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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 20 August 2025
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Displaying 29 contributions

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Criminal Justice Committee, Health, Social Care and Sport Committee, Social Justice and Social Security Committee: Joint Committee

Reducing Drug Deaths in Scotland and Tackling Problem Drug Use

Meeting date: 24 November 2022

Alex Cole-Hamilton

Thank you very much for bringing me back in, convener. The minister knows about my party’s long-held support for safe consumption rooms. That speaks to the approach that we discussed in our earlier exchange, which is about understanding that people will always consume; that zero tolerance does not work; and that we need to help people to consume as safely as possible if that is their choice.

The matter now rests with the Lord Advocate. We know from yesterday’s events that she has been very busy. Is the Lord Advocate working to a timeline? Do you have an expectation of when she will come back to you on the matter? With every week that goes by, lives are potentially not being saved.

Criminal Justice Committee, Health, Social Care and Sport Committee, Social Justice and Social Security Committee: Joint Committee

Reducing Drug Deaths in Scotland and Tackling Problem Drug Use

Meeting date: 24 November 2022

Alex Cole-Hamilton

May I have a final question, convener?

Criminal Justice Committee, Health, Social Care and Sport Committee, Social Justice and Social Security Committee: Joint Committee

Reducing Drug Deaths in Scotland and Tackling Problem Drug Use

Meeting date: 24 November 2022

Alex Cole-Hamilton

Thank you very much, convener. I appreciate the offer to allow me to come and sit with the committees today.

I have a couple of questions on ADPs and MAT standards, but I would like to start immediately with deaths among young people. It is a topical issue, as there was a death in my constituency a couple of weeks ago, at a festival, as a result of someone taking drugs. I have had meetings with the festival organisers, whom I had met beforehand, and they are exemplars in providing a safe space, with a state-of-the-art medical facility on site, security and healthcare staff.

Very sadly, the young lady died having ingested substances before she attended the festival, so there was nothing that a zero-tolerance approach could have done to protect her. However, there is a perverse reality in the way that we are policing our festivals in Scotland at the moment, as opposed to the approach in England. We have a zero-tolerance approach to drug use at festivals, and I understand that, on paper, that sounds compelling. In England, there is pill testing, with a recognition that some people will just get high at festivals; we want them to be able to do so in safety.

Have you considered having discussions with the Lord Advocate around the policing of such events, so that we can allow young people, or people of any age, to attend festivals as safely as possible, with a recognition that we will just not stop people choosing to take substances on occasion and that we need to allow them to do so in safety, as is done in England and Wales?

Criminal Justice Committee, Health, Social Care and Sport Committee, Social Justice and Social Security Committee: Joint Committee

Reducing Drug Deaths in Scotland and Tackling Problem Drug Use

Meeting date: 24 November 2022

Alex Cole-Hamilton

I am grateful.

Despite some success in the recent implementation of the MAT standards, it is still proving difficult to access same-day services in rural areas, in which clinics are few and far between. What are your plans to increase the provision of same-day services in rural and harder-to-reach areas?

COVID-19 Recovery Committee

Vaccination Certification

Meeting date: 30 September 2021

Alex Cole-Hamilton

I put the same question to Professor Dye.

COVID-19 Recovery Committee

Ministerial Statement

Meeting date: 30 September 2021

Alex Cole-Hamilton

Deputy First Minister, Murdo Fraser brought to our attention what I think is the most striking admission in the Government’s evidence paper, which was published last night—that Scotland, when it introduces vaccination certification, will be the only country in Europe to bring in such a scheme in isolation, without a requirement for testing. Murdo Fraser asked you about that, and I wrote down part of your answer. You said that the Government did not want to undermine vaccination uptake.

Do you have empirical evidence from other European countries that have brought in certification in tandem with testing requirements that suggests that vaccination uptake has been inhibited by that combination of measures?

COVID-19 Recovery Committee

Ministerial Statement

Meeting date: 30 September 2021

Alex Cole-Hamilton

That seems slightly at odds with the messaging in the Government’s evidence paper, which was published last night.

In section 5.1, which is about the basis for the introduction of vaccination certification, the very first bullet point is about reducing transmission. Increasing vaccine uptake is ancillary to that—it is the fourth bullet point. I recognise that—

COVID-19 Recovery Committee

Ministerial Statement

Meeting date: 30 September 2021

Alex Cole-Hamilton

I am more than happy to concede on that.

COVID-19 Recovery Committee

Vaccination Certification

Meeting date: 30 September 2021

Alex Cole-Hamilton

Good morning, panel. I have just one question that I hope will be pretty straightforward.

Section 5.1 of the Government’s evidence paper, which was produced last night, states that the scheme first and foremost

“aims to ... Reduce the risk of transmission”.

Driving vaccine uptake is in fact ancillary to that, as it is the fourth bullet point. That chimes, I think, with the theme that the Government is trying to set out in its case, which is that Covid ID cards and vaccination certification are in and of themselves tools of infection control. When I asked the First Minister to respond to the fact that 5,000 cases occurred at an event that had required vaccination passports, she stated as indisputable fact that, without those passports, transmission would have been worse. As Professor Stephen Reicher is leaving, I will start with him. Do you think that that is fact? Would the situation at that event have been worse had there been no vaccination certification?

COVID-19 Recovery Committee

Vaccination Certification

Meeting date: 30 September 2021

Alex Cole-Hamilton

I want to bring in Professor Drury, who has spoken extensively about behavioural science in this area. Given the significant coverage that vaccination already enjoys across the UK, is there a tipping point—I am thinking of an event such as the Boardmasters event in Cornwall, where there were 5,000 infections—at which the benefits of people evidencing their vaccinated status versus the risks of them dispensing with some of the precautions and indulging in riskier behaviour because of that means that it is more of a liability than an asset to ask for Covid certification?