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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 9 August 2025
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Displaying 868 contributions

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Economy and Fair Work Committee

New Deal for Business

Meeting date: 26 February 2025

Lorna Slater

That is the bit that I am interested in. I agree about the jargon of “wellbeing economy” and “net zero”. How do businesspeople look at their own businesses and employees in relation to terms such as “the circular economy”? Again, nobody knows what that means.

Economy and Fair Work Committee

New Deal for Business

Meeting date: 26 February 2025

Lorna Slater

Reporting is an incentive for taking things forward.

Economy and Fair Work Committee

New Deal for Business

Meeting date: 26 February 2025

Lorna Slater

I have heard that the businesses that you represent are broadly on board. They understand that part of the wellbeing economy is about paying living wages and that the circular economy means looking at what happens to their waste and making their processes more efficient. People get it, but they are struggling with having the resources and bandwidth to actually do it. Is that a reasonable summary?

Economy and Fair Work Committee

New Deal for Business

Meeting date: 26 February 2025

Lorna Slater

Is it my go?

Economy and Fair Work Committee

New Deal for Business

Meeting date: 26 February 2025

Lorna Slater

The interesting conversation is about what businesses need, if science says that we have to do X, in order to get there. What is realistic for them?

Economy and Fair Work Committee

New Deal for Business

Meeting date: 26 February 2025

Lorna Slater

Thank you, convener. My question is directed primarily to Tony Rodgers, because Nathalie Agnew, who talked about B corps, Claire Mack, who works in renewables, and Jane Wood, who pointed out that housing is highly regulated, all live within our bubble a bit. I am an electrical and mechanical engineer by trade, and I have spent many happy hours shining a little penlight down a fibre optic cable and shouting, “I’ve lit number 1. Which one’s coming up?”, so I get what you do and why it is important.

Economy and Fair Work Committee

New Deal for Business

Meeting date: 26 February 2025

Lorna Slater

What do terms such as “wellbeing economy”, “net zero” and “nature positive” mean to you, as a typical successful Scottish businessman? Do they mean anything to you? Do Scottish businesses know what they mean? Do you know what role you play in all that, or is it all just opaque?

Economy and Fair Work Committee

New Deal for Business

Meeting date: 26 February 2025

Lorna Slater

That is a really interesting approach. Targets are set on the basis of—

SPCB Supported Bodies Landscape Review Committee

SPCB Supported Bodies Landscape Review

Meeting date: 20 February 2025

Lorna Slater

For those aspects that are public facing—when someone has a complaint or wants to come to you for information or because they have an issue with the police—something that we have talked about with other witnesses is the idea of having a one-stop shop.

If a citizen or resident of Scotland has a problem with a public service—maybe with the police—and they need help but do not know where to start because the landscape is complicated, would it be useful for them to have a one-stop shop or a single portal to access your services?

11:00  

SPCB Supported Bodies Landscape Review Committee

SPCB Supported Bodies Landscape Review

Meeting date: 20 February 2025

Lorna Slater

We have talked a lot about the complicated landscape. Your role and the role of your office is the newest but also probably the most specific and the narrowest of these bodies. Would it be right to say that that is largely as a result of changes to technology and evidence-gathering methods? As we look ahead to the future of the landscape, we can imagine that new technologies, such as AI—goodness knows what else is ahead of us—might require other bits of data protection, better good practice by police and so on. If we are imagining a robust shape for this landscape such that, in the future, other things are required, do you imagine that something like that could be incorporated within your office? Would there be other commissioners? How do we make your function—or the role that you play in the wider landscape—robust in relation to future technological advance?