diagnosis while they are undergoing treatment.

At our previous consideration of the petition, we agreed to write to Social Security Scotland highlighting the concerns of the petitioner and the recommendations for system improvements that are set out in Macmillan Cancer Support’s submission.

In response, Social Security Scotland has confirmed that it will publish quarterly statistics and that the information that is available will be expanded as it continues to collect more data. That will include information on processing times. The response outlines its work to address the issues that are raised by Macmillan Cancer Support’s recommendations.

The petitioner’s recent submission highlights her on-going concern about rejected applications for disability payments through the personal independence payment.

Do members have any comments or suggestions for action?

Alexander Stewart

We have asked questions about the petition in the past and we have received some assurances. However, there are a number of issues that we might still want to ask about. It might be advantageous to write to Social Security Scotland to ask whether it intends to set targets for application processing times for special and normal rules cases. That is vitally important for an application process. If we have targets, we will get an answer as to where we are, and there are other options that we can look at thereafter.

Thank you. Does everybody agree to take that approach?

Members indicated agreement.


High-caffeine Products (PE1919)

The Deputy Convener

PE1919, which was lodged by Ted Gourley, calls on the Scottish Parliament to urge the Scottish Government to ban the sale of fast-release caffeine gum to under-18s for performance enhancement due to the risk of serious harm.

At our previous consideration of the petition on 28 September 2022, where we agreed to seek information from the Scottish Government on when the report on the consultation on ending the sale of energy drinks to children and young people will be published.

We have now received a response from the Government, which states that it will publish an independent consultation analysis report and set out its policy response “in due course.” The response also suggests that the evidence base in relation to caffeine, and caffeine gum specifically, continues to develop. Furthermore, it will look to the European Food Safety Authority and others as the evidence base evolves to consider the implications for the current advice on caffeine products. At this stage, the Government is not considering a ban on the sale of fast-release caffeine products to under-18s.

We have also received two submissions from the petitioner in which he raises concerns about the lack of available evidence to understand the impacts of high-strength, fast-release caffeine products on athletes of various ages. Mr Gourley also offers suggestions for further information gathering by the committee, as well as drawing our attention to advice that the US Anti-Doping Agency provides in relation to caffeine.

Do any members have suggestions?

Alexander Stewart

I think that we should write to the Scottish Government requesting an update on when the analysis report and policy response to the consultation into ending the sale of energy drinks to children and young people will be published. In addition, I would suggest that we recommend that it commissions further research into the effects of fast-release caffeine products on children and young people, particularly those participating in physical activity.

It might also be useful to seek some clarity from UK Athletics, to seek its views on where we are in relation to the issues that are raised in the petition. Information on any action that it is undertaking to address the potential risks to athletes under 18 using fast-release caffeine products for performance enhancement would give us an indication as to how that is being managed and processed.

Fergus Ewing

In backing that recommendation, I note that the information that we have been provided with states that there have been sudden cardiac deaths at races where caffeine gum was promoted, although there are no investigations of any potential link. Scottish Athletics and sportscotland have warned of health risks. I mention that because, plainly, if cardiovascular risks are involved and death has occurred, that is a very serious matter. We should get that further evidence in some detail.

I support that. If the athletics associations are already looking into the issue, bringing the evidence to the committee would be very worth while.

Thank you for that, colleagues. Do we agree to take that approach?

Members indicated agreement.


Universal Free School Meals (PE1926)

The Deputy Convener

PE1926, which was lodged by Alison Dowling, calls on the Scottish Parliament to urge the Scottish Government to expand universal free school meals provision for all nursery, primary and secondary school pupils.

When we previously considered the petition on 28 September 2022, we agreed to write to the Cabinet Secretary for Education and Skills seeking an update on the work that is being undertaken to expand the provision of free school meals, specifically on where priority is being given to extending the provision to pupils in secondary schools.

In response, the cabinet secretary notes that £30 million of capital funding has been allocated to support the expansion of catering and dining facilities to help plan for the expansion of free school meals to pupils in P6 and P7. The cabinet secretary also states the Government’s commitment to running a pilot of free school meals in secondary schools to support its consideration of further expansion.

Do members have any comments or suggestions?

Fergus Ewing

The £30 million of funding is welcome, but what is it being spent on, and when? What is the timetable? Can we write to the Cabinet Secretary for Education and Skills to seek further information on the planned pilot of free school meals in secondary schools, especially on the anticipated timescale for carrying out the pilot?

Carol Mochan

Similarly, my point is that it is very disappointing that we do not have a timeframe. There is a growing body of evidence that that is an important policy to progress. Commitments have been made on school meals but nothing has come forward. We should send a strongly worded letter to the minister asking that the Government please sets out an exact timeframe for the measure.

Do we agree with those recommendations?

Members indicated agreement.


Gender-based Violence (Education) (PE1934)

The Deputy Convener

PE1934, which was lodged by Craig Scoular on behalf of Greenfaulds high school rights and equalities committee, calls on the Scottish Parliament to urge the Scottish Government to work with Education Scotland to develop an educational resource on gender-based violence for all year groups in high school. The resource should educate on the causes of gender-based violence and ensure that young people leave school with the tools to help them to create a safer society for women.

At our previous consideration of the petition, the committee agreed to write to the Cabinet Secretary for Education and Skills and to COSLA. We requested information from COSLA on the current provision of gender-based violence lessons across local authorities. COSLA’s response details a number of on-going workstreams that schools are delivering in partnership with local rape crisis centres and Rape Crisis Scotland.

The submission from the Cabinet Secretary for Education and Skills states that recording and monitoring of incidents in schools is essential, emphasising the importance of a consistent and uniform approach. SEEMiS, which is a local authority-owned tool, provides a function to record instances of sexual harassment. An evaluation was due to take place in 2022 to assess the success of the system. The submission also highlights upcoming reviews of personal and social education and prevention practices.

Does any member have any thoughts?

Alexander Stewart

I think that we need to write to COSLA to ask which of the local authorities are yet to roll out the mentors in violence prevention programme in secondary schools, requesting information about what challenges have prevented implementation and details of work planned to address those. We should ask what challenges local government faces in embedding schools-based prevention of violence against women and girls.

We should also write to Rape Crisis Scotland to request information on its reporting mechanisms for its equally safe at school—ESAS—strategy and whether its planned work with local authorities has resulted in an increase in ESAS activities across Scotland. That information would be very useful and clarify where we are in this whole process. As you have indicated, convener, this is an immensely important issue. If measures are embedded at school level, that will help to prevent gender-based violence once pupils have left school.

Carol Mochan

We will all be aware that there has been significant debate and discussion on violence against women and girls in Parliament. Do we have any information about whether any of the other committees have done any work around education, either in the Equalities, Human Rights and Civil Justice Committee or the Education, Children and Young People Committee? If so, it would be interesting to look at that evidence.

The Deputy Convener

I am sure we can find that out, Carol. Do we agree to take forward Alexander Stewart’s recommendations?

Members indicated agreement.