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Chamber

Meeting of the Parliament 26 February 2026 [Draft]

26 Feb 2026 · S6 · Meeting of the Parliament
Item of business
Substance Misuse in Prisons
Chapman, Maggie Green North East Scotland Watch on SPTV

I begin by thanking the Criminal Justice Committee for its work on this inquiry. The evidence that it heard and included in the report is sobering, urgent and, frankly, politically and morally challenging.

Let us begin with the reality: almost two thirds of people in our prisons have alcohol use disorder, and around 40 per cent were drunk at the time of their offence, yet referrals to specialist alcohol services remain vanishingly small compared with the scale of need. That is not simply a service gap—it is a political choice.

The committee’s report makes it clear that substance misuse in prison is not an isolated problem. It is the predictable outcome of trauma, poverty, inequality and a system that too often warehouses distress rather than responding to it. If we are serious about justice, we must be serious about public health. Prisons are being asked to manage what are fundamentally health crises.

Overcrowding, extended lock‑up, lack of purposeful activity and fractured mental health provision create conditions in which substances become coping mechanisms. When alcohol is less available, we see substitution with synthetic drugs, which are often more dangerous, unpredictable and harmful, and prison officers are left to pick up the pieces, whether or not they have had the appropriate training or have the correct personal protective equipment.

This is not about individual moral failure but about systemic neglect. The Scottish Greens support the committee’s recommendations on consistent assessment, closing the treatment gap, strengthening pre-release planning and improving continuity of care. We must, however, also be honest that implementing the recommendations remains at the current scale of imprisonment will only ever be a sticking plaster.

Scotland imprisons too many people. Many of them are there for short sentences that are linked to poverty, addiction or low-level offending. We know that short custodial sentences are ineffective, destabilising and criminogenic, yet we continue to rely on them. If 63 per cent of the prison population has alcohol use disorder, that is not a prison problem but a public health emergency that is playing out behind bars.

We should therefore be dramatically expanding community-based disposals with robust treatment requirements. We should be embedding trauma-informed care across the justice system. We should be piloting prison-based overdose prevention centres. We should ensure that medication assisted treatment is universally and proactively available, not just for opioids but for alcohol dependence.

We must guarantee that no one leaves custody without housing; healthcare registration; a prescription, if required; and a live appointment in the community. The weeks after release are the most dangerous and we cannot continue to discharge people into homelessness and expect recovery to follow.

We should go further. We must confront the uncomfortable truth that incarceration itself can deepen harm. When women who are leaving prison are nine times more likely to die from alcohol-related causes than the general population, that demands more than incremental reform—it demands transformation. Justice must mean healing, restoration and addressing the root causes of harm rather than simply punishing its symptoms.

The committee’s report gives us a road map, but the question for Parliament is whether we are brave enough to follow it, not just by tweaking services but by reimagining what justice looks like in Scotland. The Scottish Greens stand ready to support action that treats substance use as a health issue, reduces our reliance on imprisonment and centres dignity, compassion and evidence. If we truly believe that people can change, our system must also change.

16:14

In the same item of business

The Deputy Presiding Officer (Annabelle Ewing) SNP
The next item of business is a debate on motion S6M-20875, in the name of Audrey Nicoll, on behalf of the Criminal Justice Committee, on its substance misuse...
Audrey Nicoll (Aberdeen South and North Kincardine) (SNP) SNP
I am very proud to open the debate on the Criminal Justice Committee’s report into the harm caused by substance misuse in Scotland’s prisons. I thank our exc...
Angela Constance (Almond Valley) (SNP) SNP
I give my thanks to Audrey Nicoll in her capacity as convener of the Criminal Justice Committee. I will start by echoing the committee’s conclusion that a pu...
Sharon Dowey (South Scotland) (Con) Con
Scotland’s prison estate does not need to seek its troubles. Inmate numbers are at record levels, staff are reporting unprecedented challenges and prisoners ...
Pauline McNeill (Glasgow) (Lab) Lab
The committee launched its inquiry because repeated investigations, powerful testimony from families and staff, and the findings of the people’s panel all sh...
Maggie Chapman (North East Scotland) (Green) Green
I begin by thanking the Criminal Justice Committee for its work on this inquiry. The evidence that it heard and included in the report is sobering, urgent an...
Elena Whitham (Carrick, Cumnock and Doon Valley) (SNP) SNP
I welcome the Criminal Justice Committee’s report on substance use in Scotland’s prisons and thank the committee members for their care in ensuring that live...
Audrey Nicoll SNP
Will the member take an intervention?
The Deputy Presiding Officer (Annabelle Ewing) SNP
I am afraid that the member is concluding.
Elena Whitham SNP
If we want safer communities, fewer deaths and lower reoffending, we must ensure that our prisons are places where recovery is supported, dignity is upheld a...
The Deputy Presiding Officer (Annabelle Ewing) SNP
I remind all members who wish to speak in the debate to ensure that they have, in fact, pressed their request-to-speak button.16:20
Mark Griffin (Central Scotland) (Lab) Lab
It is clear from reading the findings of the Criminal Justice Committee’s inquiry into the harm caused by substance misuse in Scottish prisons that the issue...
Audrey Nicoll SNP
The point about purposeful activity has been raised by, probably, all speakers in the debate. Over the years, I have had the privilege of visiting HMP Grampi...
The Deputy Presiding Officer (Annabelle Ewing) SNP
I will give you the time back for the intervention, Mr Griffin.
Mark Griffin Lab
Thank you. I appreciate the points that Audrey Nicoll has made. However, the point that prison management made to me was that those issues were down to overc...
Rona Mackay (Strathkelvin and Bearsden) (SNP) SNP
The Criminal Justice Committee’s inquiry into substance abuse in prisons was at times harrowing, often emotional when the committee met affected prisoners an...
The Deputy Presiding Officer (Annabelle Ewing) SNP
We move to closing speeches. I call Maggie Chapman to close on behalf of the Scottish Greens.16:30
Maggie Chapman (North East Scotland) (Green) Green
The debate has reinforced something that many of us already knew: substance misuse in prison is not incidental; it is endemic and, as Elena Whitham highlight...
Michael Marra (North East Scotland) (Lab) Lab
I refer members to my entry in the register of members’ interests: I am a former deputy director of the Leverhulme research centre for forensic science at th...
The Deputy Presiding Officer (Annabelle Ewing) SNP
I call Sue Webber to close on behalf of the Scottish Conservatives.16:39
Sue Webber (Lothian) (Con) Con
Thank you, Presiding Officer—I thought that you had forgotten about me.Under the SNP, Scotland’s prisons have become warehouses for addiction. The committee’...
Angela Constance SNP
Will Ms Webber give way?
Sue Webber Con
If Ms Constance does not mind, I will not. I am a last-minute addition to the speakers list. Perhaps I will give way as I get through my speech; I am only fo...
Maree Todd (Caithness, Sutherland and Ross) (SNP) SNP
Tapadh leibh, Oifigeir Riaghlaidh. I thank all committee members for their contributions to the debate. Drug and alcohol use in prison is a public health cha...
The Presiding Officer (Alison Johnstone) NPA
I call Liam Kerr to wind up the debate on behalf of the Criminal Justice Committee.16:49
Liam Kerr (North East Scotland) (Con) Con
A key function of the committee system in a unicameral Parliament is to be independent of Government and party. At the outset, it is important to put on reco...
The Presiding Officer NPA
That concludes the debate on the substance misuse in prisons inquiry, on behalf of the Criminal Justice Committee. I will allow a moment or two for members o...