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Questions and Answers Date answered: 28 March 2019

S5W-21975

The National Ophthalmology Workstream developed in 2017 identifies mechanisms to determine that service capacity is adequate to meet clinical need.
Questions and Answers Date answered: 5 December 2018

S5W-20100

To ask the Scottish Government what its response is to the comment in the report by the Auditor General, The 2017/18 audit of the Scottish Police Authority, that "The lack of progress in developing the workforce, estates and ICT strategies will constrain the Scottish Police Authority’s ability to achieve long-term f...
Questions and Answers Date answered: 13 August 2018

S5W-17729

Growing, widening and enhancing apprenticeships is at the heart of Scotland’s Youth Employment Strategy, Developing the Young Workforce (2015). We have a number of Key Performance Indicators to measure progress including reducing the proportion of Modern Apprenticeship frameworks where the gender balance is 75:25 (or...
Official Report Meeting date: 29 January 2025

Meeting of the Parliament 29 January 2025

As I said in my original answer, the funding allocated to the Scottish Prison Service will be used to progress the construction of HMP Highland and HMP Glasgow.
Last updated: 5 October 2022

EUFunds_ConvenerToHoC BillCttee_5Oct22

As such, we have undertaken scrutiny of the replacements for EU funding including the UK Shared Prosperity Fund and the Levelling Up Fund.
Last updated: 1 May 2025

BB20250502

S6W-37166 Stephen Kerr: To ask the Scottish Government whether it has issued any guidance or expectations to university governing bodies regarding executive pay restraint during periods of public funding pressure, in the last five years.
Questions and Answers Date answered: 17 April 2015

S4W-25047

The Scottish Government works in partnership with the Scottish Ambulance Service and has recently agreed its Local Delivery Plan for 2015-16 which sets out how services be delivered in that year including working with NHS boards against the strategic priorities identified in Everyone Matters: 2020 Workforce Vision. This administration has provided the Scottish Ambulance Service with the highest level of resource funding the service has ever had with a resource budget of £212.1 million and £10.1 million capital funding in 2015-16.
Official Report Meeting date: 28 January 2025

Meeting of the Parliament 28 January 2025

Motion, as amended, agreed to, That the Parliament welcomes the investment in Scotland’s public services through the draft Scottish Budget 2025-26; notes that £21.7 billion for health and social care investment and over £15 billion in funding for local authorities is being provided; calls on the UK Government to fully fund the additional cost of its increase in employer national insurance contributions, noting the significant impacts on public services, including social care, if it does not fund it in full; further calls on the UK Government to fully fund the increase in employer national insurance contributions in commissioned services and arm’s-length external organisations; notes the importance of the public service reform programme to drive future financial sustainability; further notes the success of the four-day week pilot trialled by South of Scotland Enterprise; calls on the Scottish Government to expand the four-day working week within the public sector workforce; celebrates the key role that the Scottish public service workforce plays in delivering these services across Scotland; notes that Scottish Liberal Democrat priorities have been reflected in the first draft of the Budget through the inclusion of the reinstatement of a winter heating payment for pensioners, extra funding for social care, additional funding for local healthcare to make it easier to see a GP or NHS dentist, funding for new specialist support across the country for people with long COVID, chronic fatigue syndrome and other similar conditions, the right for family carers to earn more without having support withdrawn, business rates relief for the hospitality sector, funding to build more affordable homes, enhanced support for local authorities operating ferry services, and the resumption of the work required to replace the Belford Hospital in NHS Highland and the Princess Alexandra Eye Pavilion in NHS Lothian; calls for further investment in drug and neonatal services, hospices, support for the young people with complex and additional needs attending Corseford College, and colleges, so that they can deliver the skills that the economy and public services need, and further calls for local authorities to receive a fair share of the money for additional employer national insurance contributions when it is received by the Scottish Government.
Official Report Meeting date: 28 January 2025

Meeting of the Parliament 28 January 2025

Motion, as amended, agreed to, That the Parliament welcomes the investment in Scotland’s public services through the draft Scottish Budget 2025-26; notes that £21.7 billion for health and social care investment and over £15 billion in funding for local authorities is being provided; calls on the UK Government to fully fund the additional cost of its increase in employer national insurance contributions, noting the significant impacts on public services, including social care, if it does not fund it in full; further calls on the UK Government to fully fund the increase in employer national insurance contributions in commissioned services and arm’s-length external organisations; notes the importance of the public service reform programme to drive future financial sustainability; further notes the success of the four-day week pilot trialled by South of Scotland Enterprise; calls on the Scottish Government to expand the four-day working week within the public sector workforce; celebrates the key role that the Scottish public service workforce plays in delivering these services across Scotland; notes that Scottish Liberal Democrat priorities have been reflected in the first draft of the Budget through the inclusion of the reinstatement of a winter heating payment for pensioners, extra funding for social care, additional funding for local healthcare to make it easier to see a GP or NHS dentist, funding for new specialist support across the country for people with long COVID, chronic fatigue syndrome and other similar conditions, the right for family carers to earn more without having support withdrawn, business rates relief for the hospitality sector, funding to build more affordable homes, enhanced support for local authorities operating ferry services, and the resumption of the work required to replace the Belford Hospital in NHS Highland and the Princess Alexandra Eye Pavilion in NHS Lothian; calls for further investment in drug and neonatal services, hospices, support for the young people with complex and additional needs attending Corseford College, and colleges, so that they can deliver the skills that the economy and public services need, and further calls for local authorities to receive a fair share of the money for additional employer national insurance contributions when it is received by the Scottish Government.
Official Report Meeting date: 25 January 2024

Meeting of the Parliament 25 January 2024

Further to that, the Scottish Government is investing more than £125 million in the Aberdeen city region deal, and it further supports businesses in the region through initiatives such as the energy transition fund and the just transition fund. Last week, Aberdeen received the devastating news that Marks and Spencer ...

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