General Questions
Urban Regeneration
I thank the cabinet secretary for that helpful answer. Is she aware of the almost derelict state of Drumchapel town centre, which is a cause of great concern to many of my constituents, who are without even a local supermarket? Might her strategic role see new hope of drawing together the local authority and developers, with a view to regenerating that much-needed facility?
I congratulate Bill Kidd on his return to Parliament as the MSP for Glasgow Anniesland and on providing the most exciting result of the night at the exhibition centre in Glasgow.
What contact has the cabinet secretary had with Dundee City Council and stakeholders in Dundee about the strategy for Dundee city? Will there be support from the Government for the regeneration of the waterfront, which includes plans for the Victoria and Albert museum?
The short answer to the question is yes. In the past couple of weeks, I have had telephone conversations with all the leaders of our city councils, including the leader of Dundee City Council. I will meet all of them individually and collectively over the coming period, because I see a key part of my role as being to encourage and promote the collective activities of our cities and to ensure that we get the best out of that collaboration. I am sure that it will not surprise Jenny Marra to know that on the Scottish National Party benches there are strong advocates for the city of Dundee in the shape of both Shona Robison and Joe FitzPatrick. We remain committed to ensuring that that city, like all our cities, fulfils its potential.
Public-private Partnership/Private Finance Initiative Schools (North Ayrshire Council)
The latest available figure published on Her Majesty’s Treasury website for North Ayrshire Council’s total estimated unitary charge for its schools built under PFI is around £400 million. The schools are St Matthew’s academy, Greenwood academy, Arran high school and Stanley primary school.
I warmly welcome the minister to his new post. He will be aware that, in 2007-08, North Ayrshire Council made payments of £3.8 million on its school estate. This year, those PFI payments will be £11 million, rising year on year to £16.6 million 25 years from now. Does the minister agree that such profligacy with public money is a major reason why Labour-controlled North Ayrshire Council is reduced to cutting 72.7 full-time equivalent classroom assistants this year, causing outrage among parents and inevitably leading to much less spending on teaching and support staff than there should be for many years to come?
It is for North Ayrshire Council to manage its budget and to determine its spending plans from the resources that are available to it. However, the sums of money that the council has committed are not trivial, particularly given that the estimated capital value of the projects is £83 million.
Regeneration (Airdrie and Shotts)
Primary responsibility for regeneration projects in Airdrie and Shotts rests with North Lanarkshire Council. Over the period from 2008 to 2011, £400,000 was allocated from the Scottish Government’s town centre regeneration fund award of £2 million to the council to support improvements in Airdrie town centre. In addition, a total of £1.3 million of vacant and derelict land fund money was allocated towards projects in Airdrie and Shotts.
I welcome the cabinet secretary’s commitment to the regeneration of the local area. Does he envisage significant improvements to the infrastructure of Airdrie and Shotts over the next few years? In particular, I would be interested to know whether the Government plans to revisit the proposal to build a new station at Plains as part of the Airdrie to Bathgate rail link, a proposal that the then Minister for Transport, Infrastructure and Climate Change, Stewart Stevenson, rejected in 2007.
I am delighted to be answering the question both as the new Cabinet Secretary for Infrastructure and Capital Investment and as the new member for Airdrie, Shotts and the surrounding villages.
Question 4 was not lodged.
Schools (Capital Investment)
As the Parliament will be aware, we are already taking forward 37 school projects, funded by a mixture of capital and revenue finance, as part of our £1.25 billion Scottish schools for the future programme. The forthcoming spending review process will inform the timing of the announcement of the next tranche of projects.
As the cabinet secretary will be aware, plans continue to be developed by South Ayrshire Council, in consultation with the local community, for the refurbishment and extension of Marr college in Troon, a school with which I know the cabinet secretary is very familiar. Can the cabinet secretary assure me that, when future capital allocations are made to assist councils in improving their school estates, favourable consideration will be given to the planned refurbishment of Marr college to help to ensure that the excellent educational experience that it provides to local pupils can be maintained and further improved in the future?
I hope that I am a living testament to the favourable educational experience that is provided there—although there may be different views on that across the chamber. The member, and perhaps the Conservative education spokesperson, would be the first people to criticise me were I to give a too favourable response to the question.
May I make a plea on behalf of East Renfrewshire communities, parents and pupils, and indeed East Renfrewshire Council? There are severe difficulties to do with pressure for some schools, such as Our Lady of the Missions primary school, which is packed to the gunwales, and a number of non-denominational schools, some of which are older than Scotland Street school museum.
We made it clear during the election that our next target on school buildings in Scotland would be to continue to reduce the number of young people who are being taught in unacceptable buildings. In the secondary sector, we have eliminated all buildings in category D, but there are still a number of primary schools in that category, which need to be taken out of it. The Government managed to halve the number of pupils in unacceptable schools in our first four years. I want to do that again in the current session. That is our ambition.
Disabled People (Support)
I thank the cabinet secretary for that reassurance.
I am taken aback. I thank the member for thanking me for that reassurance.
Does the cabinet secretary agree with Pam Duncan, of Inclusion Scotland, that the cost of the council tax freeze in 2009-10 was £310 million but the new charges for care services for some of the most vulnerable people brought in £350 million? Does the cabinet secretary think that that is fair to our older and disabled people?
There is a serious point here, but before I address it I must say that I am not sure whether we are hearing yet another Labour position on the council tax freeze, after Labour went from opposing it to supporting it but offering only an additional £10 million over the Government funding. I am not quite sure whether this is an early leadership stake by Jackie Baillie, to say that Labour is actually against the council tax freeze.
Higher Education (Governance)
Proposals for the reform of governance in the higher education sector will be brought forward in due course. Those will be based on the wide-ranging consultation up to and after the publication of the higher education green paper and will be informed by comments and concerns on the matter that have been expressed widely in Scotland in recent years.
In light of the consultation on the cuts that are being made at the University of Strathclyde, which has lasted a month and is taking place during an exam period, will the cabinet secretary consider the call by University and College Union Scotland for a governance inquiry?
I certainly agree with the First Minister, but it would be foolish to disagree with Noam Chomsky on matters of academic import, although I am not sure how well informed he was about the detail of the proposals.
The cabinet secretary will be aware of some of the governance changes that are already under way in some institutions and which some of my constituents have raised with me. Without prejudging the consultation for any individual institution, will the cabinet secretary say how he is inclined on the issue of graduate and alumnus involvement in on-going institutional governance?
Universities and further education institutions must have open and transparent systems of governance and must ensure that they are accountable both to the community of the institution—the academic or educational community—and to the wider communities that they serve. Some institutions in Scotland do that very well, but some do not do it as well as they should. The issue requires examination, and I committed myself to that in the green paper. I renew the commitment here today that we will go forward in consultation with all interested parties, including those involved in the present governance, so that we can get a solution for the long term.
Care Homes (Inspections)
Is the cabinet secretary concerned that, if relatives had not complained, the next inspection of the Elsie Inglis nursing home might have been in October 2012, two years after the previous routine inspection? Will she look again at the maximum interval between inspections as well as at other aspects of the inspection system that I and others raised in the debate earlier this morning?
I have already said to Malcolm Chisholm—although I have no hesitation in repeating it—that I will look carefully at the points that he made. I think that we have a shared interest in ensuring the highest possible standards of care in our care homes.
Bus Services (Rural and Out-of-town Areas)
The Scottish Government is committed to bus services in Scotland and we are working with local government partners and bus operators to improve them. The Scottish Government is providing funding to the bus industry of more than £240 million in the current financial year.
Lack of services, particularly buses, concerns people not only in my constituency but across the country. Large operators still cherry pick profitable routes, isolating communities and forcing out small operators. If the Government wants to do more to move towards a greener economy, we need an integrated transport system, which would have the knock-on effect of benefiting the tourist industry.
Can we have your question please, Ms Fee?
The present system isolates elderly people. Given the debate that we have had this morning, I would like assurances that something will be done to protect the elderly.
Can we have a brief response please, minister?
Our protection for bus services for the elderly is exemplified by the fact that we give several hundreds of millions of pounds towards a concessionary travel scheme, which allows older people to get around the country.