- Asked by: Mark Ruskell, MSP for Mid Scotland and Fife, Scottish Green Party
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Date lodged: Tuesday, 07 December 2004
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Current Status:
Answered by Ross Finnie on 21 December 2004
To ask the Scottish Executive whether it has raised any concerns regarding the Supermarket Code of Practice officially with the UK Government and, if so, whether it will give details of the representations made.
Answer
The question of the effectiveness of the operation of the Supermarket Code of Practice is currently the subject of an audit by the Office of Fair Trading (OFT). The Executive made representation to the OFT about the effectiveness of the Code which, along with other representations, led to the audit being conducted. The results are likely to be published early in 2005. The Executive will make further representation once the outcome of the audit is known.
- Asked by: Mark Ruskell, MSP for Mid Scotland and Fife, Scottish Green Party
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Date lodged: Tuesday, 07 December 2004
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Current Status:
Answered by Ross Finnie on 21 December 2004
To ask the Scottish Executive what contribution it made to the Office of Fair Trading"s review of the Supermarket Code of Practice.
Answer
The Executive made representation to the Office of Fair Trading (OFT), early in 2003, to the effect that there was a very strong view from suppliers in Scotland that the Supermarket Code of Practice was not working. The representation made it clear that fear of de-listing was preventing suppliers making complaints under the code, together with concerns about lack of substantive penalties for non-compliance. The outcome of this representation, and other similar representations, was the OFT’s announcement of an audit of the code, aimed at establishing the effectiveness of the code. The report of the audit is nearing completion and is likely to be published early in 2005. The Executive will make further representation once the outcome of the audit is known.
- Asked by: Mark Ruskell, MSP for Mid Scotland and Fife, Scottish Green Party
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Date lodged: Wednesday, 08 December 2004
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Current Status:
Answered by Cathy Jamieson on 16 December 2004
To ask the Scottish Executive when the TETRA system will be fully operational and ready for use by police.
Answer
By summer of 2006 all police forces in Scotland will be fully operational in the use of Airwave.
- Asked by: Mark Ruskell, MSP for Mid Scotland and Fife, Scottish Green Party
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Date lodged: Wednesday, 24 November 2004
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Current Status:
Answered by Johann Lamont on 2 December 2004
To ask the Scottish Executive what the main public interest criteria are in respect of planning appeals.
Answer
There are no set criteria for defining public interest, nor can there be. Planning decisions, including appeals, must be made in accordance with the development plan unless material considerations indicate otherwise. This means that each decision must be made taking into account the individual planning merits for and against the grant of planning permission.
- Asked by: Mark Ruskell, MSP for Mid Scotland and Fife, Scottish Green Party
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Date lodged: Thursday, 21 October 2004
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Current Status:
Answered by Lewis Macdonald on 23 November 2004
To ask the Scottish Executive who were invited to its consultation seminars regarding the proposed Quality and Standards III investment programme for Scottish Water.
Answer
A series of three seminars were organised and hosted by Water Customer Consultation Panels and the Scottish Executive to discuss the issues contained in the Investing in Water Services 2006-2014 consultation These took place in Edinburgh, Inverness and Glasgow. A wide range of stakeholders were invited and these are listed below:
Aberdeen City Council | Dundee Chamber of Commerce |
Aberdeenshire Council | Edinburgh Chamber of Commerce |
Angus Council | Federation of Master Builders |
Argyll and Bute Council | Federation of Small Businesses |
Scottish Borders Council | Fife Chamber of Commerce |
Clackmannanshire Council | Forth Valley Chamber of Commerce |
Dumfries and Galloway Council | Friends of the Earth |
Dundee City Council | Glasgow and Clyde Valley Structure Plan Authority |
East Ayrshire Council | Glasgow Chamber of Commerce |
East Dunbartonshire Council | Glasgow housing association |
East Lothian Council | Graham and Sibbald |
East Renfrewshire Council | Highlands and Islands Enterprise |
Edinburgh City Council | Highlands and Islands Partnership Programme |
Falkirk Council | Homes for Scotland |
Fife Council | Initiative on the Edge |
Glasgow City Council | Inverness Chamber of Commerce |
Highland Council | Loch Lomond and Trossachs National Park |
Inverclyde Council | McGregor Donald Sols |
Midlothian Council | Moray Chamber of Commerce |
Moray Council | Moray Firth Partnership |
North Ayrshire Council | Orkney Housing Association |
North Lanarkshire Council | Renfrewshire chamber of commerce |
Orkney Council | Royal Incorporation of Architects in Scotland |
Perth and Kinross Council | Royal Institute of Chartered Surveyors |
Renfrewshire Council | Royal Town Planning Institute |
Shetland Council | Scottish Building |
South Ayrshire Council | Scottish Council for Development and Industry |
South Lanarkshire Council | Scottish Centre for Information and Environmental Health |
Stirling Council | Scottish Council of Voluntary Organisations |
West Dunbartonshire Council | Scottish Enterprise Ayrshire |
West Lothian Council | Scottish Enterprise Borders |
Western Isles Council | Scottish Enterprise Dunbartonshire |
Ìý | Scottish Enterprise Edinburgh and Lothians |
Ayrshire Chamber of Commerce | Scottish Enterprise Fife |
British Gas | Scottish Enterprise Forth Valley |
Burness Solicitors | Scottish Enterprise Glasgow |
Cairngorms National Park Authority | Scottish Enterprise Grampian |
Caledonian Paper | Scottish Enterprise Lanarkshire |
Chemical Industries Association | Scottish Enterprise Renfrewshire |
Civil Engineering Contractors Association | Scottish Enterprise Tayside |
Communities Scotland | Scottish Federation of Housing Associations |
Confederation of Business and Industry | Scottish Natural Heritage |
Confederation of Paper Industries | Scottish Power |
Construction Industry Forum | Scottish Rural Property and Business Association (formerly Scottish Landowners Federation) |
Director of Public Health Argyll and Clyde | SEPA |
Director of Public Health Borders | Scottish Society of Directors and Planners |
Director of Public Health Fife | Shepherd and Wedderburn |
Director of Public Health Forth Valley | Tulloch Group (Housebuilders) } |
Director of Public Health Glasgow | Transco |
Director of Public Health Highland | Water Customer Consultation Panel members |
Director of Public Health Shetland | World Wildlife Fund |
Ìý
- Asked by: Mark Ruskell, MSP for Mid Scotland and Fife, Scottish Green Party
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Date lodged: Wednesday, 10 November 2004
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Current Status:
Answered by Lewis Macdonald on 23 November 2004
To ask the Scottish Executive whether the Lewis Peatlands are classified as a Special Protection Area under the EU Directive on the Conservation of Wild Birds (79/409/EEC) and, if so, what the extent is of the site; what species of bird in the area are listed as the qualifying interest; how many of these species occur in the area and what proportions of national and international populations they represent, and whether the site is also a Site of Special Scientific Interest.
Answer
The Lewis Peatlands Special Protection Area (SPA) was classified under the European Council Directive on the Conservation of Wild Birds (79/409/EEC) on December 7 2000; the site encompasses an area of 58,984.23 hectares.
The relevant international population by which the importance of any bird species on an SPA can be assessed is expressed in terms of the biogeographic population from which it is drawn or is a part of. A biogeographic population is a group of birds which breed in a particular location (or group of locations), breed freely within the group, and rarely breed or exchange individuals with other groups.
The qualifying species are – black throated diver (11 pairs representing at least 6.9% of the GB breeding population and <0.1% of="" the="" biogeographical="" population),="" dunlin="" schinzii="" sub-species="" (3,650="" pairs="" representing="" at="" least="" 33.2%="" of="" the="" breeding="" baltic/gb/ireland="" population),="" golden="" eagle="" (six="" pairs="" representing="" at="" least="" 1.5%="" of="" the="" gb="" breeding="" population="" and="" 0.1%="" of="" the="" biogeographical="" population),="" golden="" plover="" (1,978="" pairs="" representing="" at="" least="" 8.8%="" of="" the="" gb="" breeding="" population="" and="" 0.4%="" of="" the="" biogeographical="" population),="" greenshank="" (152="" pairs="" representing="" at="" least="" 0.3%="" of="" the="" breeding="" europe/western="" africa="" population="" and="" 0.3%="" of="" the="" biogeographical="" population),="" merlin="" (20="" pairs="" representing="" at="" least="" 1.5%="" of="" the="" gb="" breeding="" population="" and="" 0.2%="" of="" the="" biogeographical="" population)="" and="" red="" throated="" diver="" (60="" pairs="" representing="" at="" least="" 6.4%="" of="" the="" gb="" breeding="" population="" and="" 0.8%="" of="" the="" biogeographical="">0.1%>
The whole of the Lewis Peatlands SPA is not underpinned by Site of Special Scientific Interest (SSSI) notification. However, four SSSIs are contained within the SPA boundary. These are mainly notified for reasons other than the SPA interest and are:
1. Achmore Bog SSSI (296.73ha. Notified for blanket bog).
2. Loch Laxavat Ard & Loch Laxavat Iorach SSSI (267ha. Notified for woodland,open waters and breeding bird assemblage).
3. Loch Nan Eilean Valley Bog SSSI (33.26ha. Notified for blanket bog and valley mire).
4. Loch Scarrasdale Valley BogÌýSSSI (218.26ha. Notified for blanket bog and valley mire).
- Asked by: Mark Ruskell, MSP for Mid Scotland and Fife, Scottish Green Party
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Date lodged: Friday, 05 November 2004
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Current Status:
Answered by Lewis Macdonald on 19 November 2004
To ask the Scottish Executive how many deer were killed in (a) 2002 and (b) 2003 (i) under control agreements made under section 7, (ii) under control schemes made under section 8, (iii) as part of emergency measures taken under sections 10 and 11 and (iv) by occupiers or persons authorised by occupiers acting under section 26 of the Deer (Scotland) Act 1996.
Answer
This information is not held centrally and I have asked the Director of the Deer Commission for Scotland to respond to you. A copy of the response shall be placed in the Parliament’s Reference Centre.
- Asked by: Mark Ruskell, MSP for Mid Scotland and Fife, Scottish Green Party
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Date lodged: Friday, 05 November 2004
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Current Status:
Answered by Lewis Macdonald on 19 November 2004
To ask the Scottish Executive to what extent the Lewis Peatlands Ramsar site overlaps with the (a) Lewis Peatlands candidate Special Area of Conservation and (b) Lewis Peatlands Special Protection Area.
Answer
The Lewis Peatlands Ramsar site is identical to the Lewis Peatlands Special Protection Area in extent (58,984.23 ha) and boundary. The Lewis Peatlands candidate Special Area of Conservation is smaller (27,945.59 ha) and lies entirely within the Lewis Peatlands Ramsar site.
- Asked by: Mark Ruskell, MSP for Mid Scotland and Fife, Scottish Green Party
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Date lodged: Friday, 05 November 2004
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Current Status:
Answered by Lewis Macdonald on 19 November 2004
To ask the Scottish Executive what mechanisms are in place to protect the peatland features of the Lewis Peatlands Ramsar site outside the boundary of the Lewis Peatlands candidate Special Area of Conservation.
Answer
Outside the candidate Special Area of Conservation the Ramsar site and its features are protected by designation as a Special Protection Area and the associated Conservation (Natural Habitats, &c.) Regulations 1994.
- Asked by: Mark Ruskell, MSP for Mid Scotland and Fife, Scottish Green Party
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Date lodged: Friday, 05 November 2004
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Current Status:
Answered by Lewis Macdonald on 19 November 2004
To ask the Scottish Executive whether it is undertaking research into means of avoiding damage by deer to woodland, agricultural production of crops or livestock that do not involve the taking or killing of deer.
Answer
The Scottish Executive funds an ongoing research programme of about £600,000 per annum on sustainable deer management. The research includes developing a decision support tool for management of deer in woodlands as an aid to native woodland regeneration.
In addition the Deer Commission has a deer research programme and I have asked the director to write to you with details.