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All Official Reports of meetings in the Debating Chamber of the Scottish Parliament.
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Displaying 4778 contributions
Finance and Public Administration Committee
Meeting date: 7 January 2025
Kenneth Gibson
Thank you very much, minister and colleagues.
The next item on our agenda is to continue taking evidence on the Scottish budget 2025-26. Sorry—before we come to that, we had better finish off dealing with the subordinate legislation. My mind is already on the Auditor General for Scotland.
We turn to item 2, which is formal consideration of motion S6M-15749. I invite the minister to speak to and move the motion.
Motion moved,
That the Finance and Public Administration Committee recommends that the Land and Buildings Transaction Tax (additional amount: transactions relating to second homes etc) (Scotland) Amendment Order 2024 (SSI 2024/367) be approved.—[Ivan McKee]
Finance and Public Administration Committee
Meeting date: 7 January 2025
Kenneth Gibson
Do any members wish to speak?
Finance and Public Administration Committee
Meeting date: 7 January 2025
Kenneth Gibson
Lynne Raeside, your submission says:
“In line with our strategic and workforce plans, our staff base has seen modest increases”
Finance and Public Administration Committee
Meeting date: 7 January 2025
Kenneth Gibson
It seems very significant in itself; I just wonder what it represents in terms of the share of procurement and the lessons that can be learned.
Finance and Public Administration Committee
Meeting date: 7 January 2025
Kenneth Gibson
The Scottish Parliamentary Corporate Body can get you a new website for only £3 million.
Finance and Public Administration Committee
Meeting date: 7 January 2025
Kenneth Gibson
That concludes questions from the committee. Are there any further points that you wish to make before we conclude this evidence session?
Finance and Public Administration Committee
Meeting date: 7 January 2025
Kenneth Gibson
I will put that on the record. That paragraph says:
“The Scottish Government has contacted public bodies three times since January 2023 to assess their ability to carry out reform. These requests did not generate concrete information on the quantity, quality or anticipated impact of public bodies’ collective work on reform ... There is no evidence that specific action has been taken to remove these barriers”.
Finance and Public Administration Committee
Meeting date: 7 January 2025
Kenneth Gibson
Understandably, everyone wants security of employment, but if an organisation has to reduce its head count for whatever reason, it will end up having to ask for voluntary redundancies. Sometimes, in order to balance the books, people will leave who it does not want to leave and people whose jobs are perhaps no longer really required will stay. Those people might not have the skills or even the aptitude to move somewhere else. That causes difficulties, not least for the ability of an organisation to deliver services.
In terms of progress on public service reform, you say in paragraph 69:
“The Scottish Government required all portfolios to lay out their savings and reform plans by the end of the financial year. These plans contain different levels of detail and estimates of how reform will affect costs and budgets. Together they do not provide the information needed to estimate how much reform will save.”
How much do you estimate needs to be saved by such reform, and what does the Government have to do to get on track in order to reach that objective?
Finance and Public Administration Committee
Meeting date: 7 January 2025
Kenneth Gibson
Indeed. If people want to come in on that issue, I would be more than happy for them to do so.
Finance and Public Administration Committee
Meeting date: 7 January 2025
Kenneth Gibson
In my experience, we have gone backwards on flexibility in some respects. For example, a decade ago, some of my constituents in Skelmorlie, which is on the border of the NHS Greater Glasgow and Clyde area, would have been able to go to Inverclyde hospital, but now they have to jump through all sorts of hoops to do that. Eighty-year-olds are having to visit relatives in hospital in Crosshouse, which, from their perspective, is at the far end of Ayrshire, when they have another hospital a few miles up the road.
There used to be a simple arrangement whereby people from Skelmorlie would have gone to Inverclyde hospital in the NHS Greater Glasgow and Clyde area and NHS Ayrshire and Arran would have paid for that, but I feel that there is now a reluctance to allow that to happen. The interests of the patients seem to be secondary to accountancy concerns. I am not convinced that the flexibility that you have mentioned has improved over the years. In my experience, we have gone slightly backwards in that regard.