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Official Report Meeting date: 11 August 2020

Environment, Climate Change and Land Reform Committee 11 August 2020

There is no intention to exclude issues such as birds and habitats or the creatures that live there. That is clear from the provision on how we define environmental harm.
Official Report Meeting date: 26 May 2020

Meeting of the Parliament (Hybrid) 26 May 2020

I thank the cabinet secretary for advance sight of his statement and add my thanks to the teachers, parents and young people who find themselves in the most difficult time of their academic lives. It is only right that schools do not open until it is safe for them to so for both pupils and teachers, but every day out of school is another day that is lost fr...
Official Report Meeting date: 21 May 2020

COVID-19 Committee (Virtual) 21 May 2020

In bringing forward these regulations, I am clear that allowing for the limited release of prisoners was a necessary action to protect the health of all those who live and work in our prisons at this time, and to mitigate the impact of coronavirus on our prisons overall.
Official Report Meeting date: 3 March 2020

Meeting of the Parliament 03 March 2020

Secondly, the vast majority of people who are infected with the virus will have mild symptoms, will not require hospital treatment and will be able to return to their normal lives after a week to 10 days. However, some people will experience more severe symptoms, and some of them will become very unwell.
Official Report Meeting date: 16 January 2020

Public Audit and Post-legislative Scrutiny Committee 16 January 2020

That said, it is reasonable to assume that the amount of time and energy that has been taken up in dealing with some of the problems around Gaelic culture, which are outlined in my and Deloitte’s reports, might have diverted attention from engaging with the Gaelic-speaking community in the ways in which Mr Neil has suggested, and from thinking longer term about the best approach to promoting Gaelic development around Scotland and, particularly, in the areas of the Highlands where it is so important to maintain Gaelic as a living...
Official Report Meeting date: 11 September 2019

Finance and Constitution Committee 11 September 2019

I had a letter from HMRC telling me that it assumed that I do not live in Scotland. How much do we trust the HMRC data?
Official Report Meeting date: 13 June 2019

Justice Sub-Committee on Policing 13 June 2019

I hope and believe that the process of living through those experiences will have given Police Scotland a lot of food for thought with regard to how it deals with such issues in the future.
Official Report Meeting date: 14 November 2018

Meeting of the Parliament 14 November 2018

Motion, as amended, agreed to, That the Parliament believes in a health and social care system based on human rights, where people receive care according to their need, not on their ability to pay; recognises the immediate and long-term challenges to social care delivery and is concerned about high levels of turnover in the social care sector; further recognises the commitment of social care staff to delivering high-quality care but considers there to still be a disparity between the value of social care to society and staff’s level of pay and working conditions; considers that social care workers, and the professional services that they provide, should be held in the same high regard as clinical health care; affirms the Scottish Government’s aim of shifting the balance of care from acute settings into the community but believes that this cannot be achieved without a significant increase in resources and investment in social care, primary care and mental health services over the current parliamentary session; further believes that protection of the health budget, and its investments in social care, is necessary to ensure that the NHS can be sustained long into the future; notes that, with investment from both the NHS and local authorities, almost £9 billion per year is managed by integration authorities; believes that the additional investment of £66 million in this financial year to support social care, including for delivering the real living...
Official Report Meeting date: 6 November 2018

Meeting of the Parliament 06 November 2018

Motion, as amended, agreed to, That the Parliament welcomes the UN Special Rapporteur on Extreme Poverty and Human Rights to the UK and in particular to Scotland this week as part of his visit to investigate the link between poverty and the realisation of human rights in the UK; condemns the unacceptable damage that the UK Government’s welfare reform policies are causing across Scotland, and the subsequent negative impact on poverty levels; agrees that Universal Credit is causing debt and hardship across Scotland’s communities and calls on the UK Government to immediately halt the roll-out of this; further agrees that MPs must act to halt the Universal Credit managed migration; notes the contribution of Scottish Choices, the Scottish Welfare Fund and mitigation of the so-called bedroom tax to help counter the impact of welfare reform; believes that cross-party talks should now take place to consider the extent to which the income supplement can protect people from the Conservative administration’s welfare reform, and how Scotland’s new powers will be best used to support carers, older people and disabled people; notes the conclusions of the Scottish Government’s 2018 welfare reform report, which highlights that the UK Government’s welfare cuts will lead to a £3.7 billion fall in social security spending in Scotland in 2020-21, including a £370 million reduction due to the benefit freeze; believes that these cuts are highly gendered, impacting the income of women disproportionately, and that, contrary to assurances given by the UK Government that Universal Credit would not cut incomes, some low-income families are expected to lose an average of £200 per month; further notes that the appalling two-child limit has already reduced the income of 3,800 families in Scotland and this number is set to grow year on year and will result in a £92 million cut for families by 2020-21; raises concerns that UK Government tax and welfare changes since 2010 are estimated to increase the number of children living...
Official Report Meeting date: 23 October 2018

Economy, Energy and Fair Work Committee 23 October 2018

We typically have a differential of about 10p per kilowatt hour between the wholesale value to a community generator of selling its power to the grid and the retail cost that someone—who may live nearby—will pay for that energy, because it goes off to the grid and comes back again.

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