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 8273 contributions
Meeting of the Parliament [Draft]
Meeting date: 30 September 2025
Edward Mountain
I was worried that I had not put my card in. I am sorry that I was unable to connect. I would have voted yes.
Meeting of the Parliament [Draft] Business until 19:38
Meeting date: 30 September 2025
Edward Mountain
I am sure that it is bubbling excitement for my amendment. [Interruption.] Well, one of the reasons why I lodged this amendment was not, as I suspect some members believe, to protect landlords in the private rented sector, who have been described as “wolves” and the users of “weasel” words.
Citizen Participation and Public Petitions Committee
Meeting date: 24 September 2025
Edward Mountain
I, too, welcome the national treatment centre in Highland. It proves to me that people can travel for healthcare if they need to do so. In the Highlands, we know that. We have lost our vascular surgeon and our interventional radiologist. The reason, we are told, is that we do not have the population density that leads to enough demand to justify having those services—despite, in the case of the vascular surgeon, having two operating theatres that are equipped for such operations, and 12 beds, which is more than any other board in Scotland.
I am therefore interested in how you work out that populations in the Highlands will not always be the ones to lose out on services, despite the fact that they might have the equipment to deliver the healthcare. At the moment, the feeling is that we in the Highlands are going to have to travel. No-one really travels to us for those specialisms. Given that just getting to Raigmore may take two and a half hours from Wick, or even longer from more remote areas, we have a huge journey ahead of us. I am interested in knowing how you balance population density with services, because NHS Highland tells us that that is why we are losing all our services.
Citizen Participation and Public Petitions Committee
Meeting date: 24 September 2025
Edward Mountain
The problem is not just vascular surgery. It is that we will never have the population density and, therefore, the demand to outstrip need in Aberdeen or Tayside, so we will always lose our services until NHS Highland is hollowed out. That is what we are told and we just have to lump it. Do you agree with that, or do you think that you must put some specialist services in the Highlands and force people to travel to the Highlands in the same way that Highlanders have to travel to get their services?
Citizen Participation and Public Petitions Committee
Meeting date: 24 September 2025
Edward Mountain
As the petitioner lives in Speyside, I remind the committee that I have an interest as I have a freshwater fishery on the River Spey. I have responded to a particular application related to Storegga’s proposed project at Marypark, which is in Speyside.
I will draw the committee’s attention to one or two matters that I think are critical in relation to the petition.
Citizen Participation and Public Petitions Committee
Meeting date: 24 September 2025
Edward Mountain
As part of this whole idea of tech and putting power in the hands of patients, it is absolutely critical that we put the power into the hands of children. I remind the cabinet secretary that PE2031 is about insulin pumps for kids, which they need, because not having them stops them developing.
In NHS Highland, we get only eight pumps a year, which means that the waiting list in the Highlands is three years for an insulin pump for a child, whereas, in the central belt, there might be no wait at all. I wondered whether the cabinet secretary would consider that issue carefully. I am not asking him to give an answer, but kids do need to have the power in their hands.
Citizen Participation and Public Petitions Committee
Meeting date: 24 September 2025
Edward Mountain
I am trying not to. [Laughter.]
Citizen Participation and Public Petitions Committee
Meeting date: 24 September 2025
Edward Mountain
I was, indeed. I hear these calls and I have heard them in the committee before. I cannot answer at the moment whether the net zero committee can look into the issue, but I cannot see there being any capacity for that in the committee’s programme between now and the end of the parliamentary session. You may wish to write to the committee, and the committee will consider doing that. However, I am gently saying that there is a climate change plan that is behind schedule, there are carbon budgets still to agree and there is an ecocide bill that is already with the committee. I do not want to discourage people from doing things, but, realistically, the problems that this committee faces on petitions are multiplied in the net zero committee because of the lateness of the climate change plan.
Citizen Participation and Public Petitions Committee
Meeting date: 24 September 2025
Edward Mountain
I have never known what that means, convener.
Citizen Participation and Public Petitions Committee
Meeting date: 24 September 2025
Edward Mountain
I am not sure that politicians know what that means.
I understand how important water is across the River Spey and every other catchment. The water levels in the River Spey have not been so low since 1975. It is phenomenal—there has been no increase in the water level since February. All other abstractions on the river have been halted except for the one to Lochaber. SEPA is allowing water to be taken from the top of the catchment, but it is preventing it from being taken from anywhere else. The abstraction that is being proposed is massive: some 500,000 cubic metres would be taken out of the river daily, which would be hugely detrimental to any river. As a Parliament, we need to consider how those applications are considered.
11:45I understand that the committee is running out of time in the current parliamentary session. However, what happens is that SEPA says that it is doing river basin management planning, but it is absolutely not. It is considering each application as it arises, and the cumulative effect of all those applications will be hugely detrimental to every watercourse. That is especially true in this case in Speyside, because it will increase the temperature of the water, and the water will be taken from substrate that has a high mineral content, which will be discharged back into the river. That is bad for mussels and it creates algae.
I do not think that the petitioner wants to halt all production for ever, but they want some sensible consideration to be taken. I urge the committee, rather than just closing the petition, to consider writing to SEPA to ask how it will consider this application in light of all the other applications that have already been consented to. Adding one more might be the final straw that breaks the camel’s back.