This search includes all content on the Scottish Parliament website, except for Votes and Motions. All Official Reports (what has been said in Parliament) and Questions and Answers are available from 1999. You can refine your search by adding and removing filters.
In our research, Health, Wellbeing and the COVID-19 Pandemic, people told us that they had requested that health services visit them at home as they were shielding, frightened to use public transport or have physical accessibility requirements, but 4 were denied .
S5W-24276 Graham Simpson: To ask the Scottish Government, further to the publication of its Homelessness in Scotland: 2018 to 2019 statistics on 26 June 2019, for what reason there has been a 3% increase in homeless applications since 2017-18.
S6W-27357 Willie Rennie: To ask the Scottish Government when it will begin a clinically-led review into additional or alternative cancer waiting times standards for different types of cancer and cancer treatment, as set out in its Cancer Action Plan for Scotland 2023-26. S6W-27358 Willie Rennie: To ask the Scottish Government what progress it has made on investing up to £30 million to support cancer waiting times improvements, as set out in its Cancer Action Plan for Scotland 2023-26.
David Stewart Tuesday 8 December 2020 26 Today's Business Future Business Motions & Questions Legislation Other Gnothaichean an-diugh Gnothaichean ri teachd Gluasadan agus Ceistean Reachdas Eile Questions | Ceistean 4.
Projections indicate that an additional trial court may be required in the High Court to achieve recovery by 2026.” 103. Overall, SCTS said that, for 2025-26, its “projections indicate that an uplift of £20.8m in baseline revenue funding will be required in 2025-26”.
As food security is a major objective of government and parliament, we do not agree that replacing premium salmon grown in Scotland with imported fish from overseas would make any sense.
Residents now face evacuation, dereliction, and spiralling costs for empty homes—on top of rent payments for temporary accommodation and futile insurance premiums. In Basildon, two private homeowners affected by RAAC were compensated based on pre-RAAC property values.
Their submission identifies potential impacts which they state have not been adequately costed, including potential delays in sales and stagnation in the land market arising from Part 1 provisions, additional professional costs associated with lotting, which will be incurred by a landowner, and the valuation of resumption compensation, which “is now framed to include a proportion of the capital value of the lease […] a significant additional burden on a landlord because there will usually have been no premium...
Their submission identifies potential impacts which they state have not been adequately costed, including potential delays in sales and stagnation in the land market arising from Part 1 provisions, additional professional costs associated with lotting, which will be incurred by a landowner, and the valuation of resumption compensation, which “is now framed to include a proportion of the capital value of the lease […] a significant additional burden on a landlord because there will usually have been no premium...