- Asked by: Jamie Greene, MSP for West Scotland, Scottish Conservative and Unionist Party
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Date lodged: Wednesday, 03 February 2021
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Current Status:
Answered by Jamie Hepburn on 10 February 2021
To ask the Scottish Government what its response is to the Scottish Retail Consortium's call for a national strategy to support the sector, given that retailers reported a loss of 13,000 jobs and £3.5 billion in annual turnover between 2016 and 2018.
Answer
Work on a Retail Strategy for Scotland has already commenced with a steering group established to help develop this. The Scottish Retail Consortium are a member of the group along with other trade organisations, businesses, academia, public sector and trade unions. All group members will have an opportunity to shape our vision for retail and the aims and objectives of the strategy.
- Asked by: Jamie Greene, MSP for West Scotland, Scottish Conservative and Unionist Party
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Date lodged: Wednesday, 03 February 2021
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Current Status:
Answered by Fiona Hyslop on 10 February 2021
To ask the Scottish Government whether it will provide an update on the delivery timetable for the MV Glen Sannox, and whether the vessel will be operating the Ardrossan-Brodick route by the end of 2022.
Answer
Tim Hair, Turnaround Director of Ferguson Marine is preparing an update on the delivery timetable for vessels 801 and 802 to reflect the impact of COVID 19. The update will be published later in the year when the impact of COVID-19 becomes clearer.
- Asked by: Jamie Greene, MSP for West Scotland, Scottish Conservative and Unionist Party
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Date lodged: Wednesday, 03 February 2021
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Current Status:
Answered by Paul Wheelhouse on 10 February 2021
To ask the Scottish Government, in the absence of the delivery of the MV Glen Sannox, what action it will take to improve the reliability of Arran ferry services, in order to reduce the risk of disruption.
Answer
The MV Glen Sannox will be delivered and, based on the work programme shared with Parliament by the Turnaround Director of Ferguson Marine Port Glasgow, Mr Tim Hair, the vessel should be delivered to CalMac for deployment on services on the network by April-June 2022, following sea trials.
We continue to invest in the reliability of vessels in Clyde and Hebrides network through the Resilience Fund which was set up to improve the future reliability and availability of vessels, including both vessels operating on the Ardrossan to Brodick route and for ensuring the resilience of the Lochranza service.
This funding has been in place since 2018 and has been used to upgrade or replace key systems and equipment on the vessels throughout the CalMac fleet to reduce the risk of breakdowns.
- Asked by: Jamie Greene, MSP for West Scotland, Scottish Conservative and Unionist Party
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Date lodged: Wednesday, 03 February 2021
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Current Status:
Answered by John Swinney on 9 February 2021
To ask the Scottish Government whether it will provide an update on whether prelim exams will go ahead in March 2021 and, if so, how these will take account of any disruption resulting from the long-term school closures.
Answer
Supporting the health and wellbeing of our teachers and lecturers, other school and college staff and learners is of paramount importance and we are committed to ensuring that learners can be fairly assessed this year. The National Qualifications 2021 Group has clarified that there is no expectation that schools or colleges hold prelims. It is for schools and colleges to decide on the best assessment approaches, and timings, for gathering learner evidence. This approach provides local flexibility to plan assessments against local circumstances in these unique times.
I am aware that some schools and colleges will already have held prelims, and these may contribute towards evidence and teachers’ and lecturers’ determination of the provisional results for National Qualifications courses. However, while results from prelims which have been held or which are planned can contribute to learner evidence, schools and colleges will be drawing on a wider range of evidence in arriving at the provisional results for individual learners this year. These results will be subject to local and national quality assurance. These provisional results are to be submitted to the Scottish Qualifications Authority by the later date of 18 June 2021.
The priority for schools and colleges at this time should be to maximise learning and teaching, and consolidate learning, with final assessments of learner attainment to inform the provisional results taking place later in the 2020-21 session.
- Asked by: Jamie Greene, MSP for West Scotland, Scottish Conservative and Unionist Party
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Date lodged: Wednesday, 03 February 2021
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Current Status:
Answered by Michael Russell on 9 February 2021
To ask the Scottish Government how it plans to distribute the proposed £26.5 million allocated for International and European Relations in the draft Budget 2021-22, including the proposed increase of £2.1 million from last year’s respective funding.
Answer
The International and European Relations draft budget of £26.5m for 2021-22 will be spent pursuing our engagement at home and internationally to enhance Scotland's reputation and increase sustainable economic growth, and promote Scotland as a great place to live, visit, work and do business. A breakdown of how this has been distributed has been published on the Scottish Parliament website https://beta.parliament.scot/chamber-and-committees
/research-prepared-for-parliament/financial-scrutiny
The increase of £2.1m from the 2020-21 budget is due to the Migration Strategy budget moving from the Finance Portfolio into the Constitution Europe & External Affairs Portfolio.
- Asked by: Jamie Greene, MSP for West Scotland, Scottish Conservative and Unionist Party
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Date lodged: Friday, 29 January 2021
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Current Status:
Answered by John Swinney on 8 February 2021
To ask the Scottish Government whether it will provide an update on the implementation of the ‘1+2 approach’ to language learning in schools.
Answer
The Scottish Government provides a bi-annual report to the Culture, Tourism, Europe and External Affairs Committee on progress with the 1+2 approach. Our most recent report to the committee was considered on 14 January: https://www.parliament.scot/S5_European/Meeting%20Papers/20210114_MeetingPapers.pdf .
We continue to prioritise support for the 1+2 approach, with £35.6 m invested since 2013 to enable local authorities to implement it in schools. This includes £2.4 m announced on 1 February to support consolidation of progress so far.
We also provide over £1 m each year to partners to support professional learning for teachers, pedagogy and leadership, immersion courses, and the provision of language assistants.
Our 2019 survey of local authorities on 1+2 implementation showed good progress with delivering the entitlement to learning a first additional language. A report is available at: https://www.gov.scot/publications/12-languages-implementation-findings-2019-local-authority-survey/ .
To avoid adding to schools’ workload during the pandemic, a survey was not distributed in 2020. Officials are considering how and when a new survey should be issued.
- Asked by: Jamie Greene, MSP for West Scotland, Scottish Conservative and Unionist Party
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Date lodged: Wednesday, 03 February 2021
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Current Status:
Answered by John Swinney on 8 February 2021
To ask the Scottish Government whether it will end multi-level teaching in schools.
Answer
Local authorities and schools have responsibility for delivering a curriculum that meets the needs of learners in their areas and running multi-level course classes is one approach that schools use to increase the amount of choice available to their pupils.
In 2019, the Scottish Government commissioned an Independent Review of Scotland’s Curriculum for Excellence, by the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD). This review is intended to help us better understand how the curriculum is being designed and implemented in schools and to identify areas for improvement across the country. It is due to report in June 2021 and the recommendations from that report will be vital in helping us to ensure that Scotland’s education framework continues to deliver quality learning and positive outcomes for all young people.
- Asked by: Jamie Greene, MSP for West Scotland, Scottish Conservative and Unionist Party
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Date lodged: Friday, 08 January 2021
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Current Status:
Answered by Mairi Gougeon on 2 February 2021
To ask the Scottish Government what plans it has to introduce COVID-19 testing centres in North Ayrshire.
Answer
Subject to local partners’ agreement, the Scottish Government plans establish increased symptomatic mobile testing unit coverage and further asymptomatic testing coverage across Ayrshire.
- Asked by: Jamie Greene, MSP for West Scotland, Scottish Conservative and Unionist Party
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Date lodged: Tuesday, 12 January 2021
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Current Status:
Answered by Michael Matheson on 26 January 2021
To ask the Scottish Government whether it will clarify how the term, "five miles from the boundary of your local area", in the new lockdown rules is legally defined, and whether a person is only allowed to travel to the boundary of their local area, or is allowed to travel five miles from the boundary of their local area into an adjacent area.
Answer
The legal requirements that apply to travel and, in Level 4 areas, to leaving one’s home without a reasonable excuse are set out in the Health Protection (Coronavirus) (Restrictions and Requirements) (Local Levels) (Scotland) Regulations 2020. They are designed to allow, amongst other things, local outdoor exercise by permitting that to start and finish at a place in the local authority area in which a person lives or is within 5 miles of that area. Guidance stresses that people should stay as close to home as possible including by travelling no further than they need to reach to a safe, non-crowded place to exercise in a socially distanced way.
- Asked by: Jamie Greene, MSP for West Scotland, Scottish Conservative and Unionist Party
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Date lodged: Monday, 11 January 2021
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Current Status:
Answered by Mairi Gougeon on 25 January 2021
To ask the Scottish Government how many international travellers have been tested for COVID-19 on arrival at airports in each month since March 2020, also broken down by how many tests were (a) positive, (b) negative and (c) inconclusive.
Answer
From 18 January all people arriving in Scotland from outside the Common Travel Area (UK, Republic of Ireland, the Channel Islands and the Isle of Man) have to self-isolate for 10 full days. They must also have a valid negative COVID-19 test result, taken no more than three days before the scheduled time of departure.
During the contact tracing process, information is collected on whether a positive case has travelled outside of Scotland. This figures set out confirmed cases who, when interviewed, reported that they had travelled outside Scotland.
As published by PHS in the weekly Covid Statistical briefing:
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Week Commencing | 05-Oct | 12-Oct | 19-Oct | 26-Oct | 02-Nov | 09-Nov | 16-Nov |
Cases reporting travel outside Scotland | 362 | 362 | 348 | 353 | 207 | 133 | 107 |
| 23-Nov | 30-Nov | 07-Dec | 14-Dec | 21-Dec | 28-Dec | 04-Jan |
| 91 | 49 | 69 | 111 | 218 | 228 | 183 |
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Week Commencing | 05-Oct | 12-Oct | 19-Oct | 26-Oct | 02-Nov | 09-Nov | 16-Nov |
Cases reporting travel beyond UK | 93 | 106 | 106 | 85 | 88 | 67 | 69 |
| 23-Nov | 30-Nov | 07-Dec | 14-Dec | 21-Dec | 28-Dec | 04-Jan |
| 66 | 28 | 30 | 26 | 53 | 72 | 84 |
This information is collected on the contact tracing interview and is where outside of Scotland travel information is recorded. Please note Public Health Scotland are aware of an undercount for those travelled outside Scotland. Public Health Scotland is working closely with contact tracing leads to improve this recording.
This information is only available from September 2020. The latest information on cases which have reported international travel can be found here: https://beta.isdscotland.org/find-publications-and-data/population-health/covid-19/covid-19-statistical-report/ .