Holyrood, made browsable

Hansard

Every contribution to the Official Report — chamber and committee — searchable in one place. Pulled from data.parliament.scot, indexed for full-text search, linked through to every MSP.

129
Current MSPs
415
MSPs ever elected
13
Parties on record
2,355,091
Hansard contributions
1999–2026
Coverage span
Official Report

Search Hansard contributions

Clear
Showing 0 of 2,355,091 contributions in session S6, 17 Apr 2026 – 17 May 2026. Latest 30 days: 148. Coverage: 12 May 1999 — 14 May 2026.

No contributions match those filters.

← Back to list
Committee

Equal Opportunities Committee 15 March 2011

15 Mar 2011 · S3 · Equal Opportunities Committee
Item of business
Budget 2011-12
Glen, Marlyn Lab North East Scotland Watch on SPTV
I realise that we cannot say much about it at this point because we are coming to the end of the session, but I thought that it was worth making some comment.The response is positive about the committee’s relationship with the Government, how everything works and how we have moved forward. I appreciate that and it is right. We have come on in leaps and bounds and I hope that that continues over the next sessions. However, I will mention a few smaller details.Page 2 of the response mentions the equality and budget advisory group—EBAG—2010 report. However, it was unhelpful that that report was not published earlier. EBAG had completed it and submitted it to the Scottish Government, which was considering it, but we did not get to see it until afterwards. That needs to be said. The process is good, but it needs to be transparent and timely so that we can follow it.The response also talks about:“Analysis of the potential impact on equality groups of the final choices set out by Ministers in the Draft Budget proposals”.We need to make the point again about when the decisions are made. It is all well and good to conduct an analysis at the end, but equality impact analysis should be an early and integral part of the decision-making process. It seems that we cannot say that often enough. It is essential.On page 4, the education maintenance allowance is mentioned as an example of a case in which considering equal opportunities made a difference to policy and an example of an analysis having shown that a policy would have an impact on a particular group. The EMA is obviously targeted at young people and, although I absolutely welcome its retention, surely better examples could be given.Throughout, the response talks about tackling occupational segregation but it does not give details of how that is being done. Simply to assert that something is going on to tackle occupational segregation is not detailed enough. I would have appreciated a little bit more on that.

In the same item of business