The Official Report is a written record of public meetings of the Parliament and committees.
The Official Report search offers lots of different ways to find the information you’re looking for. The search is used as a professional tool by researchers and third-party organisations. It is also used by members of the public who may have less parliamentary awareness. This means it needs to provide the ability to run complex searches, and the ability to browse reports or perform a simple keyword search.
The web version of the Official Report has three different views:
Depending on the kind of search you want to do, one of these views will be the best option. The default view is to show the report for each meeting of Parliament or a committee. For a simple keyword search, the results will be shown by item of business.
When you choose to search by a particular MSP, the results returned will show each spoken contribution in Parliament or a committee, ordered by date with the most recent contributions first. This will usually return a lot of results, but you can refine your search by keyword, date and/or by meeting (committee or Chamber business).
We’ve chosen to display the entirety of each MSP’s contribution in the search results. This is intended to reduce the number of times that users need to click into an actual report to get the information that they’re looking for, but in some cases it can lead to very short contributions (“Yes.”) or very long ones (Ministerial statements, for example.) We’ll keep this under review and get feedback from users on whether this approach best meets their needs.
There are two types of keyword search:
If you select an MSP’s name from the dropdown menu, and add a phrase in quotation marks to the keyword field, then the search will return only examples of when the MSP said those exact words. You can further refine this search by adding a date range or selecting a particular committee or Meeting of the Parliament.
It’s also possible to run basic Boolean searches. For example:
There are two ways of searching by date.
You can either use the Start date and End date options to run a search across a particular date range. For example, you may know that a particular subject was discussed at some point in the last few weeks and choose a date range to reflect that.
Alternatively, you can use one of the pre-defined date ranges under “Select a time period”. These are:
If you search by an individual session, the list of MSPs and committees will automatically update to show only the MSPs and committees which were current during that session. For example, if you select Session 1 you will be show a list of MSPs and committees from Session 1.
If you add a custom date range which crosses more than one session of Parliament, the lists of MSPs and committees will update to show the information that was current at that time.
All Official Reports of meetings in the Debating Chamber of the Scottish Parliament.
All Official Reports of public meetings of committees.
Displaying 1578 contributions
Criminal Justice Committee
Meeting date: 2 March 2022
Jamie Greene
That response was helpfully brief, too.
Finally, are you concerned that the power might be used as a blunt tool to reduce prison population numbers, as Stuart Murray has alluded to, and that it might be used inadvertently not for public health reasons but simply to get the numbers down? There are, of course, other ways to get the numbers down—and I am sure that we will have a discussion about that, too, some time—but given the high rate of reoffending among the last cohort of prisoners who were released for public health reasons under this emergency power, when a substantial number of them reoffended in a short space of time after release, that sort of suggestion has struck alarm bells among many from whom we have taken evidence.
Do you have any view on that, Vicki?
Criminal Justice Committee
Meeting date: 2 March 2022
Jamie Greene
Sure. This power was used first under the premise of a public health emergency. Are you concerned or worried that it could be used as a blunter tool to reduce our burgeoning prison population?
Criminal Justice Committee
Meeting date: 2 March 2022
Jamie Greene
Thank you for that comprehensive answer. I guess that the difference is that the inability of solicitor firms to undertake their duties or even to survive as going concerns affects members of the public very differently from how the impact of Covid on other types of commercial business affects them.
In the correspondence from the Law Society that we received yesterday—we have just had time to digest it—there was a paragraph with key questions. They are posed to us for us to pose to you. I request that you review those key questions and respond to the committee so that we can forward that response to the Law Society or make it public.
I get the impression that the Law Society is not confident that there is sufficient capacity in the defence bar to address the backlog of cases. That is a key point, irrespective of the argy-bargy over fees. Are there physically enough people in the system or, even if you increased capacity in the Scottish Courts and Tribunals Service and the Crown Office and Procurator Fiscal Service was able to increase capacity, would the inability to increase defence capacity at the same rate mean that you would not get through the backlog at the rate that we all want? Is that a concern for the Government?
Criminal Justice Committee
Meeting date: 2 March 2022
Jamie Greene
I guess the answer is to improve retention and to stop people leaving the profession.
Criminal Justice Committee
Meeting date: 2 March 2022
Jamie Greene
It is a matter of getting new entrants in, too.
Criminal Justice Committee
Meeting date: 2 March 2022
Jamie Greene
Remand is a much wider issue, which the committee is looking at. Everyone is acutely aware of the sad inevitability that some people spend more time in prison on remand than they would have done in serving their sentence, if they had been proven guilty, but we can talk about that another day.
Criminal Justice Committee
Meeting date: 2 March 2022
Jamie Greene
I know that Audrey Nicoll has questions on this subject. My other question is on the next topic that we will discuss, so I will save it.
Criminal Justice Committee
Meeting date: 2 March 2022
Jamie Greene
Thank you.
Criminal Justice Committee
Meeting date: 2 March 2022
Jamie Greene
I have a final question on an issue that has cropped up a few times and on which we took evidence in the early part of the committee’s existence. It relates to salaries.
When we posed the question to the Lord Advocate, her response was that people take a pay cut when they go into public service from the private sector. However, I get the impression that the Law Society thinks otherwise. There is a sense that good-quality solicitors are being poached from the private sector into the Government—the civil service—or public bodies that require legal assistance.
Do you have any indication as to where the truth lies? Is it somewhere in the middle? Are average salaries much higher in Government agencies than they are in the private sector, for all the reasons that we have talked about and because of the financial issues that private sector firms have faced?
Criminal Justice Committee
Meeting date: 23 February 2022
Jamie Greene
I do not mind. It was a tough question.