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.
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Education, Children and Young People Committee
Meeting date: 29 June 2022
Sue Webber
Kaukab Stewart has some questions on that.
Education, Children and Young People Committee
Meeting date: 29 June 2022
Sue Webber
Ruth Maguire joins us virtually.
Education, Children and Young People Committee
Meeting date: 29 June 2022
Sue Webber
I have questions on this subject from Stephanie Callaghan before we move on to the other members.
Education, Children and Young People Committee
Meeting date: 29 June 2022
Sue Webber
I am sorry, but could you come to a question, please?
Education, Children and Young People Committee
Meeting date: 29 June 2022
Sue Webber
Great. Thank you, Stephanie.
We will now move on to questions from Willie Rennie.
Education, Children and Young People Committee
Meeting date: 29 June 2022
Sue Webber
Thank you, Iain. I am very encouraged to hear that you are genuinely interested in listening to people’s views and suggestions in your consultation exercise. I am really pleased to hear that, so thank you very much.
With that, sadly, the clock has chimed and we have reached the conclusion of our session. Thank you all for coming along and for your time today. The public part of our meeting is now at an end and we will consider our final agenda items in private.
11:08 Meeting continued in private until 12:24.Education, Children and Young People Committee
Meeting date: 29 June 2022
Sue Webber
Good morning, and welcome to the 20th meeting in 2022 of the Education, Children and Young People Committee. Our first item of business is an evidence session with Bòrd na Gàidhlig on the “Draft National Gaelic Language Plan 2023-28”.
I welcome Mairi MacInnes, the chair; Iain MacMillan, the director of development; and Jim Whannel, the director of education. Good morning to you all.
Mairi MacInnes will make an opening statement. Before I invite her to do so, I would like to make a few comments. The Scottish Parliament is committed to facilitating the use of the Gaelic language in its proceedings whenever possible. We were keen that Bòrd na Gàidhlig be able to give its opening statement in Gaelic, and we sought to make arrangements to support that. However, we were unfortunately unable to secure an interpreter for this morning’s meeting.
I am grateful to Bòrd na Gàidhlig for working with the Parliament’s staff to find an alternative option, and I am grateful to Mairi MacInnes for agreeing to deliver the opening statement in Gaelic—which is welcome—before repeating it in English. The Parliament is arranging for the Official Report of the meeting to be translated into Gaelic so that it will be accessible to those in the Gaelic community.
I invite Mairi MacInnes to make her statement in Gaelic and then in English.
Education, Children and Young People Committee
Meeting date: 29 June 2022
Sue Webber
I have a follow-up question on that. You spoke about strengthening the powers of the bòrd. What would you like to see developing in that respect?
Meeting of the Parliament (Hybrid)
Meeting date: 29 June 2022
Sue Webber
Time and again at the Health, Social Care and Sport Committee, we have heard about the essential role that third-party organisations have played in supporting people—young and old—with mental health issues and people with mental illness, while statutory services were letting them down.
The Covid-19 pandemic has had a negative impact on the mental health of people across Scotland. For that reason, funding for charities and community initiatives will be more important than ever in the coming years. Access to services is crucial to supporting mental health.
Can the Deputy First Minister outline why more than 10,000 of our children and young people were refused access to mental health treatment during 2021? What assurances can he give me that urgent work is being undertaken to make services much more accessible, this year and beyond?
Meeting of the Parliament (Hybrid)
Meeting date: 23 June 2022
Sue Webber
I thank the minister for advance sight of her statement, and I acknowledge the challenging comments that she has made today about progress on the standards.
The statement has laid bare the damning truth that a critical target has been missed. Drug-related deaths are Scotland’s national shame, yet this Government’s actions have once again fallen short and families continue to be let down. Although a target was set last year to ensure that the MAT standards would be fully embedded across the country by April 2022, the report shows that that target was nothing more than a pipe dream. Only 17 per cent of the standards have been fully implemented and, shamefully, MAT standard 1 has been implemented in only one ADP area—the Borders. That is a 97 per cent failure rate.
The new recommendation from Public Health Scotland is to push the target back by a year and water it down; it is that only half the standards are to be implemented by April 2023, with only partial implementation for the others.
Across Scotland, there has been unwarranted variation in implementation of the standards. There can be no clearer illustration of that than the statistics on drug-related deaths that were released last week, which show welcome declines in Glasgow but mask increases in deaths in Edinburgh, Fife, and Dumfries and Galloway. What urgent steps is the Government taking to end that postcode lottery? What support will the minister offer to the ADPs that have fallen so far behind?