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Chamber

Meeting of the Parliament 03 December 2025

03 Dec 2025 · S6 · Meeting of the Parliament
Item of business
Social Care

My constituent Charles McGarvey was an English teacher, but in 2018, his life changed forever. Following an accident, he became quadriplegic. He cannot use his arms and legs and must rely on support from carers. Life being paralysed is challenging enough, but in the past year, the specialist team that has supported him has disappeared, and he learned only through word of mouth that his overnight care would be terminated.

Mr McGarvey’s care needs have not changed. What has changed is the relentless drive for cuts in social care, and his story is typical of many of those who receive social care across Scotland. The United Kingdom Labour Government has delivered more than £10 billion of additional funding for Scotland since 2024, but it is up to the Scottish National Party Government to spend it.

So, where has the money gone? It has not gone into social care. For years, the SNP has underfunded health and social care partnerships—the local bodies that are responsible for the delivery of social care—and now the system is on the verge of collapse. There is a black hole in their budgets of almost £500 million in this financial year, so it is no wonder that they are being forced to make cuts. At least £90 million has been cut from services, at least £72 million has been cut by reducing social care capacity and at least £68 million has been cut from staffing budgets—the list goes on.

Social care providers in the voluntary sector are in danger of going to the wall and care homes are closing. Across Scotland, it is the poorest and most vulnerable who are paying the price. We are now funding only crisis care and only those who require critical care will get support. Everyone else who asks for help will have to fend for themselves.

In North Ayrshire, £500,000 has been slashed from the care at home service. There were cuts of £200,000 to residents’ care packages and £200,000 to day care. They did not want to do that, but the Scottish Government is underfunding them.

In Aberdeenshire, there are eight projects closing and there is reduced eligibility for day care centres, while the number of activity hubs for older people has halved. They did not want to do that either, but it is down to the Scottish Government underfunding them.

There have been 145 jobs lost in Glasgow to cover a £42.5 million gap. That has led to the loss of a supported living service for elderly people, including people with dementia, and the loss of a counselling service for victims of sexual assault. They did not want to do that, but it is down to a lack of Government funding.

In West Lothian, there is currently a consultation on cuts of £14 million, including a reduction in the number of adult day service support days. Care hours have been capped in Argyll and Bute, where the health and social care partnership is funding only critical care at the same time as closing day services and a care home. In Edinburgh, the health and social care partnership is cutting almost all funding to community mental health services. None of them want to cut services, but they are forced into doing that because they do not have the budget that they need.

Every few months, the Cabinet Secretary for Health and Social Care stands up in the chamber to say that we need more preventative care in the community—and I agree with him. However, that is not the reality on the ground. The reality is that preventative services are being slashed, leaving families to struggle on until they are in crisis. Experienced social care staff are losing their jobs at a time when the sector is struggling to recruit. For example, despite increasing clinical need, there are 28 per cent fewer registered nurses in care homes for adults compared with in 2013.

A recent survey by the Coalition of Care and Support Providers in Scotland found that 82 per cent of its members are funding shortfalls in contract costs themselves—that has been going on for years. More pressure is being piled on unpaid carers, who are yet to see the breaks that they are legally entitled to. As the story of my constituent shows, even those who have the highest care needs are having their support downgraded.

The SNP Government’s neglect of Scotland’s social care shames us all. It wasted £30 million and years of Government time on the so-called National Care Service (Scotland) Bill, which was a mess, and failed to pay for a single extra carer. The Government promised to scrap non-residential care charges, but we are still waiting for that. To add insult to injury, the £20 million that was recently announced to improve social care capacity over the tough winter period is being given to health boards rather than being directed at social care.

In the meantime, our population is growing older and sicker. The number of people who are waiting for a social care assessment is 30 per cent higher than at the same time last year, and nearly 2,000 people every month are stuck in hospital because of delayed discharge, which is mostly due to a lack of social care packages. We simply cannot afford for this to continue any longer.

At best, social care is delivered locally by a range of partners—by the public, private and voluntary sectors working together. That delivery is informed by the views of those who are being cared for and their families. Social care helps people to remain in their own homes without needing to go into hospital, but we are reversing that because of the serious lack of funding. The Scottish Government needs to stop patting itself on the back and spinning the amount of money that it is putting in, which simply fails to match the level of need that is evident and required.

I ask the Government, in all sincerity, to just implement the recommendations of the Feeley report, which the Government commissioned, and to raise the minimum wage for social care workers to £15 an hour, so that doing a challenging job—caring—does not pay less than stacking shelves at Aldi. For five years—I am nothing if not consistent—I have asked the SNP to do that but, for five years, it has said no. For years, the Government has blamed its failures on absolutely everybody else—it is never its fault—and it continues to do so today in its amendment, instead of facing up to and dealing with the crisis.

Scotland has a record budget settlement. This is the opportunity to make deep and meaningful change. The SNP Government must learn the lessons of the past two decades and prioritise social care. It must close the funding gap, prioritise the needs of vulnerable people and show that it values our vital social care workforce before it is too late.

I move,

That the Parliament believes that the Scottish Government’s failure to prioritise social care has fuelled a crisis, harming some of Scotland’s most vulnerable people, and calls on the Scottish Ministers to work to close the funding gap facing health and social care partnerships and value Scotland’s care workforce.

15:00  

In the same item of business

The Deputy Presiding Officer (Liam McArthur) LD
The next item of business is a debate on motion S6M-19977, in the name of Jackie Baillie, on crisis in social care. I invite members who wish to participate ...
Jackie Baillie (Dumbarton) (Lab) Lab
My constituent Charles McGarvey was an English teacher, but in 2018, his life changed forever. Following an accident, he became quadriplegic. He cannot use h...
The Cabinet Secretary for Health and Social Care (Neil Gray) SNP
I start by thanking those in our incredible social care workforce for all that they do. Their hard work and resilience ensure that those who need care receiv...
Paul Sweeney (Glasgow) (Lab) Lab
Will the cabinet secretary take an intervention?
Neil Gray SNP
If I can get the time back, Presiding Officer, I will take an intervention.
The Deputy Presiding Officer LD
You can get the time back, cabinet secretary.
Paul Sweeney Lab
On collaboration and co-operation, the cabinet secretary might be aware of my constituent six-year-old Brie McCann, who is urgently waiting for a transfer to...
Neil Gray SNP
That is not directly related to social care, but of course I am aware of the issue. I spoke about the issue on BBC Radio Scotland’s “Breakfast” programme thi...
Jackie Baillie Lab
Will the cabinet secretary take an intervention?
Neil Gray SNP
I know that Jackie Baillie does not want to hear that, so instead I will share with her some comments from the sector. In May, Donald Macaskill of Scottish C...
Jackie Baillie Lab
That is fantastic. This challenge has been on-going for years now. Year after year, there have been vacancies in social care that the Government has been una...
The Deputy Presiding Officer LD
Thank you, Mr Gray.
Jackie Baillie Lab
You had the power to do something about it, but you have failed.
The Deputy Presiding Officer LD
Always speak through the chair, Ms Baillie.
Neil Gray SNP
I challenge Jackie Baillie to defend her Government’s approach to migration, which, in the words of the industry, is undermining our approach to recruitment ...
The Deputy Presiding Officer LD
You need to conclude.
Neil Gray SNP
—to undermine our critical services; it is a disgrace.
Pam Duncan-Glancy (Glasgow) (Lab) Lab
Made a request to intervene.
Neil Gray SNP
I think that I need to conclude. Scotland has many talented and compassionate social care workers who have settled here and who call our communities home. W...
The Deputy Presiding Officer LD
I discourage members on the front benches from carrying on a conversation while someone else is on their feet. 15:08
Sandesh Gulhane (Glasgow) (Con) Con
I declare an interest as a practising NHS general practitioner. Scotland’s social care system is in crisis—not by accident but because this SNP Government ...
Neil Gray SNP
I recognise that there will be differences in viewpoint on the issue between us and the Conservatives, but I hope that you can see quite clearly that I have ...
Sandesh Gulhane Con
It is very clear that the Labour budget was damaging to our social care sector and our charities, but we cannot get away from the fact that the SNP has had 1...
Mark Ruskell (Mid Scotland and Fife) (Green) Green
I pay tribute to the social care staff and unpaid carers of all ages who work so hard to take care of people under often very difficult circumstances. Low pa...
Jackie Baillie Lab
Will Mark Ruskell take an intervention?
Mark Ruskell Green
I am in my closing sentences. I urge the Scottish Government to redouble its efforts, using all the powers that it has, to fund and reform a social care sys...
Alex Cole-Hamilton (Edinburgh Western) (LD) LD
I am grateful to Labour for making time to discuss this important issue. As we convene in the chamber this afternoon, any number of our constituents might be...
Emma Harper (South Scotland) (SNP) SNP
Will Alex Cole-Hamilton take an intervention?
Alex Cole-Hamilton LD
I am afraid that I have a lot to get through. It has been revealed that, notwithstanding the people I have just talked about, more than 11,000 people are cu...
Jackie Baillie Lab
Will the member take an intervention?