Meeting of the Parliament 06 February 2024
Mr Kerr makes a valid point. In approaching this legislation, we need to ensure that we do the most that we can. If there are examples from elsewhere, in particular close to home, we should look to those in respect of what we can do. We need to question whether, if the bill does not go as far as the temporary provisions that we enacted recently during Covid, it is going far enough.
My point about capacity leads me on to the point about the threshold. We do not have clarity in that regard. Although I understand that the Government will publish draft regulations before stage 3, it is hard to understand precisely to which group of people the provisions will apply.
The mental health moratorium working group, in its proposals, suggests that the provisions will apply to those undergoing compulsory treatment orders—in colloquial terms, those who have been sectioned. That is an extraordinarily high threshold. As we all know, only people who are experiencing the most severe and acute forms of mental health distress—those who are likely to harm themselves or others—will find themselves in that situation.
I understand—and I agree with—what the minister said about the need to find a balance, but I suggest that that threshold is too high.