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Official Report Meeting date: 6 October 2009

Public Petitions Committee, 06 Oct 2009

If we do this, we cannot do that, and if we do that, we cannot do the other. As a Parliament, we need to get our minds around provision for the disadvantaged members of our society.
Official Report Meeting date: 1 December 2010

Rural Affairs and Environment Committee 01 December 2010

Could we devise a scheme to enable a young person who genuinely wanted to get into farming to get some support?
Official Report Meeting date: 5 October 2010

Justice Committee 05 October 2010

You might want to get back into your house, but you cannot get back into your house in certain situations, if he has the legal right to stay there, so you need an order to get him out.
Questions and Answers Date answered: 4 March 2011

S3W-40004

This may include various leisure, recreation and sporting activities, including equine activities.
Questions and Answers Date answered: 29 January 2009

S3W-20043

To ask the Scottish Executive how many students would benefit from the introduction of Activity Agreements, as proposed in 16+ Learning Choices: First Step Activity and Financial Support.
Questions and Answers Date answered: 6 March 2008

S3W-10259

Various public sector organisations provide funding to support tourism activities across Scotland; many such activities (for example the marketing of Scotland as the Home of Golf by VisitScotland) while of great benefit to Fife will be of benefit to other areas.
Official Report Meeting date: 3 September 2009

Plenary, 03 Sep 2009

I can guarantee that such a proposal would not get the CBI's support, but it might get a great deal of support from many care workers, cleaners, young workers, casual workers and temporary workers.
Official Report Meeting date: 11 March 2009

Public Audit Committee, 11 Mar 2009

James Kelly tried to pin you down on what that means in terms of revenue streams. Where are you getting the money from to get to the break-even point that you want?
Official Report Meeting date: 24 April 2019

Meeting of the Parliament 24 April 2019

Motion, as amended, agreed to, That the Parliament notes the growing interest in Scotland and across the world in a Green New Deal, which is an agenda that requires the mobilisation of regulatory, fiscal and monetary powers to achieve a rapid and just transition to a carbon-neutral economy, recognising that the main fiscal and monetary policy levers are reserved to the UK Government; calls on the UK Government to increase its ambition to tackle climate change and to work with Scotland towards net-zero emissions as soon as possible; welcomes the reduction in Scotland’s greenhouse gas emissions to date and believes that a Green New Deal policy would offer a delivery vehicle for more ambitious climate targets in the next decades while creating quality jobs, achieving a sustainable economy and addressing the severe inequalities in the Scottish economy; calls on the Scottish Government to develop a Green New Deal policy for Scotland that establishes a 10-year economic and public investment strategy to promote an inclusive and sustainable economy that prioritises decarbonisation, the eradication of inequality and the restoration of Scotland’s environment in a way that supports community and employee-led actions; welcomes the work of the Just Transition Commission and the First Minister’s comments that the transition to a carbon-neutral society will be a key mission of the Scottish National Investment Bank, and calls on the Scottish Government to work with other parties to ensure that this agenda is a central part of the Scottish National Investment Bank’s core activities...
Official Report Meeting date: 15 June 2016

Meeting of the Parliament 15 June 2016

That the Parliament notes recent publications, including the EY Scottish ITEM Club, which recognises that the Scottish economy, and the oil and gas sector in particular, is facing many external challenges though will continue to grow this year, despite the impact of lower oil prices on the oil and gas sector, which has revised up its growth forecast for 2017, as the negative impact of the oil price fades and the pace of expansion picks up; acknowledges the EY Attractiveness Survey, which showed that Scotland attracted more foreign direct investment projects than any part of the UK outside London last year and has “been resilient in managing to weather the oil and gas price volatility storm whilst also being able to flourish in other sectors”; recognises the measures that the Scottish Government is taking to support workers and companies affected by falling oil prices and the wider slowdown in the global economy, including the Energy Jobs Taskforce, which has supported 8,800 individuals and over 100 employers to help those affected move forward into new employment, training or education; recognises that the Bank of Scotland oil and gas sector report provides clear evidence that there are still opportunities in the North Sea, and finds that more than half of companies believe that the UK Government must bring forward further support for exploration activity...

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