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 1810 contributions
Economy and Fair Work Committee [Draft]
Meeting date: 21 January 2026
Sarah Boyack
I am stopping at this point.
Economy and Fair Work Committee [Draft]
Meeting date: 21 January 2026
Sarah Boyack
What are the key economic challenges over the remainder of the spending review period? How will future budget decisions need to change to support sustainable growth? The committee has spent a lot of time talking about the just transition and the need to invest to protect jobs, but where are the big opportunities?
Economy and Fair Work Committee [Draft]
Meeting date: 21 January 2026
Sarah Boyack
I blanked that out; I could not hear it.
Economy and Fair Work Committee [Draft]
Meeting date: 21 January 2026
Sarah Boyack
It is useful to get that feedback, because the arrangement works in other countries.
The planned capital utilisation has reduced from £341 million to £153 million. There is money there, but we are not spending it, and we are not reinvesting it.
Economy and Fair Work Committee [Draft]
Meeting date: 21 January 2026
Sarah Boyack
Okay. I just think that it is a missed opportunity. We do not have anything in those projects, and other countries are going to get resources out of our natural environment.
Meeting of the Parliament
Meeting date: 21 January 2026
Sarah Boyack
To ask the Scottish Government whether it will introduce standards and regular public reporting on hospital discharges and the use of non-clinical spaces to deliver care. (S6O-05396)
Meeting of the Parliament
Meeting date: 21 January 2026
Sarah Boyack
Given Healthcare Improvement Scotland’s damning report on NHS Lothian; the horrific story in the Edinburgh Evening News this month about the young father who lost his life after waiting for 13 hours to be seen in accident and emergency; the Royal College of Emergency Medicine noting that, last year, there were around 720,000 days of unnecessary hospital stays in Scotland due to delayed discharges, which is nearly 2,000 years of lost bed capacity that could have helped to relieve exit block and corridor care; and the fact that the RCEM has been raising these issues for years, when is the Scottish Government going to fix this?
Net Zero, Energy and Transport Committee [Draft]
Meeting date: 20 January 2026
Sarah Boyack
What about the concerns expressed by the children’s commissioner and the SYP?
Net Zero, Energy and Transport Committee [Draft]
Meeting date: 20 January 2026
Sarah Boyack
This is a really important issue. Like the convener, I have to declare an interest in that I have a free bus pass for the over-60s. When it was introduced, I never thought that I would be using it. Having taken part in the parliamentary debates and seen evidence from constituents, I can see that there is antisocial behaviour out there. There are people who are conducting themselves in absolutely inappropriate ways, and it is putting drivers at risk, so this could not be more important.
It is important to discuss both the principle of removing people’s passes and the circumstances for doing so. I hope that we can come back to the issue, because Young Scot was not consulted, and there have been comments from the Scottish Youth Parliament and from the Children and Young People’s Commissioner Scotland. It is really important that safeguards are in place. I would like to discuss both those things at the same time.
I would also like to hear more about travel safety officers and how they will be targeted to support the safety of bus users. The fact that people are not using buses came through in evidence from young people; they worry about using the bus now, because other people conduct themselves totally inappropriately. Where is the resource for that and how will it be targeted?
09:45
How do we raise the profile of the legislation so that young people can see it? Should it be through TV, social media, adverts and schools but also more widely? As has been commented on, it is not just young people who might abuse their bus pass by not behaving appropriately; certain other groups of people might do so, too. Could there be something in guidance and in the code of conduct? It is really important that you consider all that.
My final question is about the disability issue. Will drivers be briefed about people with Tourette’s, for example? There are some really important issues in how the legislation is implemented. People want it to be implemented, but we must ensure that the process in relation to the code of conduct is fair when Transport Scotland is considering the removal of a bus pass. I hope that the minister listens to us and that the committee has spare time to enable us to get this right, because it is so important.
Net Zero, Energy and Transport Committee [Draft]
Meeting date: 20 January 2026
Sarah Boyack
There were a couple of questions on disabilities earlier, and I raised another example. Proper guidance is needed on all those issues to make people aware of them, so I would like to hear a commitment about that. As other members have said, the two issues go together: what we are discussing today and the context. That needs to be in the code of conduct, because young people have not been consulted—we have had that feedback. Getting the two right is critical.