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Chamber and committees

Official Report: search what was said in Parliament

The Official Report is a written record of public meetings of the Parliament and committees.  

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Dates of parliamentary sessions
  1. Session 1: 12 May 1999 to 31 March 2003
  2. Session 2: 7 May 2003 to 2 April 2007
  3. Session 3: 9 May 2007 to 22 March 2011
  4. Session 4: 11 May 2011 to 23 March 2016
  5. Session 5: 12 May 2016 to 4 May 2021
  6. Current session: 13 May 2021 to 14 March 2026
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Displaying 1316 contributions

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Local Government, Housing and Planning Committee

Scrutiny of the Scottish Housing Regulator

Meeting date: 17 December 2024

Paul Sweeney

I very much appreciate that.

Local Government, Housing and Planning Committee

Scrutiny of the Scottish Housing Regulator

Meeting date: 17 December 2024

Paul Sweeney

I appreciate that response. I have one more quick question. On the idea of peer support, and of housing associations co-operating to support each other, is there concern that giving RSLs a non-compliant status could lead to a chilling effect? A neighbouring housing association might want to support another association, but they might be non-compliant. Non-compliance is not the end of the world—it can often be quite benign issues that just need a bit of work—but it might create an idea that one housing association is tainted and cannot work with another one, or look to develop a relationship.

Similarly, I have heard reports from housing co-operatives that they are being pressured to demutualise because it is seen as inappropriate that the membership of the housing association is restricted just to tenants. That is not seen to be a good thing, and that people from outside the housing association should be brought in. However, the principle of co-operation and co-operatives is that it is the people who have a stake in them who are the members. Perhaps some of the practices of the regulator can militate against that idea of co-operation in building housing co-ops and collectives.

Health, Social Care and Sport Committee

Budget 2025-26

Meeting date: 17 December 2024

Paul Sweeney

Could the cabinet secretary provide more detail on the changes that underpin the significant decline in the “miscellaneous other services and resource income” budget line?

Health, Social Care and Sport Committee

Budget 2025-26

Meeting date: 17 December 2024

Paul Sweeney

That is helpful. Is it still the intention of the Government to increase direct investment in mental health services by 25 per cent over the course of this parliamentary session and to allocate 10 per cent of NHS front-line expenditure to mental health?

Health, Social Care and Sport Committee

Budget 2025-26

Meeting date: 17 December 2024

Paul Sweeney

The cabinet secretary is right to point out a real crisis in mental health in the country, with the rise in general issues. He also pointed out that the Government’s stated objective was to increase the overall percentages of mental health investment, yet the 2025-26 budget shows a 1.1 per cent real-terms cut to the mental health services budget line. That comes back to the cash versus real-terms issue, as well as where you measure from—budget to budget or autumn review to budget. Certainly, when we look at the 2025-26 allocation compared with the 2024-25 budget—not the post-autumn budget review figures but from budget to budget—we see that the mental health services budget faces a cash cut of £20 million. How does it marry with the Government’s stated intention to grow the overall slice of the NHS budget pie that goes to mental health, when that is actually going backwards?

Health, Social Care and Sport Committee

Budget 2025-26

Meeting date: 17 December 2024

Paul Sweeney

Where the Government has set clear missions—a 25 per cent increase in direct investment in mental health services and 10 per cent of NHS front-line expenditure being allocated to mental health—it would be really useful to know exactly where the Government is in meeting those targets.

Health, Social Care and Sport Committee

Budget 2025-26

Meeting date: 17 December 2024

Paul Sweeney

I thank the cabinet secretary for his opening statement. Health and social care is a huge area of public expenditure for the Scottish Government. Next year, the overall health and social care budget is forecast to be 42 per cent of all Government revenue expenditure, which is a significant amount.

Understanding like-for-like comparators can be quite challenging; there are cash figures, real-terms figures and percentages. Our concern is that the change in baseline presentation in this year’s budget presents challenges when trying to do a meaningful interpretation of year-on-year changes to the health and social care budget.

We note that, from budget to budget, there is a real-terms increase of 3.4 per cent, but under the new presentation of autumn review to budget, it is 7.5 per cent, which is a clear difference. Do you accept that the previous budget-to-budget presentation was more meaningful, given the significant in-year transfers that take place each year from health to local government and, in the case of clinical training, to education?

Health, Social Care and Sport Committee

Budget 2025-26

Meeting date: 17 December 2024

Paul Sweeney

Thank you very much.

Health, Social Care and Sport Committee

Budget 2025-26

Meeting date: 17 December 2024

Paul Sweeney

That would be really helpful. If transfers are known about and tend to take place year on year as a common practice in Scottish Government financing, would it make more sense to show the budgets from the outset in the portfolio area that will ultimately undertake the spending? For example, that could be local government in respect of social care budgets or education in respect of nursing tuition.

Health, Social Care and Sport Committee

Budget 2025-26

Meeting date: 17 December 2024

Paul Sweeney

That would be welcome.

Does the cabinet secretary remain committed to the Scottish Government policy to pass on all health-related Barnett consequentials to the Scottish health budget? To what extent will that support the current 2024-25 budget?