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Displaying 1687 contributions
Social Justice and Social Security Committee
Meeting date: 9 June 2022
Miles Briggs
Having produced these reports for a number of years now, you will have been seeing this happening; you must also have seen how, every year, local government and other budgets have been facing the same kinds of cuts. From your experience of other committees to which you have given evidence, do you think that more can be found in these budgets to meet that shortfall?
Social Justice and Social Security Committee
Meeting date: 9 June 2022
Miles Briggs
What is the limit to the Scotland reserve? Did you say £25 million?
Social Justice and Social Security Committee
Meeting date: 9 June 2022
Miles Briggs
I will follow on some of those questions. Donald Rumsfeld’s phrase about “known knowns” and “known unknowns” springs to mind, and we are probably going round in circles.
Previous forecasts have looked at the costs of administering Social Security Scotland. Have you looked at those and at where potential additional costs might be, given the amount of benefits that it will be administering?
Social Justice and Social Security Committee
Meeting date: 9 June 2022
Miles Briggs
Does Darren Kelly have an opinion on that modelling?
Local Government, Housing and Planning Committee
Meeting date: 7 June 2022
Miles Briggs
Good morning to our second panel. Thanks for joining us here and online today. What difference has part 9 of the 2015 act made to access to new allotments? Where have you seen access to community growing expand, for those who are looking for that rather than an allotment? That is for Sinclair Laing and anyone else who wants to come in afterwards.
Local Government, Housing and Planning Committee
Meeting date: 7 June 2022
Miles Briggs
You touched on how the act has been interpreted by local authorities. On the subject of allotments, you two are obviously the living embodiment of the councils that you work in. We know that Highland Council does not run or allocate sites despite having large waiting lists for private sites in the Inverness area. Peter, you mentioned the honeymoon period. Has that prevented people in local authorities from needing to act and thinking about the waiting lists that have built up? Have they seen it as something that is coming rather than as something that they have to act on now?
Local Government, Housing and Planning Committee
Meeting date: 7 June 2022
Miles Briggs
Good morning and thank you for joining us today. I want to ask a few questions about part 9 of the 2015 act and how it has made a difference. To what extent have the numbers of plots and sites changed over the past seven years? You have touched on some of the splitting that has taken place, and we have heard from witnesses about the assessment of waiting lists and their division into thirds. How have things changed on the ground because of part 9?
Local Government, Housing and Planning Committee
Meeting date: 7 June 2022
Miles Briggs
It does—thank you. You covered quite a lot of points there.
You mentioned individuals who do not want a full-size allotment but want to start growing, and community growing especially. Has the demand for that been assessed, especially as we come out of the pandemic, when people have wanted such spaces? Is a different model needed? On our visits, we saw raised beds being provided, and people getting small spaces to see whether they are able to sustain them. Could that approach be developed on new sites to allow communities of people who are in the same position to start out and develop?
Local Government, Housing and Planning Committee
Meeting date: 7 June 2022
Miles Briggs
You made an important point about making this about every public sector organisation looking at their land and what they can hand over, especially if it is already fenced. I think that all my questions have been covered, so I am happy to hand back.
Local Government, Housing and Planning Committee
Meeting date: 31 May 2022
Miles Briggs
Fencing seemed to come up a lot yesterday in the conversations that we had. We saw a project with a £35,000 fence—it was a deer fence, which was quite a basic fence but delivered the same outcome as a different type. It might be interesting to pursue that barrier and opportunities to get these things built more quickly. Even if the land is there, the fencing issue seems to hold back projects coming on stream.
Do you have anything to add about projects that you know have not gone forward because of that specific barrier—that is, the barrier of not being able to put up a barrier? You can let us know after the meeting if you are aware of any of those issues if you cannot do so now.