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.
The policy intention of the 2016 Act was to encourage the use of apologies and a change in social and cultural attitudes towards apologising.1Policy Memorandum for the Apologies (Scotland) Bill. (2015, March 3). Retrieved from <a href="http://www.parliament.scot/S4_Bills/Apologies%20(Scotland)%20Bill/b60s4-introd-pm.pdf" target="_blank">http://www.par...
Annexe B: Letter from the Scottish Government
Dear Clare
Thank you for your letter of 2 March 2017 and for sight of draft Standing Order rule changes which will allow Parliamentary processes to take account of new super-majority requirements in relation to certain protected subject-matter, once relevant provision in the Scotland Act 2016 is brought into fo...
We need to bear in mind the reduction in the number of support staff that has already taken place; 250 such staff have gone between March and November this year. If 190 police officers can go to bring us down to the 1,000, are we talking about 400 or 500 support staff?
Let us look at the timescale: the bill will be approved towards the end of the year, the contracts will go out to tender a few months after that, and they will be signed in March or April 2011. Let me see, what am I doing in March and April 2011?
There is total consistency.Beyond that, we have a comprehensive programme around our 10 energy pledges, which were published in March; a progress report is due soon.
There does not seem to be a clear explanation about why they were provided with or had access to information only on 13 March 2009. You could come back to the committee on that.
I quote again from his words of 18 March 1968. He said:"Gross national product does not allow for the health of our children, the quality of their education, or the joy of their play.
We accept, however, the concept of prioritising projects, as set out in the Lib Dem amendment, although that is a little ironic. In March 2007, Tavish Scott was asked to publish a list, in priority order, of the then Government's transport projects.