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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 24 August 2025
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Displaying 2341 contributions

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Local Government, Housing and Planning Committee

Standards Commission for Scotland Annual Report 2021-22

Meeting date: 10 January 2023

Willie Coffey

Is there a process by which a councillor can appeal against your decision? In your experience, how successful or otherwise have such appeals been?

Local Government, Housing and Planning Committee

Standards Commission for Scotland Annual Report 2021-22

Meeting date: 10 January 2023

Willie Coffey

Do you find that the sanctions that are available to you are pretty much adequate to cover the kinds of behaviours that you have observed over the years? Are they sufficient?

Local Government, Housing and Planning Committee

Commissioner for Ethical Standards in Public Life in Scotland Annual Report and Accounts 2021-22

Meeting date: 10 January 2023

Willie Coffey

It helps a great deal. Thanks for taking the time to explain the situation in detail.

What recourse is there for a person who feels that their complaint has been inappropriately dismissed at the initial stages? Where do they turn to?

Local Government, Housing and Planning Committee

Standards Commission for Scotland Annual Report 2021-22

Meeting date: 10 January 2023

Willie Coffey

Good morning. I want to ask a bit more about sanctions and the sanctions process. You have partly answered one of my questions, and you have said that the available sanctions are suspensions, censure and disqualification. Will you tell us a wee bit more about how that works and whether there is a process through which a councillor might find themselves travelling if repeat offences are found by the commission?

Local Government, Housing and Planning Committee

Standards Commission for Scotland Annual Report 2021-22

Meeting date: 10 January 2023

Willie Coffey

There is no sense of the degree of sanction. For example, the first time that an offence is recorded, it could, depending on its nature, immediately be dealt with through any of the three types of sanction, could it not?

Local Government, Housing and Planning Committee

Standards Commission for Scotland Annual Report 2021-22

Meeting date: 10 January 2023

Willie Coffey

Do you get many repeat offences? What are the numbers like in that regard?

Local Government, Housing and Planning Committee

Commissioner for Ethical Standards in Public Life in Scotland Annual Report and Accounts 2021-22

Meeting date: 10 January 2023

Willie Coffey

That is good. Now, I really have to ask you about the 2019 to 2021 period, when the number of complaints that were not taken forward was excessively high. The figure was more than 80 per cent, and that possibly gave rise to the Audit Scotland section 22 report that we all know about. Will you tell us, as far as you can, why the percentage was so high during that period, and could you also give the committee some sense of why the complaints that were made during that period cannot be reinvestigated?

Local Government, Housing and Planning Committee

Scottish Housing Regulator “Annual Report and Accounts 2021-22â€

Meeting date: 20 December 2022

Willie Coffey

Do any of the houses not meet the standard because of dampness or condensation? Do they not meet the housing standard because of their structural condition in relation to dampness, condensation or mould, or is it because of all the functional things that you mentioned such as electrical installations and upgrades and so on?

Local Government, Housing and Planning Committee

Scottish Housing Regulator “Annual Report and Accounts 2021-22â€

Meeting date: 20 December 2022

Willie Coffey

Will we see a register—or whatever it might be called—of local authority landlords’ properties, which will set out how they comply with the standard? Should addressing issues of dampness, condensation and mould form part of the standard?

Local Government, Housing and Planning Committee

Scottish Housing Regulator “Annual Report and Accounts 2021-22â€

Meeting date: 20 December 2022

Willie Coffey

Lastly, not to labour the point, do you not think that, before they take up a tenancy, tenants have a right to know that the house that they are about to live in is free from dampness, condensation and mould, and that they have a right to have an authority tell them that that is so?