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Last updated: 7 March 2023

BB20170911

Supported by: Colin Beattie*, Emma Harper*, Stewart Stevenson* *S5M-07598 Iain Gray: Recharge That the Parliament welcomes BBC Children in Need s award — ’ of £97,000 funding to the Tranent-based youth charity, Recharge; understands that the award will pay staff costs for three years to help ensure that it can continue to offer its services, which are aimed at improving the confidence and wellbeing of young people in the area to allow them to offer positive community engagement; notes that, since 2005, it has helped to empower well over 1,500 young people, by encouraging them to have their say and get...
Last updated: 7 March 2023

BB20190918

S5W-25382 Colin Smyth: To ask the Scottish Government how its respiratory care action plan will support the early diagnosis of idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis to help ensure that patients get early access to high resolution CT scanning.
Last updated: 7 March 2023

BB20160921

S5W-02959 Alison Johnstone: To ask the Scottish Government what consideration it has given to using its new benefit top-up powers to compensate recipients of the Employment Support Allowance work related activity component, who will lose £30 a week from April 2017.
Last updated: 14 February 2023

BB20220329

Jamie Greene: To ask the First Minister what immediate safeguarding measures will be in place to ensure that arrivals from Ukraine are protected from organised criminal activity, human trafficking and exploitation.
Last updated: 14 February 2023

BB20221223

Supported by: Karen Adam*, Stuart McMillan*, Jeremy Balfour*, Miles Briggs*, Bill Kidd*, David Torrance*, Alexander Burnett* Carol Mochan: Urgent Inquiry into Royal Mail Management—That the Parliament *S6M-07261 notes that Royal Mail staff’s planned Christmas strike action going ahead after the company reportedly ignored what it considers a peace offer from workers’ representatives to get Christmas back on track and tackle the postal backlog; considers that the Communication Workers’ Union (CWU) made a clear offer which, it understands, would give staff a back-dated pay deal of 9% over 18 months, a long-term job security commitment from Royal Mail bosses, a pause on what it sees as the ongoing attacks on union representatives and members, and a period of calm for negotiations on the future direction of the company; believes that the CWU has raised concerns of gross mismanagement by the company for over 18 months; is concerned that a business which, it understands, made record profits of £758 million announced in May 2022 would be losing allegedly more than £1 million per day just a few months later; remembers that postal workers were, in its view, rightly praised as key workers that kept the country and the company going, during the COVID-19 pandemic, and rejects what it sees as Royal Mail’s tactics of proposing to force through mass job losses, including compulsory redundancies, as part of an asset-stripping business plan to justify turning it into just another gig-economy employer; considers that customers and businesses in Scotland, particularly in rural communities, rely heavily on the Universal Service Obligation (USO); calls on the UK Secretary of State for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy to urgently deliver an inquiry into what it sees as the mismanagement at Royal Mail, with consideration to how any changes to the USO or the service itself would affect communities in Scotland, and hopes that a united Scotland-wide response rejects and resists any proposals to reduce services and the legal obligations to provide the USO.
Last updated: 22 December 2022

BB20221223

Supported by: Karen Adam*, Stuart McMillan*, Jeremy Balfour*, Miles Briggs*, Bill Kidd*, David Torrance*, Alexander Burnett* Carol Mochan: Urgent Inquiry into Royal Mail Management—That the Parliament *S6M-07261 notes that Royal Mail staff’s planned Christmas strike action going ahead after the company reportedly ignored what it considers a peace offer from workers’ representatives to get Christmas back on track and tackle the postal backlog; considers that the Communication Workers’ Union (CWU) made a clear offer which, it understands, would give staff a back-dated pay deal of 9% over 18 months, a long-term job security commitment from Royal Mail bosses, a pause on what it sees as the ongoing attacks on union representatives and members, and a period of calm for negotiations on the future direction of the company; believes that the CWU has raised concerns of gross mismanagement by the company for over 18 months; is concerned that a business which, it understands, made record profits of £758 million announced in May 2022 would be losing allegedly more than £1 million per day just a few months later; remembers that postal workers were, in its view, rightly praised as key workers that kept the country and the company going, during the COVID-19 pandemic, and rejects what it sees as Royal Mail’s tactics of proposing to force through mass job losses, including compulsory redundancies, as part of an asset-stripping business plan to justify turning it into just another gig-economy employer; considers that customers and businesses in Scotland, particularly in rural communities, rely heavily on the Universal Service Obligation (USO); calls on the UK Secretary of State for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy to urgently deliver an inquiry into what it sees as the mismanagement at Royal Mail, with consideration to how any changes to the USO or the service itself would affect communities in Scotland, and hopes that a united Scotland-wide response rejects and resists any proposals to reduce services and the legal obligations to provide the USO.
Last updated: 26 May 2022

Modern Law Review 2021 Eckes The EUUK Trade and Cooperation Agreement Exceptional Circumstances

We agree and think that using Article 217 TFEU is not a ‘get-out-of-jail’ card in the sense that its use would make analysing the extent of EU competences unnecessary.
Last updated: 29 March 2022

BB20220329

Jamie Greene: To ask the First Minister what immediate safeguarding measures will be in place to ensure that arrivals from Ukraine are protected from organised criminal activity, human trafficking and exploitation.
Official Report Meeting date: 11 March 2026

Meeting of the Parliament 11 March 2026 [Draft]

I absolutely accept that point. People could still pay to get on a bus, and I raised that at the first round-table discussion that we had.
Official Report Meeting date: 26 March 2024

Meeting of the Parliament 26 March 2024

Children who need that extra hit, the higher strength, a particular flavour or a particular colour are going to get their hands on a vape, even if that means shoplifting.

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