The Official Report is a written record of public meetings of the Parliament and committees.
All Official Reports of meetings in the Debating Chamber of the Scottish Parliament.
All Official Reports of public meetings of committees.
Displaying 1049 contributions
Meeting of the Parliament
Meeting date: 3 October 2024
Paul Sweeney
The manner in which projects were put forward by Glasgow City Council for levelling up funding was extremely opaque and involved gate keeping. Notwithstanding that, will the Deputy First Minister confirm when the Scottish Government’s regeneration funds, such as the vacant and derelict land investment programme and the regeneration capital grant fund, will be reopened, given that other projects are critically dependent on that funding?
Meeting of the Parliament
Meeting date: 3 October 2024
Paul Sweeney
There is a very powerful point to be made about the disaggregation of the finances of the refinery. It is very difficult to pick that apart, because Petroineos’s assets in France are bound up with Grangemouth’s assets.
Does the member agree that the key thing is the hydrocracker finances? Taking that offline has really hit the profitability of the refinery, but there is no visibility of what that gap is and how we could make that up with a counter investment proposal.
Meeting of the Parliament
Meeting date: 2 October 2024
Paul Sweeney
Will the minister take an intervention?
Meeting of the Parliament
Meeting date: 2 October 2024
Paul Sweeney
Does the member agree that the 10-year wait for compulsory sale orders is completely unacceptable?
Meeting of the Parliament
Meeting date: 2 October 2024
Paul Sweeney
Will the cabinet secretary give way on that point?
Meeting of the Parliament
Meeting date: 2 October 2024
Paul Sweeney
Health boards in Scotland spent £30 million on locum psychiatrists in 2022. Will the minister confirm whether she thinks that expenditure is best value for money, and say how much was spent on locum psychiatrists in the past financial year?
Meeting of the Parliament
Meeting date: 1 October 2024
Paul Sweeney
The minister has noted the pressure that the granting of refugee status to 2,709 people has put on homelessness services in Glasgow over the past year. However, I note that there are 2,641 long-term empty homes in Glasgow at present. Will the Government therefore introduce emergency legislation to force the compulsory sale of those unused homes and accelerate the mass compulsory purchase orders on those properties?
Meeting of the Parliament
Meeting date: 18 September 2024
Paul Sweeney
To ask the Scottish Government what work it is doing to enhance protection of the nation’s built heritage and listed buildings. (S6O-03721)
Meeting of the Parliament
Meeting date: 18 September 2024
Paul Sweeney
The listed ABC venue on Sauchiehall Street was badly damaged in the second Glasgow School of Art fire in 2018 and it has lain derelict ever since. A planning application was recently submitted to build student accommodation on the site, but, within weeks, Glasgow City Council served a dangerous buildings notice on the property, slating it for full demolition. At no point was a conservation accredited engineer consulted to see whether at least the iconic entrance portico could be preserved and incorporated into the design of the new development. Similar situations have prevailed at the Ayr station hotel and, most recently, at the Hillhead Baptist church in the west end of Glasgow.
For the listing process to have the weight that it should have, at the very least, it should be a necessity to consult a registered conservation engineer before any green light is given to demolition. Will the Scottish Government consider the call of Save Britain’s Heritage to make it mandatory to seek the advice of a conservation accreditation register of engineers—CARE—accredited structural engineer before any planning authority authorises demolition works?
Meeting of the Parliament
Meeting date: 12 September 2024
Paul Sweeney
The first overdose prevention centre in Scotland opened four years ago yesterday. Staffed by volunteers, it supervised around 1,000 injections and saved eight lives. Now, four years later, the state has finally caught up with the challenges that drug and alcohol issues present, but hundreds of people have died unnecessarily in the interim period.
I welcome the opening of the new OPC in Glasgow next month, but can the cabinet secretary assure members that it will not simply involve a box-ticking exercise? Will the centre be progressed to 24-hour operation and full integration with the routes to rehabilitation and other support services that are so critical to people’s recovery?
The first person who came to the OPC four years ago said, “I am sorry—I am not used to people treating me so nicely.” The core principles of our approach must be to ensure human dignity and to support people to access the pathways that they need if they are to survive.