- Asked by: Pam Duncan-Glancy, MSP for Glasgow, Scottish Labour
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Date lodged: Thursday, 10 August 2023
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Current Status:
Answered by Maree Todd on 21 August 2023
To ask the Scottish Government how many teachers act as a young carers champion.
Answer
This information is not held by the Scottish Government, and this would be a matter for Local Authorities. However, not every Local Authority has a Young Carer Champion, and if they do, they are not necessarily a teaching member of staff.
- Asked by: Pam Duncan-Glancy, MSP for Glasgow, Scottish Labour
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Date lodged: Wednesday, 09 August 2023
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Current Status:
Answered by Graeme Dey on 21 August 2023
To ask the Scottish Government whether it anticipates its student mental health plan will be published by the beginning of the 2023-24 academic year.
Answer
The Mental Health and Wellbeing Strategy, published earlier in the summer, sets out the shared vision of the Scottish Government and the Convention of Scottish Local Authorities (COSLA) to improve mental health and wellbeing.
It will be supported by an accompanying Delivery Plan and the Workforce Action Plan in the autumn and, thereafter, we will publish related actions to support students.
- Asked by: Monica Lennon, MSP for Central Scotland, Scottish Labour
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Date lodged: Friday, 21 July 2023
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Current Status:
Answered by Paul McLennan on 18 August 2023
To ask the Scottish Government whether it can provide an update on its spending
plan for the £97 million in funding received from the UK Government to remove
cladding from high-rise buildings, including a timetable setting out by when it
anticipates it will have spent all of the funding.
Answer
We are spending every penny of consequential funding we receive on this programme of work, with spend to date of over £3.6m and the anticipated whole-life cost approximately £400m.
Spending information and quarterly updates were published in July 2023 and is publicly available at Single Building Assessment programme: spending information - gov.scot (www.gov.scot) . Work is underway on a stock census to evaluate buildings and explore ways to minimise cost and maximise revenue to ensure the programme can deliver its objectives in full, efficiently and in a reasonable timeframe.
- Asked by: Gillian Mackay, MSP for Central Scotland, Scottish Green Party
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Date lodged: Monday, 24 July 2023
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Current Status:
Answered by Jenni Minto on 18 August 2023
To ask the Scottish Government how much (a) it and (b) NHS Scotland has spent on treating nicotine addiction in children and young people in each of the last five years.
Answer
The Scottish Government provides funding annually to Health Boards for smoking cessation and prevention services, but this funding isn’t split for adult and child smoking cessation and prevention services.
This funding is provided as part of a wider Outcomes Framework budget allocation to Health Boards to cover a range of outcomes – in 2023-24 this outcome framework funding totalled £74.1 million.
The table below sets out the Outcome Framework budget allocations for the last 5 years for Health Boards, which is then for Individual Health Boards to determine the allocation of and final expenditure from this budget. For illustrative purposes, c£9-10 million per annum is notionally included as part of the Outcome Framework budget allocation for smoking cessation and prevention.
| | 2018-2019 Budget | 2019-2020 Budget | 2020-2021 Budget | Restated 2021-2022 Budget | 2022-2023 Budget |
| | £m | £m | £m | £m | £m |
Outcomes Framework Budget Allocations for Health Boards | 66.2 | 75.7 | 71.9 | 74.1 | 74.1 |
- Asked by: Monica Lennon, MSP for Central Scotland, Scottish Labour
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Date lodged: Wednesday, 26 July 2023
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Current Status:
Answered by Tom Arthur on 18 August 2023
To ask the Scottish Government whether it will provide an update on whether it is considering updating the valuation date on which Council Tax bands are based, in light of reportedly severe funding shortfalls in local authorities.
Answer
The Joint Working Group on Sources of Local Government Funding and Council Tax Reform is exploring proposals for meaningful changes to be introduced to Council Tax, this includes the consideration of approaches to longer term reform of the Council Tax system.
The Scottish Government have provided local authorities with nearly £13.5 billion of funding in 2023-24, a cash increase in local government day to day spending of over £793 million which represents a real terms increase of £376 million or 3 per cent.
- Asked by: Alex Cole-Hamilton, MSP for Edinburgh Western, Scottish Liberal Democrats
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Date lodged: Tuesday, 25 July 2023
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Current Status:
Answered by Jenni Minto on 18 August 2023
To ask the Scottish Government what actions it has taken as a result of the reported post-neonatal mortality rate breaching its upper warning threshold in April 2023.
Answer
The death of any child or young person is a tragic event and our sympathies are with all parents and families affected. We are awaiting the results of the preliminary investigations into the April 2023 data from Public Health Scotland before we can confirm our next steps. We will continue to work closely with Public Health Scotland, NHS Boards and Healthcare Improvement Scotland on our maternity safety programme of work.
In order to reduce the number of preventable deaths and harm to children and young people, the Scottish Government is funding a National Hub to review all child and neonatal deaths. The National Hub will draw on the evidence from pre-existing reviews and data, including PHS data, Serious and Adverse Event Reviews and Fatal Accident Inquiries, to identify and share learning through the provision of national guidance and annual reporting. The Hub is jointly operated by Healthcare Improvement Scotland and the Care Inspectorate and will issue its first annual report this Autumn. In June 2023 the National Hub published a new national information booklet about the child death review process designed for practitioners to share with bereaved parents, carers or other family members.
- Asked by: Sarah Boyack, MSP for Lothian, Scottish Labour
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Date lodged: Thursday, 20 July 2023
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Current Status:
Answered by Richard Lochhead on 18 August 2023
To ask the Scottish Government whether it will provide an update on the Green Growth Accelerator programme, including how much of the £200 million public sector investment has already been allocated.
Answer
The aim of the Green Growth Accelerator model is to unlock investment over the medium term in low carbon infrastructure. This unlocking would be supported by payments from the Scottish Government to the local authority which are tied to delivery of a set of pre-defined and agreed outcomes.
It takes time to develop infrastructure projects, so to support the initial pilot phase the Scottish Government has provided £720k in resource funding from the 2021-22 budget for six pathfinder projects (£120k per project) to develop business cases to pilot the GGA model across a range of geographical areas and project types. The six pathfinder pilots were selected following an open call for proposals from local authorities.
The Scottish Government provided a further £832k in resource funding through the GGA in 2022-23 to support local authorities with developing their pipeline of low carbon infrastructure projects.
- Asked by: Sarah Boyack, MSP for Lothian, Scottish Labour
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Date lodged: Thursday, 20 July 2023
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Current Status:
Answered by Graeme Dey on 18 August 2023
To ask the Scottish Government when it will provide a detailed response to each of the 15 recommendations of the independent review of the skills delivery landscape.
Answer
On 28 June the Scottish Government published the Purpose and Principles for post-school education, research and skills . The Initial Priorities paper that was published alongside makes it clear that we agree that significant system reform is required if we are to achieve the long-term vision and outcomes.
The commitments on skills planning, employer engagement, funding, post-school pathways, the need for meaningful parity of esteem and consistency of language, clearly accept the basis of several recommendations made by James Withers in the Independent Review of the Skills Delivery Landscape.
Our work, with partners, to take forward these actions will further inform our response to the detail of Withers’ recommendations, which we will set out in the context of lifelong education and skills reform in the coming months.
- Asked by: Rachael Hamilton, MSP for Ettrick, Roxburgh and Berwickshire, Scottish Conservative and Unionist Party
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Date lodged: Thursday, 10 August 2023
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Current Status:
Answered by Gillian Martin on 18 August 2023
To ask the Scottish Government what plans are in place to deliver its commitment of extending the requirement for vessel monitoring and tracking systems across the whole commercial fishing fleet by the end of the current parliamentary session.
Answer
I refer the member to the answer to question S6W-20615 on 14 August 2023 which confirmed that the Scottish Government had launched a consultation seeking views on proposals to extend the tracking and monitoring requirement to under 12 metre commercial fishing vessels.
I urge all stakeholders to engage with this consultation, which closes on 7 November 2023. The consultation documents can be found here: https://consult.gov.scot/marine-scotland/improving-inshore-fisheries-data/
All answers to written parliamentary questions are available on the Parliament’s website, the search facility for which can be found at https://www.parliament.scot/chamber-and-committees/written-questions-and-answers
- Asked by: Miles Briggs, MSP for Lothian, Scottish Conservative and Unionist Party
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Date lodged: Wednesday, 09 August 2023
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Current Status:
Answered by Paul McLennan on 18 August 2023
To ask the Scottish Government, in light of its report, Temporary Accommodation Task and Finish Group; Final Report and Recommendations, whether the additional £2 million allocated in the 2022-23 financial year for rapid rehousing transition plans is new money.
Answer
Since 2019-20, local authorities have been allocated an annual share of £8 million from the Ending Homelessness Together Budget to support the implementation of their rapid rehousing transition plans. This is in addition to £2 million allocated in 2018-19 from the same budget for each local authority to develop a rapid rehousing transition plan, and £5 million in 2020-21 from the Winter Plan for Social Protection to help mitigate the negative impacts of the pandemic.
The additional £2 million allocated in 2023-24 for rapid rehousing transition plans is new money. No additional rapid rehousing transition plan funding was made available in 2022-23.