Parliamentary questions can be asked by any MSP to the Scottish Government or the Scottish Parliamentary Corporate Body. The questions provide a means for MSPs to get factual and statistical information.
Urgent Questions aren't included in the Question and Answers search. There is a SPICe fact sheet listing Urgent and emergency questions.
Displaying 42651 questions Show Answers
To ask the Scottish Government what (a) baseline material input standards have been established for material recovery facilities (MRFs) and (b) improvement in output quality from MRFs has been delivered since 2016.
To ask the Scottish Government how it plans to increase the provision of community mental health support.
To ask the Scottish Government what proportion of Scotland's plastic waste is exported; what steps it is taking to reduce this, and what date it has set to end the practice.
To ask the Scottish Government how many dementia specialist appointments have been held in each year since 2007, broken down by NHS board.
To ask the Scottish Government when it first made plans for a new round of household waste compositional analysis, following the 2013-15 programme, and how (a) much money and (b) many staffing hours it allocated to this.
To ask the Scottish Government what plans it has to increase consumer awareness of heat pumps, and whether it has a strategy to roll out such a programme.
To ask the Scottish Government how many households have access to food waste collections.
To ask the Scottish Government whether it will provide an update on progress towards delivering road equivalent tariff (RET) on the Scrabster-Stromness ferry route, and what the timeframe is for implementing this.
To ask the Scottish Government when it anticipates work will commence on the Birnam to Jubilee Bridge section of the A9 to upgrade it to a dual carriageway.
To ask the Scottish Government, further to the statement by the Cabinet Secretary for Social Justice, Housing and Local Government on 23 June 2021 (Official Report, c.23), whether it will provide a breakdown of the almost £2.5 billion that the cabinet secretary said has been invested to support low-income households.