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Sadly, there seemed to be a clash of diaries, but we might hear from Loganair at a later date. I will be brief again. The original question was: does the bill go far enough?
Like many cultural bodies, particularly the national collections, are working in amazing buildings, many that date from the 19th century, but they are not necessarily fit for the climate crisis in which we find ourselves.
Although the legislation that established the Scottish Legal Aid Board dates back to 1986, in many ways it mirrors the legislation that went before it and the legislation that went before that, which was fundamentally about an individual solicitor-client relationship.
When the Government comes in with a legislative programme and wants a date on which to bring it forward to the Parliament, it is a really big political decision to say, “Well, actually, no.”
When even the most successful committees look at a subject, their recommendations and conclusions are often misconceived, out of date and rapidly dismissed by Government as things that are already being dealt with.
I might be slightly wrong about that date, but I looked at it before I went to the Work and Pensions Committee before Christmas, and it seems that that was the last time we had such a strategy in Scotland.
Those making the allegations could not provide dates or places in relation to anything that happened—they could not even name the people involved—and we went as far as was possible on the basis of the information that we were given.