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All Official Reports of meetings in the Debating Chamber of the Scottish Parliament.
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Displaying 1685 contributions
Local Government, Housing and Planning Committee
Meeting date: 22 March 2022
Miles Briggs
How often have those powers been used by the regulator?
Local Government, Housing and Planning Committee
Meeting date: 22 March 2022
Miles Briggs
What were the circumstances of those cases? I understand that you may not have the detail of that to hand, in which case you could write to us.
Local Government, Housing and Planning Committee
Meeting date: 22 March 2022
Miles Briggs
Thank you. That was helpful.
How do you use the charter to drive performance? Probably every MSP is used to hearing complaints about repairs and the very poor living conditions that people are sometimes in. As an MSP, I have had cases in which mould in people’s homes has not been fixed for years, so I have gone to the council to fight to have that rectified. How can the charter drive performance? Are there examples of interventions in which the charter has led you to take up such issues?
Social Justice and Social Security Committee
Meeting date: 17 March 2022
Miles Briggs
We had a good run in this committee with regard to gremlins in the system.
Good morning, minister and officials. The £2.7 million for the uprating was found from flexibility in the budget, but as the cost of living crisis moves forward, have you identified any other money from flexibilities that you might come back to the committee on?
Social Justice and Social Security Committee
Meeting date: 17 March 2022
Miles Briggs
The key point that I am trying to get at is whether the uprating addresses potential unrealised additional take-up or unmet need. What are your projections for that? Most people would expect more people to seek some of those social security benefits. Where is that spend being targeted? If additional people come forward, has flexibility been lost?
Social Justice and Social Security Committee
Meeting date: 17 March 2022
Miles Briggs
Good morning, panel. Thank you for joining us. I want to ask you to develop some of the points that my colleague Natalie Don was pursuing.
When Dame Susan Rice from the Scottish Fiscal Commission came to the committee, she outlined in quite stark terms the fact that the funding gap is set to reach
“three quarters of a billion pounds by 2024-25”.
That is very much on the horizon now, in relation to budgeting. Where is the financial management within the Scottish Government around that? Where is that future projection being costed into proposals? Each budget year, we are voting on that and seeing increasing levels going towards social security. However, that is a huge amount of money and, as Dame Susan Rice says, that
“money must be found from elsewhere in the Scottish budget.”—[Official Report, Social Justice and Social Security Committee, 23 December 2021; c 3.]
Are you aware of any work that is being done on how that will be financially managed in the future?
Social Justice and Social Security Committee
Meeting date: 17 March 2022
Miles Briggs
Thank you.
Social Justice and Social Security Committee
Meeting date: 17 March 2022
Miles Briggs
Before I ask David Phillips to respond, I will expand the question a little bit. From your experience, which budget lines are likely to be targeted? The budget has cut £120 million from local government. Is the national health service budget, which has increased above inflation every year since the Parliament was established, one that we might look to? Where do you think ministers will look to find the money?
Social Justice and Social Security Committee
Meeting date: 17 March 2022
Miles Briggs
I appreciate that. I do not know whether you can commit to this, but it would be useful to the committee’s financial scrutiny to be able to see some of the potential flexibility within budgets. I do not know whether you had the chance to see the evidence session that we just had, but there is a lot of work to be done on a projected future spend that approaches £750 million. If we could have sight of more information on that, it would be helpful for the work that we are trying to do.
Social Justice and Social Security Committee
Meeting date: 17 March 2022
Miles Briggs
I have one quick question, because colleagues’ questions have covered a lot. It is about the work that we have to do with the minister in relation to the uprating of benefits, which we will come to under the next agenda item.
The Scottish Government has announced that six social security benefits will be uprated by 6 per cent from 1 April. Given the cost of living pressures, if that is the direction of travel in relation to uprating, what sort of cost does that present for the basket of Scottish social security benefits and what additional pressures will there be in the coming years?