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Chamber and committees

Official Report: search what was said in Parliament

The Official Report is a written record of public meetings of the Parliament and committees.  

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Dates of parliamentary sessions
  1. Session 1: 12 May 1999 to 31 March 2003
  2. Session 2: 7 May 2003 to 2 April 2007
  3. Session 3: 9 May 2007 to 22 March 2011
  4. Session 4: 11 May 2011 to 23 March 2016
  5. Session 5: 12 May 2016 to 5 May 2021
  6. Current session: 12 May 2021 to 17 August 2025
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Displaying 2161 contributions

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Rural Affairs, Islands and Natural Environment Committee

Subordinate Legislation

Meeting date: 28 September 2022

Jim Fairlie

I would like to make a point that I have raised before. Our papers say:

“The SI will be laid in the UK Parliament on 3 October and will come into force on 1 November 2022. According to the Scottish Government, it was not possible to provide the Scottish Parliament with the required 28 days to consider the notification as the ‘policy details were not able to be finalised prior to summer recess’.”

On numerous occasions in this committee, we have talked about the fact that SIs are not laid in time, and I think that it should be noted that, with this instrument, the UK Government has done that again.

Rural Affairs, Islands and Natural Environment Committee

Subordinate Legislation

Meeting date: 28 September 2022

Jim Fairlie

Thank you.

Rural Affairs, Islands and Natural Environment Committee

Pre-Budget Scrutiny

Meeting date: 28 September 2022

Jim Fairlie

I want to go back to Diarmaid Lawlor on his point about getting projects ready. The previous panel mentioned the problem of getting contractors on an island who can do the work. If contractors are not available on an island, the project cannot move forward and therefore does not get funding. Therefore, contractors will not go to an island because the funding is not there for them to do the work. I fully support the idea of a competitive tendering process, but is there not a danger of creating a catch-22 situation by doing it in that way?

Rural Affairs, Islands and Natural Environment Committee

Pre-Budget Scrutiny

Meeting date: 28 September 2022

Jim Fairlie

I ask this question merely out of curiosity. If we had an allocation system instead of a competitive system, would that not just mean that the money would be spread across everything? People would say, “I could do a bit of this and a bit of that,” but the targets that the Government’s infrastructure proposals are looking to achieve would be missed.

Rural Affairs, Islands and Natural Environment Committee

Pre-Budget Scrutiny

Meeting date: 28 September 2022

Jim Fairlie

If you have created that pipeline, which will be there for the future, I assume that it will require multiyear funding, which you can then guarantee. Has that created its own problems for you?

COVID-19 Recovery Committee

Pre-budget Scrutiny 2023-24

Meeting date: 22 September 2022

Jim Fairlie

I will ask you one more question before I move on to the other witnesses. When Murdo Fraser asked about the increase in demand for services, you said that the increase is across all sectors. Why is that increase happening? Is it because people’s life patterns are changing? What is driving the increase in demand for your services?

COVID-19 Recovery Committee

Pre-budget Scrutiny 2023-24

Meeting date: 22 September 2022

Jim Fairlie

I welcome the witnesses to the meeting.

I have come into politics very late, and I find some of the budget talks and discussions quite confusing. If I was running my own business, I would consider my priorities and say, “Right, we need to spend some money there, because that is where we have a problem right now.” Politically, I can see why that is incredibly difficult for the Government, because everybody is saying, “That’s my priority now.” I struggle to get my head around it.

I assume that all the strategies that Alex Rowley talked about are produced because we need transparency, and the Government needs to be seen to be telling people how things will work. However, given what is, in effect, a £1.7 billion cut to the Scottish budget, how can we look to the future and try to make things much better, which will take massive investment, but continue to spend the amount of money that we need to spend on all the things that are priorities now? How do we square that?

COVID-19 Recovery Committee

Pre-budget Scrutiny 2023-24

Meeting date: 22 September 2022

Jim Fairlie

That leads me on to my next question. During Covid, there was great collaboration and breaking down of red tape, bureaucracy and everything else. Things got done, which was great—brilliant. From local authorities’ point of view, is that approach continuing? Does the third sector believe that it is continuing in the way that local authorities think that it is?

COVID-19 Recovery Committee

Pre-budget Scrutiny 2023-24

Meeting date: 22 September 2022

Jim Fairlie

Do I have time for a very quick question?

COVID-19 Recovery Committee

Pre-budget Scrutiny 2023-24

Meeting date: 22 September 2022

Jim Fairlie

That comes back to my first point, which was about how the Government and local authorities set their priorities when all the competing things such as regulators’ demands come in.