The Official Report is a written record of public meetings of the Parliament and committees.
All Official Reports of meetings in the Debating Chamber of the Scottish Parliament.
All Official Reports of public meetings of committees.
Displaying 3659 contributions
Net Zero, Energy and Transport Committee
Meeting date: 25 October 2022
Mark Ruskell
Jo Green, what is your view?
Net Zero, Energy and Transport Committee
Meeting date: 25 October 2022
Mark Ruskell
Do you have any indication of when there might be more certainty?
Net Zero, Energy and Transport Committee
Meeting date: 25 October 2022
Mark Ruskell
What do you expect to be on the agenda with your counterpart organisations across the UK?
Net Zero, Energy and Transport Committee
Meeting date: 25 October 2022
Mark Ruskell
There is a lot of uncertainty. What is the ESS view on this?
Net Zero, Energy and Transport Committee
Meeting date: 25 October 2022
Mark Ruskell
Yes.
09:45Net Zero, Energy and Transport Committee
Meeting date: 25 October 2022
Mark Ruskell
I am pleased, too.
I go back to my point on accountability and openness to the public. You have consulted on your initial plan and we have heard some of the feedback from that. Can you say a little more about how you are going to maintain that openness and accountability in the future?
Constitution, Europe, External Affairs and Culture Committee
Meeting date: 6 October 2022
Mark Ruskell
We have had quite a lot of evidence from cultural organisations about the potential use of the transient visitor levy. You all present quite a stark picture, with the possibility of a quarter of cultural organisations—many of which are anchor institutions in communities—going under. What are your thoughts about the transient visitor levy? Is that being built into council planning and income projections? Is there an appetite across all Scottish councils to introduce that, or is it just for the Edinburghs?
Constitution, Europe, External Affairs and Culture Committee
Meeting date: 6 October 2022
Mark Ruskell
Should there be an expectation that, if councils are raising funds in that way, a proportion of them should go towards supporting cultural institutions, or should the use of such funds be purely at the discretion of councils?
Constitution, Europe, External Affairs and Culture Committee
Meeting date: 6 October 2022
Mark Ruskell
I was reflecting on your points about the short-life working group and the mainstreaming of cultural work across other colleagues’ departments. How transparent will that be in the forthcoming budget? Will we be able to look at the health or justice budget, say, and see a thread of cultural and wellbeing work with numbers attached to it, ideally, that might or might not add up to 1 per cent, but which, regardless of that, will actually show what impact that work will have in the forthcoming year and where the spend will work in a cross-departmental way? Is it too early to have that kind of transparency in the budget?
Constitution, Europe, External Affairs and Culture Committee
Meeting date: 6 October 2022
Mark Ruskell
I want to follow up Mr Cameron’s question and your reflection on that eternal question about short-term funding or “projectism”, as I think that it is called. It is a question that needs an answer, because I see a lot of public money being wasted due to the fact that projects have to eternally reinvent themselves. That wastes core staff time, which is spent on funding applications and trying to develop new projects on the back of those. What organisations really need is multiyear long-term funding to enable them to get to a place where they might well innovate and move into a different space. However, in the meantime, they need a space to grow into that. You mentioned the power of convening. How do you answer that question? How do you crack that issue, because it has been there for years and it is grinding the entire voluntary sector down—not just in the culture sector but in many other sectors.
I see an official nodding at that.