- Asked by: Margaret Jamieson, MSP for Kilmarnock and Loudoun, Scottish Labour
-
Date lodged: Monday, 03 December 2001
-
Current Status:
Answered by Margaret Curran on 9 January 2002
To ask the Scottish Executive what initiatives it is undertaking in order to enhance capacity-building and self-sufficiency in rural communities in Ayrshire and improve social inclusion in such communities.
Answer
The Executive has a range of activities, over and above local initiatives by its partners, to address social injustice wherever it occurs in Scotland. In Ayrshire there are four Social Inclusion Partnerships (SIP), with the East Ayrshire Coalfields Area SIP in particular covering rural parts of the area. The SIP in Girvan also does outreach work to its surrounding rural communities and in North Ayrshire the SIP is moving on to take a more strategic look at exclusion across the area. Each partnership receives £60,000 from the Executive specifically for supporting community involvement and to build capacity and confidence in these excluded communities. We also have Kickstart, a programme to enhance the uptake of funding in our disadvantaged areas, by helping communities to help themselves.In addition, we have provided the Coalfields Regeneration Trust with £4.5 million over the last three years to support local activities in local coalfield communities, including those in Ayrshire. Communities Scotland is promoting and supporting a wider role for Registered Social Landlords, both in urban and in rural areas, through the provision of funding, information, advice and guidance.Scottish Rural Partnership Fund (SRPF), which is operated by an annual biding process, offers grant aid to rural communities to build community capacity and help communities to find local solutions to local problems. The closing date for applications to the 2002-03 round was 12 October 2001 and the bids received are currently being assessed. These include seven bids from the North, South and East Ayrshire areas combined. An announcement regarding successful projects will be made early in the New Year.
- Asked by: Margaret Jamieson, MSP for Kilmarnock and Loudoun, Scottish Labour
-
Date lodged: Monday, 03 December 2001
-
Current Status:
Answered by Margaret Curran on 9 January 2002
To ask the Scottish Executive whether it has conducted any research into links between domestic violence, child abuse and animal abuse.
Answer
No. Some relevant research has, however, been carried out in the USA and, to a lesser extent, in the UK.
- Asked by: Margaret Jamieson, MSP for Kilmarnock and Loudoun, Scottish Labour
-
Date lodged: Thursday, 06 December 2001
-
Current Status:
Answered by Malcolm Chisholm on 3 January 2002
To ask the Scottish Executive what procedures are in place to measure compliance by NHS Trusts in the labelling of medicinal products and associated package leaflets as required by Council Directive 92/27/EEC.
Answer
Requirements for the provision of drug information leaflets to patients are reserved matters which come under the remit of the Medicines Control Agency. Directive 92/27/EEC was incorporated into UK law by the Medicines (Marketing Authorisations etc) Regulations 1994 and the Scottish Executive supports its aim of ensuring that patients receive full and useful information. There is no formal procedure in place to measure compliance with these requirements in the NHS. Pharmacists are expected to comply with the requirements and standards laid down by their professional body, the Royal Pharmaceutical Society of Great Britain.
- Asked by: Margaret Jamieson, MSP for Kilmarnock and Loudoun, Scottish Labour
-
Date lodged: Monday, 03 December 2001
-
Current Status:
Answered by Margaret Curran on 17 December 2001
To ask the Scottish Executive whether it plans to take any particular measures in respect of aggressive or violent adults who abuse both their families and their animals.
Answer
There are currently no plans for measures in this area.
- Asked by: Margaret Jamieson, MSP for Kilmarnock and Loudoun, Scottish Labour
-
Date lodged: Monday, 03 December 2001
-
Current Status:
Answered by Jim Wallace on 17 December 2001
To ask the Scottish Executive how many people (a) in total and (b) in each local authority area were arrested in the Strathclyde police force area in each of the last three years for contravening local byelaws banning drinking in public places.
Answer
Information on the number of people arrested for contravening byelaws banning drinking in designated places is not centrally collected. The available information on the numbers of such offences recorded by the police is given in the table. In general, an offence will be recorded for each person arrested.Offences recorded by the police for contravening byelaws prohibiting the consumption of alcohol in designated places, 1998 to 2000
Area | 1998 | 1999 | 2000 |
Strathclyde police force area | 9,006 | 7,534 | 9,748 |
Argyll & Bute Council | 104 | 92 | 191 |
East Ayrshire Council | 273 | 266 | 207 |
East Dunbartonshire Council | 162 | 115 | 227 |
East Renfrewshire Council | 114 | 46 | 156 |
Glasgow City Council | 3,818 | 3,355 | 5,359 |
Inverclyde Council | 590 | 538 | 256 |
North Ayrshire Council | 343 | 264 | 182 |
North Lanarkshire Council | 1,622 | 916 | 947 |
Renfrewshire Council | 381 | 403 | 319 |
South Ayrshire Council1 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
South Lanarkshire Council | 1,388 | 1,387 | 1,737 |
West Dunbartonshire Council | 211 | 152 | 167 |
Note:1. South Ayrshire Council has not introduced such byelaws.
- Asked by: Margaret Jamieson, MSP for Kilmarnock and Loudoun, Scottish Labour
-
Date lodged: Monday, 03 December 2001
-
Current Status:
Answered by Colin Boyd on 17 December 2001
To ask the Scottish Executive, in the light of the outcome of the recent criminal proceedings against Andrew Aspinall, what measures it plans to take to avoid any repetition of the circumstances that led to this outcome in future cases involving abused young people.
Answer
I have now received a report from the Procurator Fiscal at Linlithgow into the circumstances of this case. Having considered this report I have decided to refer the case to the High Court of Justiciary in terms of section 123 of the Criminal Procedure (Scotland) Act 1995. This will enable the points of law raised by the case to be addressed by the High Court.
- Asked by: Margaret Jamieson, MSP for Kilmarnock and Loudoun, Scottish Labour
-
Date lodged: Monday, 03 December 2001
-
Current Status:
Answered by Ross Finnie on 17 December 2001
To ask the Scottish Executive whether it will be carrying out any random foot-and-mouth disease testing on sheep flocks over the winter period in order to protect against any re-emergence of the disease.
Answer
We have conducted extensive testing for foot-and-mouth disease of sheep flocks in all parts of Scotland, concentrating on Dumfries and Galloway and the Scottish Borders. All tests were negative and all of Scotland has been declared foot-and-mouth disease free. The current veterinary advice is that further testing in Scotland is not considered necessary.
- Asked by: Margaret Jamieson, MSP for Kilmarnock and Loudoun, Scottish Labour
-
Date lodged: Monday, 03 December 2001
-
Current Status:
Answered by Ross Finnie on 17 December 2001
To ask the Scottish Executive which organisations have received funding for animal welfare purposes over the last three years, how much such funding each organisation received and how the funding was spent in each case.
Answer
The Executive has not provided funding to organisations for animal welfare purposes.
- Asked by: Margaret Jamieson, MSP for Kilmarnock and Loudoun, Scottish Labour
-
Date lodged: Monday, 03 December 2001
-
Current Status:
Answered by Jim Wallace on 17 December 2001
To ask the Scottish Executive how many people arrested in each local authority area in the Strathclyde police force area for contravening local byelaws banning drinking in public places had previously been arrested for the same offence.
Answer
The information requested is not held centrally.
- Asked by: Margaret Jamieson, MSP for Kilmarnock and Loudoun, Scottish Labour
-
Date lodged: Monday, 03 December 2001
-
Current Status:
Answered by Ross Finnie on 17 December 2001
To ask the Scottish Executive what steps it is taking to maintain the status of small farms in Ayrshire as sustainable businesses.
Answer
Farms in Ayrshire, as elsewhere in Scotland, benefit from public support through a wide range of schemes funded by the Scottish Executive and the European Commission. The Farm Business Development Scheme, for example, supports farmers with the development of additional income generating opportunities so strengthening the sustainability of the farming business. It is, of course, for each individual business to decide how to maximise their potential for prosperity. The Forward Strategy for Scottish Agriculture, published in July this year, set out a series of actions through which the farming industry could build a financially sustainable future, and the action which the Scottish Executive would take to support this.