Official Report 209KB pdf
Agenda item 2 is on the Equality Bill that is currently before the United Kingdom Parliament and on which the Scottish Executive intends to lodge a Sewel motion.
We have felt all along that the Scotland commissioner will have a large workload. The existing three commissions each have a Scotland commissioner—those commissioners are part time but work very hard. The new commission will deal with six equality strands and human rights, which is more than the existing three commissions deal with, so we are still concerned about the matter. In the steering group, on behalf of the equalities co-ordinating group, I have said that the Scotland commissioner needs to be full time and that they will also need a lot of support from the other Scotland committee members.
Whether or not a formal deputy is the right route—that might just re-emphasise the feeling that "They are the Scottish people"—there must be a route to allow somebody to deputise in case of sickness or absence and to take proxy roles. That might be another commissioner from the 15, or it might be a member of the Scotland committee. It is essential that we have such a mechanism, either in the bill or in management practices.
Are you content with the provision under which the secretary of state will need the consent of the Scottish ministers on the appointment of a Scottish commissioner
Our feeling was that the phrase,
Tim Hopkins has mentioned that the phrase,
If you think that the phrase,
We have not discussed a preferred recommendation. The wording needs to be made stronger and should have more of a focus on the need to drive the agenda. The descriptor should be much more proactive.
I am not sure that the point that we are making requires a change to the bill; I think that the process will work in practice.
It is important that the Scotland committee has representation from across a range of equality interests and from across Scotland. It should be reflective, rather than representative, of equality issues across Scotland, including disability interests, obviously.
That is the difficulty about one commissioner knowing about everything in Scotland. It sounds quite incredible.
That is why the Scotland committee is important. At the GB level, there will be the 10 to 15-member commission that will have a chair and, at the Scotland level, the Scotland commissioner will chair the Scotland committee. The Scotland committee should be thought of as being the Scottish parallel to the GB commission, which will mean that its members should have the same range of experience and skills as the members of the GB commission.
Our view is that, even if there were two full-time commissioners, they would not be able to represent the equality interests of Scotland. The model that Tim Hopkins described has to be the way in which the process will work.
I am impressed with your optimism about the possibility that all the commissioners will be knowledgeable about Scotland and will understand it. Are you content that the provisions relating to the establishment of a Scotland committee are sufficient for the purpose of ensuring the effective operation of the commission in relation to Scotland? How confident are you, for example, that the Scotland committee will be adequately representative of the various equality strands and will have sufficient knowledge and expertise in relation to Scotland and its institutions?
That is not set out in the bill. If the model that we have been discussing is followed, we would get the result that we need, which is what you have just described. The Scotland committee members will be appointed by the commission, in consultation with the Scottish Executive. That must be done correctly early in the process.
Should that be made explicit in the bill?
I do not think that we can legislate for everything; we will have to take some things on trust. The United Kingdom Government has already said in Parliament that the Scottish Executive will be consulted about the appointments to the Scotland committee. I am not sure that that needs to be spelled out in the legislation.
Similarly, we cannot put job descriptions into legislation, but that is what we are starting to talk about when we think about the different types of expertise in the make-up of the committee.
A lot of that will be in the guidance.
It is important that the appointments to the committee should be made in line with the public appointments process. The Scotland commissioner will be a public appointment, but the committee members will not, because they will be appointed by the commission rather than by the Government. However, it is important that the process is open and that it follows equal opportunities principles as set out by the public appointments process in Scotland.
Is the panel content with the nature of the relationship that is embodied in clause 12(2) of the bill in relation to advising and making recommendations to the devolved Government?
Yes.
In evidence to the committee on 15 June 2004, John Wilkes noted:
Broadly speaking, the principle that is being established is that the promotional powers of the commission are delegated to Scotland and Wales. All the powers around promotion are delegated except for two—we sought to amend that situation through the House of Lords. The two exceptions relate to the communities' power and grant-giving powers. There were specific reasons why those were not included in the initial tranche, but they are still outstanding. Tim Hopkins might be able to update you on where the process has reached, but we think that those two remaining powers should be specified as being within the remit of the Scotland committee, because they link with the philosophy behind the proposals.
As it stands, the bill is rather inconsistent. As John Wilkes said, the principle is to delegate to the Scotland committee the promotional powers but not the enforcement powers. That was widely agreed. One of the promotional powers that are not delegated is the grant-giving power under clause 18. That is inconsistent, because the main promotional power in clause 14—the power to give advice and guidance, to undertake research, to provide education and training and so on—is delegated, which is good. Also delegated is the power to subcontract that work to other bodies. However, the power to give grants to do that work is not delegated, although the CEHR at GB level can give such grants. There is an inconsistency in that. We believe that the power to carry out the work by giving grants to other bodies as well as by subcontracting where appropriate should also be delegated to the Scotland committee under clause 18.
Does the panel have any concerns about the operation of the disability committee in relation to the operation of the Scotland committee? Is the panel content with the extent to which the relationship is described in the bill, including the requirement to consult the Scotland committee?
That was a concern previously, but the bill takes matters much further and clarifies the situation. There is now a duty on the disability committee to consult the Scotland committee on all matters to do with disability in Scotland. In practice, the liaison between the two committees will be important. It would be helpful if a member of the Scotland committee was on the disability committee and vice versa, to ensure a good flow of information when decisions are made. The disability committee should be properly informed of issues in Scotland and the Scotland committee should be properly informed of disability issues—if the Scotland committee is discussing matters that may have a bearing on disability, the disability committee should have such information. It would also be helpful if there was an impact assessment process when key policies were being discussed by the relevant committees to ensure that the disability committee considers Scottish issues and the Scotland committee considers disability issues. The practical relationship between the two committees will be critical.
The explanatory notes accompanying the bill state that the estimated annual budget for the CEHR is £70 million. Are the witnesses content that that will be enough money generally and that it will allow for a suitable allocation for the Scotland committee?
Broadly speaking, we have concerns about the level of resource that is indicated to be allocated to the CEHR, although it is about £20 million more than the allocation to the existing three commissions, which is around £50 million. There will be scope for some savings, as there will be one body rather than three. However, we should remember the scale and scope of the responsibilities of the new commission, which will have to deal with human rights issues and other areas of equality that the existing three commissions do not officially deal with. There will be issues to do with work that is delegated to Scotland and Wales around the whole promotion agenda and there is also the commitment to a regional agenda in England, Scotland and Wales.
Do you have a figure in mind of what the Scotland committee should get?
That is more difficult to say. We have avoided saying that there should be a formulaic approach like the Barnett formula. I would guess that something in the region of £12 million to £20 million might be the sort of sum to address the commission's specific responsibilities in Scotland. However, that would be hard to say, as we have not done any specific costing work in Scotland.
That would be for all the functions in Scotland, not just the functions that were delegated to the Scotland committee. The enforcement work in Scotland is not delegated, but it will be a major part of the commission's work in Scotland.
There is also the disability work in Scotland, which will be steered by the disability committee. Although there will be an element of allocation to the work in Scotland, other parts of the commission will need to ensure that they have sufficient resources to do their work across the three countries.
The bill provides for the commission to send a copy of its annual report, which is to include details of the commission's activities in relation to Scotland, to the Scottish Parliament. Are the witnesses content with the reporting arrangements that the bill proposes?
In general, we are content. It is good that the report will be sent to the Scottish Parliament rather than to the Scottish Executive. Some discussion has taken place down south about whether the commission should be a body of the Parliament or of the Executive, but of course it is a UK Government body rather than a body that answers to the UK Parliament. Scotland has tended to operate the other way round: the commissioners that have been established here report to the Parliament. We quite like the idea that the report should be sent to the Scottish Parliament.
Are panel members content that the requirements in the bill for the secretary of state to consult the Scottish ministers on codes of practice are sufficient to ensure that codes of practice that are produced in that way will be fit for purpose in Scotland? For example, would you prefer the bill to specify that the secretary of state should take account of the Scottish ministers' views or would you rather that the Scottish ministers be required to consult widely before consenting?
There are a number of options. The key point, on which we all agree, is that codes of practice must be got right for the Scottish context. We can probably all cite examples of existing codes of practice that have been better or less good at that. We already see in the bill examples of English law slipping in as reference and cited example rather than the bill being an accurate reflection of the legal context north of the border.
The responsibility to consult effectively within Britain—England, Scotland and Wales—falls to the commission.
I will follow up what Jamie McGrigor said about the report being presented to the Parliament. What would you think of a debate in the Parliament on the commission's report? Would people welcome that?
Yes. The Equal Opportunities Committee could have an important role in considering and commenting on that report.
Between the three commissions, the newer equality strands and human rights, we have established a good relationship with the committee. We have fallen into a pattern of an annual state-of-the-nation update and we hope that the new CEHR would fulfil a similar relationship with the committee and the Parliament more broadly.
My questions are about human rights. People are confused about the Executive's proposed new bill and clause 7 of the Equality Bill. Clause 7 says:
The difficulty is that, in parallel with what is happening in the Equality Bill, the Executive has announced that a bill to create a Scottish human rights commission will be part of its legislative programme. That process begins handicapped by the fact that the "in parallel" means that the bills will run side by side but not nose to nose, if that is an adequate analogy.
Clause 7 cuts a hole in the powers of the CEHR, so that effectively it cannot work on devolved human rights issues in Scotland unless it has the permission of the Scottish human rights commission, once that is set up. That point is important, because the whole arrangement will not work unless the two bodies function well together, whatever is in the legislation.
Tim Hopkins talks about the need for the two bodies to work closely together. That will be particularly important when giving advice and information to members of the public. With two bodies—one working on reserved issues and one on devolved issues—there should be some co-working and the information systems should be coterminous to ensure that members of the public do not have difficulty in knowing where to go for advice and support.
Clause 7(4) illustrates the issue that I mentioned earlier. If the CEHR asks the Scottish human rights commission whether it can take action on a matter and is told that it cannot, it might approach the Scottish information commissioner or the Scottish commissioner for children and young people, both of which posts were set up by the Scottish Parliament. The area is one in which there is a capacity for people to cut across one another's responsibilities. That needs to be taken into account when we consider the whole question of how the two bodies will work together.
I want to add to what Adam Gaines said about the need for the two bodies to work together. The memorandum of understanding will be crucial. There is a split, but the Scottish human rights commission will probably carry out most of the human rights work in Scotland. There is therefore an argument for branding the CEHR in Scotland as simply the commission for equality. That would avoid public confusion.
Many people are concerned about the different strands and devolved issues; I am thinking of the effects on asylum seekers, education, and that sort of thing. We must have clarity. David Cobb said that the CEHR would be able to deal with devolved issues as long as it spoke to the SHRC. However, what about the involvement of Scottish ministers or the Scottish Parliament? Should the memorandum cover reporting, so that issues can be reported to the Parliament or so that ministers can be involved?
As I suggested earlier, a problem that members might have with a memorandum of understanding is that it would not be subject to scrutiny but would be an agreement struck between the two bodies. The memorandum might well go into the public domain but, strictly speaking, it would not be a matter for either Parliament. You would expect something along the lines of Sandra White's suggestion to be in place, so that members were formally aware of what was happening. In principle, we would probably support that suggestion.
Should the bill contain a requirement on reporting?
It depends. I think that such a requirement would have to be preceded by a requirement to enter memorandums of understanding. I am not sure that that would happen. As Tim Hopkins has said, some things might have to be taken on trust. Ministers might say how they would like things to work, but nothing need appear in legislation. Memorandums of understanding that are entered into under an act of Parliament could become the subject of legal challenge and could become sticks with which the two bodies could beat each other. It is obviously for members to decide what is appropriate but, as Tim said, some things have to be taken on trust.
There is already a requirement for the CEHR to lay its annual report before the Scottish Parliament; I guess that there will be a similar requirement on the SHRC in the Scottish human rights commission bill. The SHRC will, I think, be a body of the Parliament rather than of the Executive, so it will be appropriate for reporting to go to the Parliament rather than to the Executive. I hope and imagine that in two or three years' time this committee will have a meeting like this one but with people from the Scottish human rights commission and people from the CEHR, and that you will ask them to justify and explain their memorandum of understanding. That would be appropriate.
That is how I would see things going: the Scottish human rights commission will be like the other commissions in Scotland and will report to the Parliament. There are concerns, but I hope that we can sort them out.
In answer to Sandra White's point, it would be difficult in this bill to state exactly how the MOU might look, because the Scottish human rights commission does not yet exist. There are practical limits to how much can go into the Equality Bill at Westminster.
John Wilkes spoke about branding and his idea sounded quite good at first. However, the commission for equality and human rights will deal with reserved human rights issues in Scotland. Therefore, people might still have to go to the CEHR if the particular issue is reserved. The branding idea is therefore less clear-cut than it seemed at first.
But that highlights the importance of having a single contact point. If someone has a human rights issue, they should be able to contact one place and then speak to people in whichever commission was appropriate.
I have another question, although I think that either David Cobb or Tim Hopkins has already touched on it. With the establishment of the CEHR and the SHRC, what concerns do panel members have about the possible gap in dealing with human rights issues in Scotland? How will we avoid issues falling through that gap? You have already given a fairly broad answer, but I wondered whether you wanted to touch on the issue again.
I will summarise the points on that. Tim Hopkins gave a few examples of where things might fall through. We are probably less concerned about the Equality Bill, which will carve out a fair hole, than we are about the possibility that there will not be enough momentum in Scotland to fill that hole adequately. As a result, we might end up having stronger human rights protection on reserved issues in Scotland through the CEHR, which will have a set of pre-defined roles and responsibilities, and weaker human rights powers on devolved matters because the Scottish human rights commission will not be set up to fill adequately the gap that is left. It is difficult to talk about our concern because it relates less to what is in the existing UK bill than it does to what might be included in a subsequent bill in the Scottish Parliament, which we cannot guess at in advance.
What are the panel's views of the powers that part 3 of the bill will bestow on Scottish ministers to impose duties in relation to sex discrimination on relevant Scottish authorities? In particular, what does the panel think about the consultation requirements that the imposition of such duties would involve?
As the commission that is responsible for gender and sex equality, we are delighted that the bill includes provision for the imposition on public authorities throughout Britain, including those in Scotland, of a specific positive duty on gender equality that is similar to the existing duty on race and the forthcoming duty on disability. As you say, in addition to the general duty, there will be specific duties, which in Scotland will be determined by Scottish ministers. We are content with the Equality Bill's provisions on that.
You have said a bit about transitional arrangements. When you gave evidence to the committee on 15 June 2004 you expressed concern regarding the transitional arrangements before the new body is established. What are your views on the transitional provisions in the bill? What are your concerns?
The provisions in the bill relate primarily to how the three commissions merge into the CEHR.
There are specific issues to address. The bill allows for one transitional commissioner from each of the three existing commissions to be part of the new commissioner group for the CEHR. That is good, as it will allow some of the experience and expertise of the current commissions to be carried through into the new commission. When the bill is passed, the process of setting up the CEHR will start, the first step of which will be to appoint the chair and then the commissioner group. It is important that the first appointments include the commissioner with responsibility for Scotland and, presumably, the commissioner with responsibility for Wales, and that the appointment of the Scotland committee happens as quickly as practicable. There will be major defining decisions to be made in relation to how the commission operates in Scotland. Having a Scotland committee set up early on in the process will allow that to happen more effectively.
As John Wilkes said, the early appointment of the Scotland commissioner and committee is vital, given the delegated functions that the committee will have in taking forward its work. We think that it will be helpful for there to be three transitional commissioners from the three commissions as that will smooth the path to and create the transition. We have a slight concern about the fact that the transitional disability commissioner will be expected to leave office at the point at which the disability committee is put together, which will not necessarily apply to the same extent to the other two transitional commissioners. We hope that the term for the transitional disability commissioner could be the same length as the term for the other two transitional commissioners.
The bill specifies the transitional arrangements for the three commissions but not for the newer strands. The Department for Trade and Industry has made available funding on the sexual orientation and religion and belief employment regulations. In this funding round we would welcome that money being made available for an 18-month period, which would allow longer-term projects to be undertaken.
A final point arising from the human rights issue, which Ali Jarvis mentioned earlier, is the question of getting the memorandum of understanding. That requires the two shadow bodies on the new commissions to be talking to each other as early as possible. It would be helpful if the committee supported having the Scottish human rights commission shadow body up and running as soon as possible.
A particularly Scottish dimension is that to some extent we are lucky enough to be a little bit ahead of the game up here in that the three commissions, the three new strands and the human rights body have worked together quite effectively and closely for some time. Our underlying point is that the transition should be swift and effective. If it is drawn out, confusion will arise not only in the minds of possible users of the services—both institutional and individual stakeholders—but among staff. There could be debates about location and so on. The Scotland dimension should be included from the start, because we have a good story to sell across GB.
Reference has been made to the six strands. When giving evidence to the committee on 15 June 2004, John Wilkes spoke about how crucial it is
You are right to highlight one of the major concerns that we had when the proposals were first presented. We are fairly confident that the bill allows the CEHR in Scotland to operate outwith the strands. Clause 3 of the bill, on the fundamental duty, refers to equality, which is very broad, and is not narrowed down to the six strands. Clause 8, which deals with the general duty to promote understanding of the importance of equality and diversity, defines equality and diversity very broadly. Paragraphs (b) and (c) of clause 8(1), which are about encouraging equality and promoting equality of opportunity, parallel the provisions of the Scotland Act 1998, which refers to encouragement of equality of opportunity, defined more broadly than the six strands. We are confident that the CEHR will have the power to support the encouragement of equality of opportunity that is devolved to the Scottish Executive and the Scottish Parliament, under the full 1998 act definition of equal opportunities. It will also have the power to do so more widely, because the bill refers only to equality and diversity generally.
The ECG is keen to see the outcomes of the discrimination law review and the equalities review, which may shed some light on where progress is being made, where persistent discrimination continues and how effective measures such as the promotional powers that the Scottish Parliament has had in additional areas of equality have been. As we look towards the future—not just next year, but three years from now—that will help to give us a perspective on how the CEHR will operate practically in those areas. I am the Scottish representative on the reference group for the two reviews. We are keeping a close watching brief on the reviews, to ensure that the issues that I have raised are adequately represented in them.
My next question was to have been about funding, but you have pre-empted it.
In short, we like it. It is really positive for such a principled statement to be made on the face of the bill. We are used to seeing that in Scotland, and it is good that it is starting to come through in Westminster bills.
As this committee's disability reporter, I am interested in the work of the disability committee. What are your views on the establishment of a separate committee—I know that Adam Gaines has said that joint working is crucial—and on the mandatory review after five years?
The disability committee will help to take forward the CEHR's work, specifically with regard to aspects of disability discrimination. The need for such a committee has arisen because of the requirement for reasonable adjustments and because whole parts of the Disability Discrimination Act 1995 are still coming into force. The presence of the DRC, which has been around for only five years, indicates the need for specific arrangements to take into account disability discrimination. As there is a need for the CEHR to work across common areas such as employment, we felt that the establishment of a specific disability committee in the Equality Bill was a helpful step.
That was helpful.
Clause 11(4) states that, in carrying out its duties,
Yes. We believe that there should be no hierarchies in the law at all. Of course, there are hierarchies of all sorts in current equalities legislation; in general, the equalities legislation on race, gender and disability is stronger than it is on religion and belief and sexual orientation and that legislation is, in turn, stronger than the non-existent legislation on age. All those hierarchies should go. The discrimination law review that Ali Jarvis mentioned earlier is looking at that. I hope that its conclusions will lead to a single equality act that will do away with such hierarchies.
The Race Relations Act 1976 refers to good race relations, which is a specific element of equality that does not exist in other legislation such as the Sex Discrimination Act 1975 and the Disability Discrimination Act 1995. Clause 11(4) was an attempt to allay fears that that specific aspect of work might get lost. Personally, I believe that if clause 11 is applied appropriately, it will be applied according to need, so clause 11(4) is perhaps unneeded—it is a belt-and-braces approach.
I must declare that I do not agree with Sewel motions at all. I cannot see how one broad brush for the whole country will do. There are problems south of the border that do not exist in Scotland; similarly, we have problems up here—for example, with sectarianism—that do not exist down there. I do not believe in decisions being made by remote control. Do you agree that the Parliament should be capable of dealing with its own problems?
That is a broad question. On the issue of sectarianism, clause 21 contains the power that supports the clause 11 duty in relation to communities. As I said, we want the implementation of clause 21 in Scotland to be delegated to the Scotland committee, for the reason that you mentioned: we have issues up here to do with hate crime and sectarianism that are different from the issues down south.
If there are Sewel motions, there should be give and take. If Westminster takes powers away, it should give us some in return to enhance our powers—that is equality.
Well, John, maybe the situation will evolve.
Part 2 will extend the anti-discrimination provisions on grounds of religion or belief to the provision of goods, facilities and services, but the extension does not apply to anti-discrimination legislation on sexual orientation. What are the panel's views on that?
We all welcome the extension of the anti-discrimination law on the provision of goods, facilities and services to cover religion and belief, as that is certainly an improvement. However, the measure will make the current hierarchy of legislation even more complicated, because, as you say, it will leave behind the sexual orientation strand and the transgender identity strand, which John Wilkes mentioned. We would like the bill to be amended so that the extension of the goods, facilities and services provision also covers sexual orientation and gender reassignment, which, as John Wilkes said, is covered in the Sex Discrimination Act 1975, but only in relation to employment and vocational training.
In relation to grounds of religion or belief, clause 54(4)(i) introduces an exemption for English and Welsh local authorities in exercising their power to promote well-being, but the bill does not seem to include any reference to the equivalent power in section 20 of the Local Government in Scotland Act 2003. Do you have any comments on that?
The main point is that I have raised the matter at the CEHR steering group in London. I asked why the bill has an exemption in relation to the exercise of the English and Welsh power of well-being, but I have not had an answer yet. Nobody could tell me why that provision is in the bill. However, we do not think that the measure should apply in Scotland. We cannot see any good reason why councils should be able to discriminate on grounds of religion or belief in exercising their power to promote well-being. We do not want the measure to be extended to Scotland, pending an answer to my question about why the measure will exist in England and Wales in the first place.
Could you give your definition of the power of well-being?
The Local Government in Scotland Act 2003 gives a general power to councils to take action to promote the well-being of their citizens, which can mean a subsection of the citizens. The power is a broad one and has existed for longer in England and Wales, under a slightly earlier piece of legislation, than it has in Scotland.
How confident is the panel that there is sufficient dialogue between Westminster and the Scottish Executive to ensure that Scotland is adequately included in the bill's provisions?
There are two parts to that, the first of which is dialogue about bill itself. There has been a reasonable amount of dialogue about the bill, in which the key concerns about what must happen in Scotland have been communicated. There have been hiccups along the way, but the general feeling is that dialogue has improved; indeed, certain issues have been sorted out. The Scotland Office has been helpful in facilitating solutions for elements of the bill, particularly those which deal with adults.
That takes us back to the broader point that we talked about. The CEHR will be a GB body and it should operate effectively at GB level. However, if certain Government departments that have responsibility for reserved legislation, whether it be the Home Office, the DTI, or the Department for Work and Pensions, take the view that they will deal only with a London or Manchester office, they will miss significant details about how implementation is different in Scotland and about the different circumstances here, to which John Wilkes referred.
I have been going to the CEHR steering group for a year now and there has been a big improvement over that year in how things have been working. I was a bit concerned at the beginning that, because I was the person representing Scotland, all input about Scotland would have to come through me. Of course, that is just impossible.
I would never be happy with an occasional visit from a committee from down south to pat us on the back and tell us to get on with it. We live here and we should be able to sort out our own problems.
My impression was that the steering group was very impressed with what we were doing and that it was listening to what was happening.
I would like to ask a couple of questions of Tim Hopkins.
Very quickly.
Will the working of groups such as yours be enhanced by the CEHR? On the recruitment process, it is very important that the people on the committee know about Scotland and about initiatives such as the fresh talent initiative and so on. The UK Government does not recruit in the same way as we do by putting out a job description and that type of thing. Would it be preferable if recruitment rather than appointment was used?
Are you talking about recruiting the commissioners?
Yes.
That will be done through the UK public appointments process because they are UK appointments. It will be really important to get the job description right.
The ECG is also being quite proactive by starting and fostering debate and dialogue on the role, who might be the sort of person who would interested in the role and in creating a sufficient pull mechanism in Scotland. We have plans to hold a couple of events in the next couple of months to generate that level of understanding, because in some Scottish communities it is not high.
Sandra, were you asking what would be the impact of the establishment of the CEHR on the steering group?
No. When the CEHR is established, will it strengthen the roles that are played by groups such as yours? Everyone is very positive about the commission, but John Swinburne is quite right that we have to ask this type of question at times.
It is a very good question and it is one that the Equality Network has considered. I am sure that Vanessa Taylor's organisation, for example, has considered it, too.
I would like to respond with a commission perspective, although I can give only that of my own commission. Many of the requirements of the bill will really help with translating our current agenda into the work of the new commission. Our commission has certainly tried to adapt to the new circumstances of devolution since 1999, and we are 30 years old this year. The commission has shown a lot of goodwill and good intent, but it is still a single corporate body.
I echo what Tim Hopkins said; my organisation is in a similar position. In the run-up to establishment of the new commission, we have been very aware of the capacity gap that we are only ever able to fill partially. We do not come to the table with anything like the experience, the resources or the staff of the commissions. Our role will change and we will adapt when the new commission comes into being, and we hope to work closely with it. We welcome the establishment of the commission and we are excited by the improvements that it will make to the lives of people for whom religion, or belief, is an important aspect of life.
We believe that the new commission has considerable potential; however, as was indicated earlier, we have concerns about how disability will be part of it, which is why we feel that the establishment of a disability committee would be helpful. The big issue is how the body is properly structured to take such matters into account and how it can work effectively in Scotland. The issue is both the structure and—crucially—how the resources will enable the body to move forward and be effective.
Thank you for your evidence. There are a few minutes left. If there are any matters that you think have not been covered in the questioning, you have the opportunity to raise those issues now.
I would like to add the Equal Opportunities Commission's voice to the idea that the proposals concerning the provision of goods, facilities and services should be extended to cover sexual orientation and transgender issues. We think that there is no real barrier to, or difficulty in, doing that now because it has been done for religion and belief.
In summary, the aim for the CRE would be to hold on to the principles that underpin the bill. It is easy for us all to go into the detail of how it will operate and what the mechanisms are going to be. All of that is important, but we have talked a lot about some of the issues about trust. As we move forward, we are essentially creating something new. If the new commission is to be merely an amalgam of what exists, it will fall far short of what it should be. We must have the bravery, the confidence and the trust to create something that will go far beyond where we are currently. There are risks involved, and we have to be prepared to take those on. Holding on to the principles is really important, which is why everyone on the ECG has tried to work so closely together, although acknowledging that each of the bodies that are represented around the ECG table has a slightly different position on certain things. We must start moving forward in a different way if we are to find different solutions.
Thank you for your evidence this morning. It has been very helpful. When we first met to discuss the single equality body, concern was expressed that there would not be an equality bill. It is good that we are now discussing such a bill that can take matters forward in a much more positive fashion.
Meeting suspended.
On resuming—
Following on from the evidence that we have heard, I have a list of issues that have been raised. We have to decide how we will deal with some of them and what action we will take in relation to the Sewel motion. I will run through some of the issues that have been raised.
In response to question 10, Ali Jarvis said that the code of practice must reflect Scottish law. That is an important point. Also, neither she nor, I think, Tim Hopkins, feels that it is important for ministers to consult widely before consenting to the choice of Scotland commissioner.
Yes.
On the separate disability committee, you said that the witnesses were concerned about the wording in the bill about the review that is to take place after five years. However, I think that their concern related to how the committee would continue after that point. At present, the suggestion is that there will be a period of five years followed by a review; nothing is said about how the committee would carry on.
Yes, we can read that in the Official Report.
An idea was raised about the two bodies being located in the same building.
Yes—we should note that as well.
The witnesses did not feel that the bill should include a requirement for the CEHR to report to the Scottish Executive on devolved matters that it had dealt with on behalf of the SHRC. They felt that that should be included in the memorandum, however.
That was covered in the part about looking at the mechanism to ensure—
So, it was covered. I would like us to mention that we are concerned about the need for the public to be educated about how the CEHR and the SHRC will work. That has to be highlighted.
That is particularly the case as we are talking about bodies that do not yet exist.
I know that it is difficult, but it is important to think about that before they are set up rather than after. We have had difficulties with people's understanding of the different responsibilities of Westminster and the Scottish Parliament and I think that the situation will be even worse with regard to the CEHR and the SHRC.
I think that the whole thing is an easy option. Things can just be off-loaded onto Westminster and the Executive can relax—
That is not how this is working. This is actually a really good step forward for equalities. Whether we agree with having a single equality body, the fact is that we are dealing with an Equality Bill.
There is no policy being discussed here that could not be implemented in Scotland off our own bat. There is nothing in the bill that would be detrimental to the working of this Parliament.
You have a particular belief and that is fine. However, we have to deal with this in terms of the Scotland Act 1998. We have been proactive in our attempts to make the legislation better and to ensure that Scottish voices are heard in relation to equalities. That is our job. We need to be able to comment, but we have a duty to listen to the people who gave us excellent evidence this morning.
Do not get me wrong. The word "Unity" in the Scottish Senior Citizen's Unity Party's title means that we are quite content to be part of the union. At the same time, however, I feel that people in this Parliament are like turkeys voting for Christmas. They are getting rid of their powers left, right and centre. We should be able to do what is proposed in the Equality Bill. If we cannot handle a simple thing like an Equality Bill, it is a sad day. The Equal Opportunities Committee should express that view to the Executive quite forcefully.
We are working within the terms of the Scotland Act 1998. The Equality Bill is UK legislation. I understand that you think that the Executive should be handling the proposals in the bill itself, but some equalities issues are reserved as a result of UK and European legislation. A debate on whether that should be the case is not for this committee. Our job this morning is to consider the evidence that we have received in relation to the Equality Bill, which this committee told the minister in writing was necessary.
Sometimes, we get engrossed in technicalities, but disabled people or people who are suffering from discrimination just want the Scottish Parliament to act and to sort out the situation in the best possible way. That is what we have done this morning. We can get wrapped up in our procedures and forget that we are supposed to be making people's lives better.
Yes. This bill will give disabled people stronger rights and rights that they have never had before. Whether that is done in the Scottish Parliament or in Westminster, it is important that it be done.
I suggest that we write to the minister about what we heard this morning, and to the UK minister; it is important that those issues be considered as part of the Equality Bill. Parliament will decide whether it agrees or disagrees to the Sewel motion, but it is important that we take appropriate action in any case. Are members happy with that proposal?
Should we mention something about the old people's commissioner?
Not at this stage. That is on the agenda, though.
Meeting closed at 11:38.
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