Skip to main content
Loading…

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.  

Filter your results Hide all filters

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 2 January 2026
Select which types of business to include


Select level of detail in results

Displaying 4175 contributions

|

Citizen Participation and Public Petitions Committee

Continued Petitions

Meeting date: 9 March 2022

Jackson Carlaw

Good morning, everyone, and welcome to the fourth meeting in 2022 of the Citizen Participation and Public Petitions Committee.

Agenda item 1 is consideration of continued petitions. PE1896, which was lodged by Callum Isted, calls on the Scottish Parliament to urge the Scottish Government to provide every primary school child in Scotland with a reusable water bottle. The petition calls for the disposable water bottle that is provided with many primary school lunches to be replaced with a sustainable, reusable metal bottle.

We give the warmest of welcomes to Callum, who is the Scottish Parliament’s youngest ever petitioner. We are absolutely delighted that he has found time to come in and have a chat with us about his petition. We welcome his dad, James, who joins him, and his mum, Sarah, who is in the public gallery. His local MSP, Sue Webber, also joins us, and I am very jealous to see that she has already been gifted a very fancy and colour-appropriate reusable water bottle.

Callum, it is great to have you with us. To start off, tell us a bit about yourself—how old you are, which primary class you are in at school and why you decided to lodge the petition.

Citizen Participation and Public Petitions Committee

Continued Petitions

Meeting date: 9 March 2022

Jackson Carlaw

I hope that you have a lot—or a few—friends in the class.

Meeting of the Parliament (Hybrid)

Portfolio Question Time

Meeting date: 9 March 2022

Jackson Carlaw

To ask the Scottish Government whether it will provide an update on the transvaginal mesh case record review, led by Professor Alison Britton, and the anticipated timescale for its completion. (S6O-00826)

Meeting of the Parliament (Hybrid)

Justice for Families (Milly’s Law)

Meeting date: 9 March 2022

Jackson Carlaw

This has been an interesting debate, with some informed and constructive contributions. I thank Anas Sarwar for the way in which he moved the motion, and I thank Katy Clark, Christine Grahame and Jamie Greene, who all brought different dimensions to the debate with their contributions.

I have a fear of heights—I am always worried that my glasses will fall off and I will be stranded—but nothing has scared me witless more in life than the wellbeing of my children. That sentiment will be shared by every single parent in the chamber. From the minute that a child becomes part of someone’s life, there is a contract that they will never forget.

As a child, we expect that we will see our parents pass—that is part of the contract of life—but we would never expect to have to deal with the loss of our own child. If people want to know what that grief looks like, they need only look at television pictures of parents in Ukraine. Fathers are having to send their children away while they go back to fight, and as mothers try to flee, their child is shot dead before them on the street—the grief is writ large. Although it does not make it any easier, they understand that the situation is due to the boot of a reckless dictator. There will be parents here who, off camera, feel exactly that grief when a child is knocked down by a car, or when a child dies of an incurable illness. However, when a child dies, and the institution of the healthcare system seems predisposed to deny us the knowledge of why it happened, that is totally unacceptable.

What worries me in part is that we have moved to a compensation culture, in which accountability is transferred and becomes “Here’s money instead.” In 2007, when I first spoke in a health debate in the chamber, the NHS paid out £18.93 million in compensation. The compensation figure for last year was revealed yesterday—it is £61.59 million.

Constituents have come to me about the death of a child or a parent, and they did not understand, or could not accept, the sequence of events that led to that loss. They have gone through a process that I can only describe as a massaging and managing of their issue, at the end of which they were told, “Of course, you can apply for compensation.” In tears, they did, eventually, but that did not answer the fundamental questions. They want to know why it happened, and they very often ask, “Is this going to happen to somebody else?” It seems to me that the transfer to a compensation culture involves an avoidance of both accountability and the determination to ensure that it will not happen again.

Back in 2019, I first raised the issue of Milly Main with the First Minister. That came on the back of an understanding that our NHS maintenance backlog was some £900 million at that point. We then asked what health inspections had been taking place and learned that the number had declined from 38 to just 14 in that year. I do not know whether that situation has now been reversed. There was, I think, an acceptance by Jeane Freeman that public confidence had been shaken, but as the months went on and the questions continued to be asked, there was a surfeit of embraces, clutching and condolences. We heard the phrase “My heart goes out to”, but there was no material advance on the fundamental questions of what happened, what was being done about it and why we did not know.

I applaud Anas Sarwar’s tenacity in pushing the issue. He and I have relied on brave souls telling us things that people did not want us to know. It is only because we found out those things that we have been able to drive the whole argument forward.

Let me be absolutely clear: I think that we should be supporting and encouraging Anas Sarwar’s bill. This is 2022, and we have to get to a point at which we do not simply say to people, “Look, rather than pursuing this, here’s some cash. You won’t actually ever find out what’s happening and we’re not ever really going to tell you. In fact, there is an institutional willingness to club together to try and hide behind a screen.” That must end. That is why I support Milly’s law, and I commend Anas Sarwar for his efforts to bring forward a bill.

16:00  

Meeting of the Parliament (Hybrid)

Scottish Parliamentary Contributory Pension Fund (Trustees)

Meeting date: 9 March 2022

Jackson Carlaw

Before I move the motions, I would like to acknowledge on behalf of the Parliament the work done by the previous pension fund trustees, Alison Harris, Gil Paterson and Mark Ruskell, in looking after our pension scheme.

Under rule 8(1) in part B of schedule 1 to the Scottish Parliamentary Pensions Act 2009, it is for the Parliament to appoint all trustees by resolution, on nomination by the SPCB. The SPCB recently agreed to nominate Gordon MacDonald MSP and Murdo Fraser MSP as fund trustees of the Scottish parliamentary pension scheme, and former MSP Mark Ballard as the pensioner trustee, to serve alongside Pauline McNeill. I will therefore move the motions for the Parliament to approve the new fund trustees.

I move,

That the Parliament appoints Gordon MacDonald MSP as a Fund trustee of the Scottish Parliamentary Contributory Pension Fund, further to his nomination for such appointment by the Parliamentary corporation.

That the Parliament appoints Murdo Fraser MSP as a Fund trustee of the Scottish Parliamentary Contributory Pension Fund, further to his nomination for such appointment by the Parliamentary corporation.

That the Parliament appoints Mark Ballard as a pensioner Fund trustee of the Scottish Parliamentary Contributory Pension Fund, further to his nomination for such appointment by the Parliamentary corporation.

Meeting of the Parliament (Hybrid)

Portfolio Question Time

Meeting date: 9 March 2022

Jackson Carlaw

In response to written questions that I submitted on the review in September last year, the Cabinet Secretary for Health and Social Care informed me that the commissioned contractor, Clinco, would

“request ... appropriate case records from Health Boards.”—[Written Answers, 18 October 2021; S6W-03321]

At that point, data-sharing agreements had been reached with some health boards for access to patient records, and the cabinet secretary said that he expected agreements to be in place for “all relevant Boards” in the near future.

We are now almost six months on. Can the minister please confirm whether all data-sharing agreements are now agreed, and whether every health board has made available all the required and requested patient information? If not, can she advise what might be holding up that process?

Meeting of the Parliament (Hybrid)

Portfolio Question Time

Meeting date: 3 March 2022

Jackson Carlaw

To ask the Scottish Government how the 2022 regulations on the prohibition of fishing in the Firth of Clyde will impact fishing businesses. (S6O-00811)

Meeting of the Parliament (Hybrid)

Portfolio Question Time

Meeting date: 3 March 2022

Jackson Carlaw

I hear what the cabinet secretary says, but I wonder whether she heard Elaine Whyte, who spoke powerfully yesterday on behalf of the Clyde Fishermen’s Association to the Rural Affairs, Islands and Natural Environment Committee. Ms Whyte made clear that the Firth of Clyde closures have left many fishermen with no other option, frankly, than to find alternative work. That is, of course, causing unbelievable stress, as many of them have fishing as a lifetime career. Furthermore, she is concerned that this might lead to us having no fishermen left in the area, and that the Clyde coast will end up being a forgotten coast in terms of fishing.

Will the cabinet secretary agree to listen to the industry, and will she outline compensation plans to support those who have been affected by this peremptory closure? Will she perhaps give a guarantee that, in future, she will consult the industry before taking such important measures that have such a profound impact on the industry?

Meeting of the Parliament (Hybrid)

Eating Disorders Awareness Week 2022

Meeting date: 1 March 2022

Jackson Carlaw

I was a member of the Scottish Parliament—although Mr Mundell was not—when Dennis Robertson gave his speech on the issue. It is partly the reason why I am in the chamber today, as it was a profoundly moving occasion for us all—his speech was very courageous and brave.

I was struck by the fact that Ms Harper indicated that that debate took place 10 years ago. With regard to the advance that we have seen in the way in which mental health and its associated stigmas are appreciated, I wonder whether we feel that sufficient progress has been made in the understanding of eating disorders. I note that we are here again, 10 years on, to debate the issue today and, although much has been done, the fundamental issues with regard to an appreciation of eating disorders and their consequences remain broadly similar to what they were when Dennis Robertson spoke in 2012.

Citizen Participation and Public Petitions Committee

Decision on Taking Business in Private

Meeting date: 2 February 2022

Jackson Carlaw

Good morning. I am delighted to welcome everyone to the second meeting in 2022 of the Citizen Participation and Public Petitions Committee.

Agenda item 1 is a decision on taking business in private. Do we agree to take item 4 in private?

Members indicated agreement.