成人快手

Skip to main content
Loading…

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.  

Filter your results Hide all filters

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 4 May 2021
  6. Current session: 13 May 2021 to 15 December 2025
Select which types of business to include


Select level of detail in results

Displaying 775 contributions

|

Equalities, Human Rights and Civil Justice Committee [Draft]

Human Rights, Equalities and Access to Services (Rural Areas)

Meeting date: 25 November 2025

Rhoda Grant

I will move on to housing, which is another big issue that was highlighted at our round-table session. Transport and housing are the two big issues in getting people into rural areas, and they are important in relation to your responsibility for addressing depopulation.

There is a total lack of affordable housing in rural areas. Affordable houses are often built in the wrong place, and planning restrictions often make housing much more expensive to build than in other areas. For instance, you need streetlights and pavements, even though you might not have other streetlights or pavements to join up with. That adds costs, even though it is not really fitting for rural areas. Is any work on-going to make housing more affordable? That adds to the cost of building. Obviously, housing associations and councils have limited resources, so they will avoid incurring those kinds of costs. Is any work going on to look at how to build affordable housing in rural areas in a cost-effective and accessible way?

Equalities, Human Rights and Civil Justice Committee [Draft]

Human Rights, Equalities and Access to Services (Rural Areas)

Meeting date: 25 November 2025

Rhoda Grant

It is about childminding. In Stornoway and Kirkwall, large childminders could not make it work, so they pulled out of the industry, leaving people in difficulties. We hear of smaller childminders who look after one or two children at home, but the hoops that they have to jump through make it impossible, so they are leaving the market as well. Is there on-going work to improve that?

Equalities, Human Rights and Civil Justice Committee [Draft]

Human Rights, Equalities and Access to Services (Rural Areas)

Meeting date: 25 November 2025

Rhoda Grant

Thank you.

Equalities, Human Rights and Civil Justice Committee [Draft]

Human Rights, Equalities and Access to Services (Rural Areas)

Meeting date: 25 November 2025

Rhoda Grant

On a similar theme, minister, you said that you spoke about maternity in your discussions with the Cabinet Secretary for Health and Social Care. Did you discuss the issues in Caithness, which are really difficult for local people? There are few natural births now, because people are going to Inverness to be induced or for caesarean sections and the like. Obviously, you did not come up with solutions or we would have heard about that, so could you give a flavour of your discussions and the areas that you are looking at to improve the issue for women in Caithness?

Equalities, Human Rights and Civil Justice Committee [Draft]

Human Rights, Equalities and Access to Services (Rural Areas)

Meeting date: 25 November 2025

Rhoda Grant

I get that, and that is money. Sadly, the housing built from 2016 was not actually in rural areas. I questioned that with the cabinet secretary previously. Much of it was built on the outskirts of Aberdeen, Edinburgh and Glasgow鈥攎ore in commuter towns than in rural areas. That is where the problem is, because it is much cheaper to tick the box in that way. I have been assured that the categorisation has changed, so at least we will get some rural housing from the rural housing funds.

11:15  

How do we make it easier? You talked about training. People on the islands who are in fuel poverty and who are looking to retrofit and increase insulation in their homes have to get tradespeople from the central belt. That is because local tradespeople and small companies cannot afford to send staff to Glasgow to undertake the certification that allows them to carry out that work.

Are we trying to rural proof some of those schemes to give opportunities to local businesses to build houses? I am talking about one or two houses and not schemes. Villages might need one house for the district nurse, one for the GP and one for the local person who cannot compete with the holiday home market. What are we doing to ensure access to skills and certification that is developed in urban areas? How are we ensuring that that transfers to rural areas to keep wealth, knowledge and ability within rural communities? Without that, retrofit and housing costs spiral, because you are bringing in a workforce, and you have to pay for them to live there and travel there to do the work. The material costs are hugely different, and that just adds to the costs and makes the work unaffordable.

Equalities, Human Rights and Civil Justice Committee [Draft]

Human Rights, Equalities and Access to Services (Rural Areas)

Meeting date: 25 November 2025

Rhoda Grant

I am aware that I have hogged the questions a bit, but I have another question, convener.

Equalities, Human Rights and Civil Justice Committee [Draft]

Human Rights, Equalities and Access to Services (Rural Areas)

Meeting date: 25 November 2025

Rhoda Grant

That is helpful. It will be interesting to see how that appears at the other end of the system and whether we get more house building.

I will move on to the cost of living, which is an issue in rural areas, even in good times. Eight or nine years ago, HIE did a study on the cost of living in the islands and, even at that point, it was 20 or 30 per cent higher, just because everything is more expensive because you have transport costs. Childcare is non-existent in many areas. Where it is available, it is expensive, and you need a car to get your child to it. That was brought up at our round-table session.

What are we doing to alleviate some of those cost pressures and make it less expensive to live in island and rural communities?

Rural Affairs and Islands Committee [Draft]

Natural Environment (Scotland) Bill: Stage 2

Meeting date: 19 November 2025

Rhoda Grant

Will you take an intervention?

Rural Affairs and Islands Committee [Draft]

Natural Environment (Scotland) Bill: Stage 2

Meeting date: 19 November 2025

Rhoda Grant

I have some sympathy with amendment 267, but I am puzzled as to why it does not apply to deer or pheasants, which also cause a nuisance. I would have been tempted to vote for the amendment had it not been for the proposed subsection that would exempt them.

Equalities, Human Rights and Civil Justice Committee [Draft]

Human Rights, Equalities and Access to Services (Rural Areas)

Meeting date: 18 November 2025

Rhoda Grant

What are biggest barriers to access to services, especially health services? I know that that is a big question.