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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.

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Showing 60 of 2,354,908 contributions. Latest 30 days: 0. Coverage: 12 May 1999 — 25 Mar 2026.
The Presiding Officer (Alison Johnstone) NPA Chamber
25 Mar 2026
Presiding Officer’s Closing Remarks
It is actually so much easier when people are not saying nice things about you in the chair. Laughter.Seriously, though, friends—it is my privilege to make some remarks to close this last scheduled meeting of session 6. We began this session during the Covid pandemic, in a soc...
The Deputy Presiding Officer (Annabelle Ewing) SNP Chamber
25 Mar 2026
Presiding Officer’s Closing Remarks
I have the great pleasure of handing over the microphone to our Presiding Officer, who wishes to address the chamber.16:48
Speaker unknown Chamber
25 Mar 2026
Presiding Officer’s Closing Remarks
16:47
The Deputy Presiding Officer (Annabelle Ewing) SNP Chamber
25 Mar 2026
Decision Time
There is one question to be put as a result of today’s business. The question is, that motion S6M-21180, in the name of John Swinney, on a motion of thanks, be agreed to.Motion agreed to,That the Parliament expresses its thanks to its Presiding Officer, Alison Johnstone, for h...
Speaker unknown Chamber
25 Mar 2026
Decision Time
16:47
The Deputy Presiding Officer (Annabelle Ewing) SNP Chamber
25 Mar 2026
Motion of Thanks
That concludes the debate on the motion of thanks.
Alex Cole-Hamilton LD Chamber
25 Mar 2026
Motion of Thanks
Each member of our staff in this institution exhibits professionalism every day, and none more so than when circumstance and situation command it of them. When the Parliament needs to be in full sail in the eyes of the world, they have it thrumming like an America’s cup yacht....
Alex Cole-Hamilton (Edinburgh Western) (LD) LD Chamber
25 Mar 2026
Motion of Thanks
I start by paying tribute to both Deputy Presiding Officers, and I echo the words that have been said about you. In particular, I say to Annabelle Ewing, what a loss you will be to the chamber—I wish you well with whatever comes next.There is a poignancy about today. I think a...
Gillian Mackay (Central Scotland) (Green) Green Chamber
25 Mar 2026
Motion of Thanks
This has been a hugely challenging session, so I want to be a wee bit more light hearted before turning to thanks for the Presiding Officer. I thank parliamentary and MSP staff, as others have done, for their work this session. We would not be able to do our jobs without them....
Anas Sarwar (Glasgow) (Lab) Lab Chamber
25 Mar 2026
Motion of Thanks
I will start by not only supporting the motion in the First Minister’s name but echoing all his comments.Presiding Officer, I thank you for your dedication over the past five years and for your dedication over 15 years to your constituents and to the great people of Scotland.T...
Russell Findlay (West Scotland) (Con) Con Chamber
25 Mar 2026
Motion of Thanks
Thank you, Presiding Officers, in the plural. Unlike at First Minister’s question time today, all you will hear from me just now are warm words in a soothing tone.I begin by thanking you, Presiding Officer, and your colleagues Annabelle Ewing and Liam McArthur. Your job is dif...
The Deputy Presiding Officer (Annabelle Ewing) SNP Chamber
25 Mar 2026
Motion of Thanks
I call Russell Findlay.16:30
The First Minister SNP Chamber
25 Mar 2026
Motion of Thanks
I move,That the Parliament expresses its thanks to its Presiding Officer, Alison Johnstone, for her dedicated service to the Parliament; thanks her Deputy Presiding Officers, and pays tribute to all of those Members who are standing down at the end of this session.
The Deputy Presiding Officer (Annabelle Ewing) SNP Chamber
25 Mar 2026
Motion of Thanks
First Minister, could I possibly ask you to move the motion? Laughter.
The First Minister (John Swinney) SNP Chamber
25 Mar 2026
Motion of Thanks
As this sixth session of the Scottish Parliament comes to a close, I extend my thanks to the Presiding Officer and the Deputy Presiding Officers for the service that each of them has given to the Parliament over the past five years.The Presiding Officers have always managed th...
The Deputy Presiding Officer (Annabelle Ewing) SNP Chamber
25 Mar 2026
Motion of Thanks
Before we turn to the next item of business, I hope that members do not mind if I say a few words. I would like to say specifically what an honour it has been for me to serve in the Scottish Parliament, which, of course, was reconvened by my late mother, Winnie Ewing, in 1999....
Speaker unknown Chamber
25 Mar 2026
Motion of Thanks
16:22
Speaker unknown Chamber
25 Mar 2026
First Minister’s Question Time
12:01
The Deputy Presiding Officer (Annabelle Ewing) SNP Chamber
25 Mar 2026
Portfolio Question Time · Temporary Accommodation
That concludes portfolio question time. There will be a short pause before we move on to the next item of business.
Màiri McAllan SNP Chamber
25 Mar 2026
Portfolio Question Time · Temporary Accommodation
I would say that, although I said in response to Clare Adamson that temporary accommodation is a vital safety net for families and individuals who find themselves facing homelessness, we must reduce the length of time that people spend in temporary accommodation and make rapid...
Willie Rennie (North East Fife) (LD) LD Chamber
25 Mar 2026
Portfolio Question Time · Temporary Accommodation
In the past five years of the Government’s tenure, 17,811 children have been trapped in temporary accommodation for more than a year. Whoever is elected to this Parliament next month must commit to it never being repeated that so many children have had to suffer for so long. M...
Màiri McAllan SNP Chamber
25 Mar 2026
Portfolio Question Time · Temporary Accommodation
That fund, which goes directly to councils to help them to turn around social voids quickly and to acquire family homes on the market, is a critical part of our response to the housing emergency, because although we are putting a huge amount of work into delivering more afford...
Clare Adamson SNP Chamber
25 Mar 2026
Portfolio Question Time · Temporary Accommodation
One of my most frustrating constituent issues is when people who are expecting to move into accommodation cannot do so because it is not ready on time, which can cause stress for families. Will the cabinet secretary explain how the targeted £80 million investment to support lo...
The Cabinet Secretary for Housing (Màiri McAllan) SNP Chamber
25 Mar 2026
Portfolio Question Time · Temporary Accommodation
I echo Clare Adamson’s thanks. On her question, temporary accommodation provides a vital safety net as part of our housing system in Scotland, but we, of course, want people to spend as little time as possible there.I will run through some of the actions that we have taken rec...
8. Clare Adamson (Motherwell and Wishaw) (SNP) SNP Chamber
25 Mar 2026
Portfolio Question Time · Temporary Accommodation
Forgive me, Presiding Officer, but I hope that you will indulge me, as I wish to thank all those working across the Parliament campus to support MSPs, including the clerks, the Scottish Parliament information centre and the legal teams, and I wish all my colleagues the very be...
The Deputy Presiding Officer (Annabelle Ewing) SNP Chamber
25 Mar 2026
Portfolio Question Time · Heating Oil Prices (Low-income Rural and Off-grid Households)
I call Clare Adamson, who joins us remotely.
Màiri McAllan SNP Chamber
25 Mar 2026
Portfolio Question Time · Heating Oil Prices (Low-income Rural and Off-grid Households)
I express the Government’s sympathy with those who are wrestling with dramatically increased oil prices, which will have come as a very unwelcome shock to households. Rona Mackay is absolutely right that the £4.6 million that the United Kingdom Government has allocated is abso...
Rona Mackay SNP Chamber
25 Mar 2026
Portfolio Question Time · Heating Oil Prices (Low-income Rural and Off-grid Households)
I thank the cabinet secretary for that welcome response. One of my constituents has seen their heating oil bill triple overnight, has no savings and has been told to wait until April for support that amounts to pennies per household. Does the cabinet secretary agree that the £...
The Cabinet Secretary for Housing (Màiri McAllan) SNP Chamber
25 Mar 2026
Portfolio Question Time · Heating Oil Prices (Low-income Rural and Off-grid Households)
Today, we have announced that the Scottish emergency heating oil scheme will be delivered by Advice Direct Scotland and will be open for applications from 1 April. The scheme will be available to users of both heating oil and liquefied petroleum gas. Low-income households and ...
7. Rona Mackay (Strathkelvin and Bearsden) (SNP) SNP Chamber
25 Mar 2026
Portfolio Question Time · Heating Oil Prices (Low-income Rural and Off-grid Households)
To ask the Scottish Government what action it is taking through its fuel poverty programmes to support low-income rural and off-grid households that are unable to heat their homes due to the recent increase in heating oil prices. (S6O-05715)
Màiri McAllan SNP Chamber
25 Mar 2026
Portfolio Question Time · More Homes Scotland (Affordable Housing and Homelessness)
: One of the main drivers—if not the main driver—of homelessness is poverty. More homes Scotland will help to drive forward the Government’s core priorities of eradicating child poverty and growing our economy. To do that, we must focus on building more social homes and maximi...
Elena Whitham SNP Chamber
25 Mar 2026
Portfolio Question Time · More Homes Scotland (Affordable Housing and Homelessness)
I refer members to my entry in the register of members’ interests—I am a member of Shelter Scotland’s committee.Given that far too many children live in temporary accommodation, more homes Scotland must be integral to ending homelessness, and its creation is most welcome. To s...
The Cabinet Secretary for Housing (Màiri McAllan) SNP Chamber
25 Mar 2026
Portfolio Question Time · More Homes Scotland (Affordable Housing and Homelessness)
Increasing the supply of affordable homes is key to addressing housing need and critical to tackling homelessness. I am pleased to confirm that more homes Scotland will have a key focus on bringing speed, simplicity and scale to the delivery of more homes, including affordable...
6. Elena Whitham (Carrick, Cumnock and Doon Valley) (SNP) SNP Chamber
25 Mar 2026
Portfolio Question Time · More Homes Scotland (Affordable Housing and Homelessness)
To ask the Scottish Government whether addressing affordable housing need and tackling homelessness will be more homes Scotland’s core mission. (S6O-05714)
Màiri McAllan SNP Chamber
25 Mar 2026
Portfolio Question Time · Social Housing Waiting Lists (Kirkcaldy)
At the end of my last answer, I noted the record funding that the Scottish Government is making available next year and in the coming four years for affordable homes. I do not want to see any underspends given that commitment. It is the responsibility of councils such as Fife ...
David Torrance SNP Chamber
25 Mar 2026
Portfolio Question Time · Social Housing Waiting Lists (Kirkcaldy)
Given the sustained pressure on social housing waiting lists in the Kirkcaldy constituency, will the cabinet secretary outline how the Scottish Government can ensure that local authorities make full and effective use of the resources that are available to them, particularly in...
The Cabinet Secretary for Housing (Màiri McAllan) SNP Chamber
25 Mar 2026
Portfolio Question Time · Social Housing Waiting Lists (Kirkcaldy)
I regularly meet Fife Council, and we discuss the local housing emergency, affordable housing supply, temporary accommodation and homelessness pressures. One of the most impactful ways to reduce the pressure on waiting lists is to deliver more affordable homes. In the Kirkcald...
5. David Torrance (Kirkcaldy) (SNP) SNP Chamber
25 Mar 2026
Portfolio Question Time · Social Housing Waiting Lists (Kirkcaldy)
To ask the Scottish Government what action it is taking in light of reports of increasing pressure on social housing waiting lists in the Kirkcaldy constituency, including how it plans to support local authorities and housing associations to expand the availability of affordab...
The Deputy Presiding Officer (Annabelle Ewing) SNP Chamber
25 Mar 2026
Portfolio Question Time · First-time Buyers
I beg your pardon. That was my fault.
Fulton MacGregor (Coatbridge and Chryston) (SNP) SNP Chamber
25 Mar 2026
Portfolio Question Time · First-time Buyers
I never pressed the request-to-speak button.
The Deputy Presiding Officer (Annabelle Ewing) SNP Chamber
25 Mar 2026
Portfolio Question Time · First-time Buyers
Fulton MacGregor has a supplementary question.
Màiri McAllan SNP Chamber
25 Mar 2026
Portfolio Question Time · First-time Buyers
Equally, the prospect of scrapping the land and buildings transaction tax or stamp duty land tax is for the birds, and I am afraid that it demonstrates that the Conservatives realise that their chances of implementing any such policies are, to put it politely, very slim.
The Deputy Presiding Officer (Annabelle Ewing) SNP Chamber
25 Mar 2026
Portfolio Question Time · First-time Buyers
Members!
Màiri McAllan SNP Chamber
25 Mar 2026
Portfolio Question Time · First-time Buyers
Not for the first time—and probably not for the last—I completely disagree with Meghan Gallacher’s assessment. The individuals in Scotland who have benefited from our open market shared equity scheme do not consider it “inadequate”, as she has put it. I am sure that there are ...
Meghan Gallacher Con Chamber
25 Mar 2026
Portfolio Question Time · First-time Buyers
My supplementary is on those first-time buyer schemes. The Scottish National Party has tried such schemes before, but with little to no success, because they do not address the fundamental problem, which is a severe lack of building the homes that we desperately need. Does the...
The Cabinet Secretary for Housing (Màiri McAllan) SNP Chamber
25 Mar 2026
Portfolio Question Time · First-time Buyers
I have heard from many young people—and, increasingly, not so young people—in Scotland for whom the hopeful prospect of owning their own home one day is becoming ever more distant. We all know that, by the end of the month, by the time that food costs, energy costs and rent ha...
4. Meghan Gallacher (Central Scotland) (Con) Con Chamber
25 Mar 2026
Portfolio Question Time · First-time Buyers
To ask the Scottish Government how it is supporting first-time buyers. (S6O-05712)
Màiri McAllan SNP Chamber
25 Mar 2026
Portfolio Question Time · Older People’s Housing
I agree with that. In my responses to Karen Adam, I was clear about local authorities’ responsibility to plan for that and the co-operation that we have with local authorities in making sure that it is delivered.I place on the record that the Scottish Government has committed ...
Alexander Stewart (Mid Scotland and Fife) (Con) Con Chamber
25 Mar 2026
Portfolio Question Time · Older People’s Housing
Housing for older people is a key priority that is driven by an ageing population. Does the Scottish Government recognise that prioritising the right type of housing can improve quality of life and reduce the need for public services, particularly in health and social care?
Màiri McAllan SNP Chamber
25 Mar 2026
Portfolio Question Time · Older People’s Housing
I share Karen Adam’s view on the importance of specialist housing. To be clear, I expect local authorities to ensure that the housing needs of their older population are met through the provision of high-quality and well-maintained homes. In that regard, I am pleased to advise...
Karen Adam SNP Chamber
25 Mar 2026
Portfolio Question Time · Older People’s Housing
Over the past five years, in representing Banffshire and Buchan Coast, I have met many older constituents who are deeply worried about the future of such complexes. Those cases have touched my heart, and they are urgent. Those people want to stay independent and they want home...
The Cabinet Secretary for Housing (Màiri McAllan) SNP Chamber
25 Mar 2026
Portfolio Question Time · Older People’s Housing
Local authorities, as statutory housing authorities, are required to assess housing requirements locally and to set out how those will be met in their local housing strategies and development plans. That includes requirements for accessible, adaptable and wheelchair housing an...
3. Karen Adam (Banffshire and Buchan Coast) (SNP) SNP Chamber
25 Mar 2026
Portfolio Question Time · Older People’s Housing
To ask the Scottish Government what action it is taking to ensure that older people’s housing, including sheltered housing, is prioritised in local housing planning and delivery. (S6O-05711)
Shirley-Anne Somerville SNP Chamber
25 Mar 2026
Portfolio Question Time · Adult Disability Payment (Mental and Behavioural Disorders)
This will probably be the last time that I will have the opportunity—at least in the chamber—to thank Jeremy Balfour for the work that we have undertaken together over the years. We have disagreed on many things, but we have also agreed on a lot, particularly on social securit...
Jeremy Balfour (Lothian) (Ind) Ind Chamber
25 Mar 2026
Portfolio Question Time · Adult Disability Payment (Mental and Behavioural Disorders)
Does the cabinet secretary agree that ADP helps people to get into and stay in employment? If ADP is cut, more people in Scotland will have to claim other benefits because they are not able to work. I remind members that I am in receipt of higher-rate ADP.
Shirley-Anne Somerville SNP Chamber
25 Mar 2026
Portfolio Question Time · Adult Disability Payment (Mental and Behavioural Disorders)
The Institute for Public Policy Research Scotland’s recent work on the issue is exceptionally important. During a recent visit to Glasgow to launch the anti-stigma campaign encouraging people to apply for social security and to get the money that they are entitled to, I was pa...
Marie McNair (Clydebank and Milngavie) (SNP) SNP Chamber
25 Mar 2026
Portfolio Question Time · Adult Disability Payment (Mental and Behavioural Disorders)
I, too, am proud that the Scottish National Party Government continues to strengthen social security support and maximise incomes for our most vulnerable. The recent report by the Institute for Public Policy Research Scotland on the welfare state highlights that high spending ...
Shirley-Anne Somerville SNP Chamber
25 Mar 2026
Portfolio Question Time · Adult Disability Payment (Mental and Behavioural Disorders)
I would be delighted to do so, but the member will have to be exceptionally quick in progressing the matter, as she will be aware that the pre-election period is coming up. I would have been delighted to take that forward at an earlier point had she raised the matter with me s...
Mercedes Villalba (North East Scotland) (Lab) Lab Chamber
25 Mar 2026
Portfolio Question Time · Adult Disability Payment (Mental and Behavioural Disorders)
A constituent of mine said:“I’ve been begging repeatedly for months for them to process my ADP claim, only to be ignored, told to contact charities or completely brushed off. We frequently go hungry due to severe financial hardship because I cannot afford to pay for essentials...
Shirley-Anne Somerville SNP Chamber
25 Mar 2026
Portfolio Question Time · Adult Disability Payment (Mental and Behavioural Disorders)
I am sure that, as a practising GP, Dr Gulhane is aware that fit notes are not used in relation to adult disability payment; that is an entirely different part of the social security system. The part that Social Security Scotland uses, which was built with the clients in mind,...
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Chamber

Meeting of the Parliament (Virtual) 23 July 2020

23 Jul 2020 · S5 · Meeting of the Parliament
Item of business
Childcare
Todd, Maree SNP Highlands and Islands Watch on SPTV

I am grateful for the Parliament’s time in making this statement today. Saturday was Mandela day, and I was reminded of his famous quote:

“There can be no keener revelation of a society’s soul than the way in which it treats its children.”

I am proud that, in Scotland, we are prioritising our children’s wellbeing and the wellbeing of those who work most closely with them.

I reiterate the First Minister’s message from her daily press briefings: the safety of the people in Scotland is our first priority. As Minister for Children and Young People, it is my responsibility to ensure that all children and their families, and all those who work with children and families, are, above anything else, kept safe. I feel that responsibility keenly as I look at my own community and my own family.

I say “thank you” to all the children and families for everything that you have done during this crisis. I also give specific thanks to the childcare workforce, many of whom have worked throughout the emergency response period. Thank you—there is no job more important than ensuring that our children are safe, loved and nurtured.

From 3 June, when childminders and outdoor settings were able to open, to last Wednesday, 15 July, when all registered childcare services were able to reopen, formal childcare options have been opening up across Scotland. Care Inspectorate records show that 942 childcare services and 2,110 childminders were open yesterday, and thousands of families are now able to access formal childcare for the first time since lockdown.

That is fantastic news for many people across the country, but I know that this will also be an anxious time for some. The evidence tells us that our youngest children, in particular, are much less likely to catch Covid and become ill, and there is very limited evidence that children transmit the virus. That fact underpins our decisions to relax restrictions for children and young people. However, we must be ever mindful that the risks remain—the virus is here, and we have no vaccine. There is a fine line between effective suppression and community transmission.

It is therefore essential for our precious childcare workforce, in particular, that public health measures are front and centre while we reopen services. The message remains largely the same as the guidance that we published on 15 June: measures should be taken to enhance hand hygiene and cleaning practice; limit children’s interactions; maximise the use of outdoor spaces; ensure physical distance between adults in the childcare setting, including parents at drop-off and pick-up times; and actively engage with test and protect. Those measures will ensure the safety and wellbeing of staff, children, families and the wider community.

On 30 July, working closely with the childcare sector, we will publish a suite of guidance for the sector that will come into effect in August. Alongside that guidance, we will publish the scientific evidence and public health advice that has helped to inform our decisions. That updated advice indicates that we can remove the need for consistent bubbles of up to eight children and ease the current restrictions on blended care. I know that that will be welcome news for the sector and for members in the Parliament.

However, that will not be a return to normal childcare arrangements, and we will all have to think very carefully about how we manage children’s interactions. We are all still living through a global pandemic, and evidence of a resurgence in the virus around the world and closer to home underlines how fragile our progress to date has been. The virus must therefore continue to be suppressed.

To be clear, until new guidance is published and the dates are confirmed, the current guidance remains in place. While no one wants to keep any of the current measures in place for any longer than is necessary, I underline to providers that those measures do not stop them welcoming back their children with open arms and a warm hug.

We know—and the evidence shows—that keeping a high-quality experience at the centre of childcare is what makes the difference for children and what creates such a rewarding profession. Now more than ever, that golden thread of quality is just as important, although perhaps it now needs to have a core of steel. Quality relationships, quality interactions and quality practice are woven through our children’s experiences in childcare in Scotland, and quality remains our focus.

We know that childcare providers have been really worried about their on-going sustainability and being able to keep going for the children they care for, their families and their staff. The past few months have shown us what a vital role the childcare sector plays in Scotland’s overall economic recovery as well as in enabling us to achieve our ambition of improving outcomes for children.

Together, national and local government and sector representatives have been looking carefully at measures to support the childcare sector during this challenging time. We are also pressing the United Kingdom Government for more action at a UK level. On Tuesday this week, the Cabinet Secretary for Economy, Fair Work and Culture and I wrote jointly to our counterparts in the Department for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy and the Department for Education to emphasise the childcare sector’s importance to economic recovery. In particular, we urged them to influence the Chancellor of the Exchequer to consider tax-free childcare to support parents.

We recognise that childcare is a varied sector that includes a large number of small businesses, social enterprises, third sector organisations and self-employed workers. We depend on that vibrant variety to give children and families what they need, so we must support all parts of the system.

On 16 July, the Deputy First Minister announced £11.2 million for a transitional support fund for private and third sector childcare providers, to help them to address the impact of the pandemic response. Providers will be able to find out more about that fund, which will be for all private and third sector childcare providers, not just those that deliver funded early learning and childcare, by the end of July. We have also worked in partnership with the Scottish Childminding Association to establish a workforce support fund to help childminders who face short-term financial difficulties. That fund opened for applications on 16 July.

The Scottish and UK Governments introduced a range of measures to support businesses through the closure period, including the coronavirus job retention scheme, the self-employment income support scheme and the bounce back loan scheme. The Scottish Government and local authorities guaranteed that payments for the statutory early learning and childcare entitlement would continue for the duration of closures, thereby ensuring that millions of pounds continued to be paid to providers.

The Scottish Government remains absolutely committed to making Scotland the best place in the world to grow up in. Covid-19 will not stop that. In 2014, we made a commitment to deliver the most ambitious childcare offer anywhere in the UK, and, in March this year, Audit Scotland said that we were on track to deliver that.

When the scale of the national emergency became clear, we took the extremely difficult decision to take away the legal duty on local authorities to deliver the ELC expansion from this August. The Parliament approved that step on 1 April. Local authorities have had to focus on managing their local response to Covid-19, and I am grateful for their incredible efforts, along with those of their partners in the private and third sectors.

That decision weighs heavily on me, as I know it does on many members, but I have made it clear from the outset that we have not stopped the expansion. Councils have continued to develop their ELC offer even over recent months, and I am delighted that many councils are telling us that they have the capacity to deliver more than the minimum of 600 hours. It is such welcome news to hear that councils in some parts of the country are able to provide 1,140 hours to eligible children from August. As restrictions ease, more will be able to do so.

We are determined to return to our commitment to the expansion of childcare for all children, and we will work with local government and providers to deliver on that as quickly as possible.

We are confident that the careful reopening of childcare that we are setting out ensures that all children, as well as the adults working with them, will be safe and will feel safe, allowing them to make the most of their time together.

Our public health measures are key to keeping children and staff safe and healthy, while the experiences that children have ensure that their development flourishes, and all those who work in the sector can fully embrace the work that they love so much.

I was so reassured to hear this in a wonderful video from the Lullaby Lane nursery in Bearsden, where the message was clear:

“Things may be a little different when you return, but the fun and love will remain.”

In the same item of business

The Deputy Presiding Officer (Christine Grahame) SNP
The next item of business is a statement by Maree Todd, on childcare. The minister will take questions at the end of her statement, so there should be no int...
The Minister for Children and Young People (Maree Todd) SNP
I am grateful for the Parliament’s time in making this statement today. Saturday was Mandela day, and I was reminded of his famous quote: “There can be no k...
Jamie Greene (West Scotland) (Con) Con
I thank the minister for circulating her statement in advance. The new guidance on bubbles and blended care will be welcome news to many people watching thes...
Maree Todd SNP
The decision about the delivery of 1,140 hours was not made out of choice. The effects of the Covid-19 pandemic across many aspects of our lives have been an...
Iain Gray (East Lothian) (Lab) Lab
I thank the minister for providing early sight of her statement. Women at work face a perfect storm. There was a pre-existing gender employment gap, women a...
Maree Todd SNP
I assure the member that we will bring in the 1,140 hours commitment for all as soon as we can. I hope that he understands that it is my wish to do that as m...
The Deputy Presiding Officer SNP
Forgive me, but those were long answers. Twelve members want to ask questions and I have less than 12 minutes, so we need to move things along a little. In t...
Alison Johnstone (Lothian) (Green) Green
In her statement, the minister said that, on 30 July, the Government will publish guidance that will come into effect in August. She said that bubbles and ce...
Maree Todd SNP
I understand why Alison Johnstone asked that question but, at this moment, I am unable to give clarity. I would love to be able to give clarity about what th...
Beatrice Wishart (Shetland Islands) (LD) LD
The decision by Scottish ministers to cancel childcare for key workers before children are due to return to school means that, for just one week, key workers...
Maree Todd SNP
I am grateful for the question, because it gives me the opportunity to state again how grateful we are for the national effort to care for those children—wit...
Rona Mackay (Strathkelvin and Bearsden) (SNP) SNP
I was pleased to hear the minister quote the wonderful Lullaby Lane nursery in my constituency. Does the minister consider that the £11.2 million transition...
Maree Todd SNP
The Scottish Government is aware that, in order to give staff and parents confidence, the Scottish childcare sector has been working extremely hard to ensure...
Jamie Halcro Johnston (Highlands and Islands) (Con) Con
The minister has confirmed that the commitment to provide 1,140 hours of childcare will be far from uniform across Scotland and—Inaudible.—very different lev...
The Deputy Presiding Officer SNP
I hope that the minister got all that.
Maree Todd SNP
It sounded a little bit like the member was under water, but I hope that I will be able to respond. The Audit Scotland report that was published in March co...
The Deputy Presiding Officer SNP
Eight questioners are left, and the session is supposed to finish in four minutes’ time. I do not want them to miss out, so I ask for short questions and ans...
Annabelle Ewing (Cowdenbeath) (SNP) SNP
I return to the important issue of blended placements. The minister will be aware that the current restrictions mean that some playgroups, such as Aberdour p...
Maree Todd SNP
The Deputy First Minister confirmed last week—and I have reiterated today—that the latest expert guidance gives us confidence that we will be able to ease th...
Daniel Johnson (Edinburgh Southern) (Lab) Lab
Parents are receiving conflicting information about the resumption of breakfast and after-school club provision. Different schools are saying different thing...
Maree Todd SNP
We are assessing the situation regularly. The current priority is to resume schooling. From what we know about coronavirus, the risk increases in accordance ...
Stuart McMillan (Greenock and Inverclyde) (SNP) SNP
Given the importance of ensuring safety within ELC settings and that children have a good early learning experience, can the minister confirm that the work t...
Maree Todd SNP
I thank the member for his important question. We know that there will be challenges in returning to services after the turbulent break. In line with realisi...
Brian Whittle (South Scotland) (Con) Con
We know that councils have been paying for key worker childcare hubs from the original 1,140 hours budget. Will councils be reimbursed for that, to make sure...
Maree Todd SNP
We are in the process of reassessing the readiness of councils to deliver 1,140 hours. As I have mentioned many times, we are looking at buildings, staffing ...
John Mason (Glasgow Shettleston) (SNP) SNP
During the pandemic, many employers have been quite flexible and have allowed staff who are parents to work at home. Should we expect employers to continue t...
Maree Todd SNP
Access to flexible working is highly important and benefits all workers. It is especially beneficial for workers with childcare responsibilities—particularly...
Mark McDonald (Aberdeen Donside) (Ind) Ind
I have been contacted by constituents who operate businesses that provide music and movement classes for nought to five-year-olds. Those classes are not cove...
Maree Todd SNP
I thank the member for raising that important issue. I would appreciate it if he could write to me with details of the businesses involved and of the challen...
Dr Alasdair Allan (Na h-Eileanan an Iar) (SNP) SNP
Has the minister been encouraged by the operation of those outdoor nurseries that opened earlier in the summer, and has their experience informed the reopeni...