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Official Report Meeting date: 19 December 2017

Economy, Jobs and Fair Work Committee 19 December 2017

I think that we have a very competitive tax regime. On top of that, council tax in Scotland is, on average, about £400 a year less than it is in the UK, and people do not pay tuition fees or prescription charges.
Official Report Meeting date: 31 January 2013

Meeting of the Parliament 31 January 2013

Unless a musician makes it to the very top, it can be very poorly paid. Most of the Musicians Union’s 30,000 members have to do other jobs alongside music to make ends meet.
Questions and Answers Date answered: 11 December 2024

S6W-31860

This includes an award of over £110,000 to the South West Grid for Learning to deliver advice to victims of intimate image abuse and to improve awareness of sexual exploitation – or ‘Revenge Porn’ across Scotland. The Safer Scotland website was updated earlier this year to provide information, links to support and advice for victims on reporting intimate image abuse and our ParentClub website provides information on online harms including specific advice on misogynistic content.The Scottish Government has also established an internal policy group on Technology-Facilitated Violence against Women and Girls, in recognition of the cross-cutting nature of this issue.
Official Report Meeting date: 8 January 2020

Rural Economy and Connectivity Committee 08 January 2020

However, there are 60,000 cars going into Edinburgh; on top of that, I think that it was mentioned that there are 60,000 people commuting by car within Edinburgh every day.
Official Report Meeting date: 20 March 2018

Meeting of the Parliament 20 March 2018

How, then, could so many of its people die of starvation? In the late 1920s, Stalin began the process of collectivisation, forcing farmers to hand over their land to Soviet authorities.
Official Report Meeting date: 21 March 2023

Local Government, Housing and Planning Committee 21 March 2023

They are also expected to do the community planning work on top of the job that they already have.
Official Report Meeting date: 5 March 2026

Social Justice and Social Security Committee 05 March 2026 [Draft]

That can be quite difficult. There are examples on the website and we have tried to make the requirements as straightforward as possible.
Official Report Meeting date: 15 May 2025

SPCB Supported Bodies Landscape Review Committee 15 May 2025

We are actively looking at how to improve that information on our website, and we will work with the commissioners and office-holders on that.
Last updated: 2 April 2024

PB_2022_161

S6M-05834: Clare Adamson: The Future of Trading Standards in Scotland – That the Parliament notes the concerns expressed by trading standards bodies regarding the recruitment pressures facing the profession; understands that trading standards officers in local authorities advise on and enforce laws that govern how people buy, sell, rent and hire goods and services; notes warnings from the Scottish branch of the Chartered Trading Standards Institute (CTSI) over the future of what it considers to be a critical service, with, it understands, fewer than 239 enforcement staff in Scotland, little capacity to train new recruits, and more than half of the profession set to retire over the next 10 years; acknowledges the Society of Chief Officers of Trading Standards in Scotland (SCOTSS) biennial workforce survey report 2021, which highlights ongoing concerns around severely reduced staff numbers, and that recruitment pressures will have a detrimental impact on trading standards enforcement; further acknowledges what it sees as the important distinction between Trading Standards Scotland (TSS) and Local Authority Trading Standards (LATS), where LATS are local authority services responsible for enforcing the full range of trading standards legislation and TSS is a standalone, specialist team employed by COSLA, but funded directly by HM Treasury and the Department for Business, Energy, and Industrial Strategy (BEIS); considers that TSS deals with illegal money lending casework, cross-border scams, and intelligence gathering and analysis, and, although the organisations work closely, TSS is not subject to local authority control; believes that trading standards officers play an essential role in areas such as consumer protection, public safety, the economy, and the environment, by ensuring that the things that people buy are safe, are in the correct amounts, are as described, that the price displays are fair, and that consumer scams are investigated and combatted; further believes that trading standards officers played a key role during the COVID-19 pandemic, and that they will have an increasing role in the post-Brexit trading environment, both domestically and keeping pace with international import regulations, and commends the work of trading standards officers who work to keep businesses and consumers informed and protected, including in the Motherwell and Wishaw constituency.
Last updated: 2 April 2024

PB_2022_157

S6M-05834: Clare Adamson: The Future of Trading Standards in Scotland – That the Parliament notes the concerns expressed by trading standards bodies regarding the recruitment pressures facing the profession; understands that trading standards officers in local authorities advise on and enforce laws that govern how people buy, sell, rent and hire goods and services; notes warnings from the Scottish branch of the Chartered Trading Standards Institute (CTSI) over the future of what it considers to be a critical service, with, it understands, fewer than 239 enforcement staff in Scotland, little capacity to train new recruits, and more than half of the profession set to retire over the next 10 years; acknowledges the Society of Chief Officers of Trading Standards in Scotland (SCOTSS) biennial workforce survey report 2021, which highlights ongoing concerns around severely reduced staff numbers, and that recruitment pressures will have a detrimental impact on trading standards enforcement; further acknowledges what it sees as the important distinction between Trading Standards Scotland (TSS) and Local Authority Trading Standards (LATS), where LATS are local authority services responsible for enforcing the full range of trading standards legislation and TSS is a standalone, specialist team employed by COSLA, but funded directly by HM Treasury and the Department for Business, Energy, and Industrial Strategy (BEIS); considers that TSS deals with illegal money lending casework, cross-border scams, and intelligence gathering and analysis, and, although the organisations work closely, TSS is not subject to local authority control; believes that trading standards officers play an essential role in areas such as consumer protection, public safety, the economy, and the environment, by ensuring that the things that people buy are safe, are in the correct amounts, are as described, that the price displays are fair, and that consumer scams are investigated and combatted; further believes that trading standards officers played a key role during the COVID-19 pandemic, and that they will have an increasing role in the post-Brexit trading environment, both domestically and keeping pace with international import regulations, and commends the work of trading standards officers who work to keep businesses and consumers informed and protected, including in the Motherwell and Wishaw constituency.

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