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.
Sorry. I do not think that I have followed your question. If a man is cruising up and down within a prostitution tolerance zone, he cannot be charged with what we might call in common parlance kerb-crawling.
I hope that there is no confusion about the purpose of section 1(1) and section 1(2) of conferring on the individual the individual right of access. Following very wide consultation, we wanted section 9(2) to clarify that simply conferring a right of access was not intended to confer an absolute right to conduct commercial activity.
That the Parliament agrees that the following be approved— Draft Undertaking by the Scottish Ministers with the Consent of NorthLink Orkney and Shetland Ferries Ltd.
That the Parliament agrees that the following instruments be approved— the draft Town and Country Planning (Fees and Applications and Deemed Applications) (Scotland) Amendment Regulations 2002; the draft Budget (Scotland) Act 2001 (Amendment) Order 2002; the draft Advice and Assistance (Financial Conditions) (Scotland) Regulations 2002; the draft Civil Lega...
Therefore, I am not giving a commitment to end ring fencing; I am committing myself to a substantial agenda that has never been followed in the history of local government.
In fact, as an enthusiast for the wit of Oscar Wilde, I could say that I am following his advice, that the best possible form of exercise is to talk, not walk.
As my colleague Brian Adam made clear, there was great consternation locally when folk heard—in the press the following day—about the 17 March decision on New Craig farm.
It greatly concerns me that a private landowner would erect a "No Entry" sign and show reluctance to remove it. Do you intend to follow up those cases? I most certainly do.
My knowledge of MScs is that they are a postgraduate qualification—people do a four-year degree course followed by a one-year MSc, which is usually a research degree.