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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.  

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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 5 May 2021
  6. Current session: 12 May 2021 to 17 June 2025
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Displaying 973 contributions

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Meeting of the Parliament

Housing Emergency

Meeting date: 2 October 2024

Mark Griffin

I have to ask how we got here. There was a time when Scotland won international praise for its approach to homelessness. We ended priority need, introduced housing options, ended the right to buy and got people safe and off the streets during the pandemic, but that seems like such a long time ago. Now, we have tens of thousands of people caught in a quagmire of failed policy, struggling in a spiral of destitution and desperation.

Meeting of the Parliament

Housing Emergency

Meeting date: 2 October 2024

Mark Griffin

—and thousands of social houses, so I advise Mr Brown to look at the statistics and to correct the record.

Meeting of the Parliament

Housing Emergency

Meeting date: 2 October 2024

Mark Griffin

Yes—certainly.

Meeting of the Parliament

Housing Emergency

Meeting date: 2 October 2024

Mark Griffin

I will give way to Mr Stewart.

Meeting of the Parliament

Housing Emergency

Meeting date: 2 October 2024

Mark Griffin

I absolutely agree with Mr Stewart, who paraphrased my former colleague Iain Gray. The emergency is caused by a lack of housing supply. That is why I would like the SNP to look at its Government’s record. On average, it has built 5,000 fewer houses in every single year than Labour did in its time in office. That is the cause of the housing crisis that we see just now—17 years of failure by this Government to build the houses that Scotland needs. [Interruption.]

Meeting of the Parliament

Housing Emergency

Meeting date: 2 October 2024

Mark Griffin

The housing minister seems to dispute that failure.

Meeting of the Parliament

Housing Emergency

Meeting date: 2 October 2024

Mark Griffin

I give way to the cabinet secretary.

Meeting of the Parliament

Portfolio Question Time

Meeting date: 2 October 2024

Mark Griffin

In 2021, the then First Minister promised Cumbernauld a new national treatment centre, but there has been no sign of it since. The cabinet secretary will know that waiting lists for in-patient and day cases stand at 11,500 in NHS Lanarkshire, with 2,500 of those people having been waiting more than a year. When will the Government make good on its promise for a national treatment centre for Cumbernauld and Lanarkshire?

Meeting of the Parliament

Housing Emergency

Meeting date: 2 October 2024

Mark Griffin

On a point of order, Presiding Officer. Will you alert members as to how to correct the record? Mr Brown has repeatedly said that Labour built only six council houses during eight years in office. It was hundreds of council houses—

Meeting of the Parliament

Housing Emergency

Meeting date: 2 October 2024

Mark Griffin

I am sorry, Mr MacDonald—I need to make progress.

Today and yesterday, and on countless other occasions, Miles Briggs has pointed out that, despite the pillars, the action plans, the meetings, the task forces and the money that has been shuffled about and rejigged, the facts are pretty stark. Things are not getting better—they are much worse.

One in four people need a different home. There are kids at our children’s school who will deal, for the rest of their lives, with the trauma of not having a home. For me, the scariest thing is that all of that is starting to feel normal. It is not normal—there is nothing normal about a Government that is unable to keep children out of hostels. My colleagues have highlighted the ways in which the inability of this Government and the housing minister to prioritise housing has affected people in Scotland.

The Government has claimed that the Labour Party is bringing no ideas to the debate but, across the chamber, there has been no shortage of ideas about what could be done to make things better. Over this debate and others, we have suggested planning improvement; tackling empty homes; dealing with the voids by speeding up electrical reconnections; a council tax escalator on second and empty homes; revised compulsory purchase orders; compulsory sale order powers; NPF4 changes; and truly rural house building.

I have agreed with Mr Macpherson previously about the need to look at VAT on modifications and bringing houses into use. We have talked about pension funds building houses. We are endlessly bringing such ideas to the chamber, but we brought this debate on the housing emergency because the Government has steadfastly refused to acknowledge it or come up with an action plan to solve it.

We are asking for an emergency response. We have brought forward proposals, but we are not alone—Homes for Scotland, Shelter, the Chartered Institute of Housing, the SFHA and the cross-party group on housing, which my colleague Graham Simpson convenes, have all asked for an emergency response from the Government. It has absolutely failed to deliver that, which is why we lodged the motion for debate.

Without resources and drive from the Government, local government will continue to struggle to keep up with the rising demand for houses.