Skip to main content
Loading…

Search

There are 60,915 results relating to "recess dates"

Order by |

Refine your search

Select from the available filters to refine your search


Available filters:

Can't find what you're looking for?

If you're having trouble finding the information you want, please contact [email protected].

Official Report Meeting date: 27 September 2022

Local Government, Housing and Planning Committee 27 September 2022

We will write to the cabinet secretary with our findings and recommendations on the affordable housing supply programme after the October recess and in advance of the budget’s publication.
Official Report Meeting date: 31 March 2022

Meeting of the Parliament (Hybrid) 31 March 2022

The stigma of that experience still lurks in the recesses of my mind. Thinking back to when I used my income support to buy my baby son’s babygrows from charity shops, I was not thinking about the circular economy nor about reducing, reusing and recycling.
Official Report Meeting date: 7 September 2021

Meeting of the Parliament (Hybrid) 07 September 2021

Having visited Na h-Eileanan an Iar over the recess, I learned about the richness of island life and the challenges that islanders face.
Official Report Meeting date: 17 June 2021

Meeting of the Parliament (Hybrid) 17 June 2021

Motion, as amended, agreed to, That the Parliament supports the national mission to tackle drug-related deaths and harms; welcomes proposals for the introduction of guidance to increase the accessibility of residential rehabilitation programmes; notes that increased funding is supporting enhancements to ensure that resources reach frontline treatment, rehabilitation and recovery services in areas of acute demand; believes that the new Medication-Assisted Treatment Standards are fundamental to ensuring that everyone who requires support can get access to the drug treatment or support option that they seek; further believes that actions on the standards, such as the implementation of same-day prescribing and increasing the range of treatment options available across the country, will help save lives; supports calls for an urgent four-nations summit to consider reform of the 50-year-old Misuse of Drugs Act 1971 to fully align the law with a public health response, so that all options for tackling the harm caused by drugs can be deployed, if supported by the Scottish Parliament; considers that the resources of the police and justice system should be focused on supporting lifesaving, public health interventions and believes that all options within the existing legal framework should be explored to support the delivery of safe consumption facilities; notes that delivering the new Medication-Assisted Treatment Standards will require significant service reform; believes that, given the scale of the drugs deaths crisis in Scotland, there must be public accountability and scrutiny over implementation of the standards; calls on the Scottish Government to report on a six-monthly basis to the Parliament on the progress of implementation and service improvement; considers that safe consumption rooms are an important public health measure that could reduce drug deaths and deliver wider benefits to communities, as they have done elsewhere; condemns the UK Government’s refusal to support trials in Scotland and urges it to reconsider; calls on the Scottish Government to investigate, as a matter of urgency, what options it has to establish legal and safe consumption rooms within the existing legal framework; notes the recommendation made by Sir Harry Burns to routinely record adverse childhood experiences, and believes that all aspects of recovery and treatment should be trauma-informed; understands that guidance has previously been issued by the Lord Advocate to police officers relating to the use of recorded police warnings in certain cases of minor offending; would support a new Lord Advocate reviewing this guidance and examining how it can be strengthened, in light of the resolution of the Parliament on motion S5M-24396 on 18 March 2021 and the support expressed for working towards diverting people caught in possession of drugs for personal use into treatment, and believes that a parliamentary statement after the summer recess...
Official Report Meeting date: 26 May 2021

Meeting of the Parliament (Hybrid) 26 May 2021

As is customary, we will set out—on, I think, the first sitting day after the summer recess, subject to the agreement of the Parliamentary Bureau—our legislative programme for the next year in our programme for government.
Official Report Meeting date: 7 May 2014

Finance Committee 07 May 2014

I think that there ought to be some tax available to the UK Government that is progressive, not regressive. In this recession, I would not have put up VAT; I would have put something extra on income tax, because that would have hit the poorer people less hard.
Official Report Meeting date: 11 March 2015

Rural Affairs, Climate Change and Environment Committee 11 March 2015

The opportunity that we will have to debate the subject over the next two or three weeks or over the recess is important. I ask the minister to say how she will take matters forward.
Official Report Meeting date: 24 April 2019

Finance and Constitution Committee 24 April 2019

The private sector suffered more at the start of the recession, but the subsequent pay restraint in the public sector has narrowed that gap.
Official Report Meeting date: 2 April 2019

Meeting of the Parliament 02 April 2019

The cabinet secretary’s response at stage 1 hints at her wanting a stage 2 debate before the summer recess. That smacks of not taking action.
Official Report Meeting date: 9 May 2012

Meeting of the Parliament 09 May 2012

Mr Macintosh referred to the fact that the UK economy has re-entered recession. It is evident that the UK Government’s approach has contributed to that.

Can't find what you're looking for?

If you're having trouble finding the information you want, please contact [email protected].