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Showing 60 of 2,354,908 contributions. Latest 30 days: 0. Coverage: 12 May 1999 — 25 Mar 2026.
Mary Scanlon (Highlands and Islands) (Con) Con Chamber
09 Feb 2016
Colleges
This has been an excellent debate. In all the years that I have been on the Public Audit Committee, it is the first debate that that committee has had in the chamber. I hope that there will be more in the next session of Parliament. I thank every member who contributed to the...
Mary Scanlon Con Committee
24 Feb 2016
Section 22 Reports
It really does not matter whether or not you were welcome and whether or not the board were talking to you. You had a serious job to do on behalf of the Scottish taxpayer and, indeed, on behalf of the Scottish Government. If you had done that, you would probably have saved the...
Mary Scanlon Con Committee
25 Nov 2015
Section 22 Reports
I have a letter here—the information is coming in by the hour. The letter was from you to the members of the remuneration committee. In regard to John Doyle, you stated: “having talked to John at some length, it is now clear that John’s position in Lanarkshire is becoming eve...
Mary Scanlon Con Committee
04 Nov 2015
Section 22 Report
Last week, the Scottish funding council confirmed that it issued the guidance in January that would have seen Mr Doyle get 12 months’ pay. Mr Gray and Mr Doyle both had that guidance, which proposed 12 months’ pay rather than 30 months’ pay. What information were you given ...
Mary Scanlon Con Committee
18 Nov 2015
Section 22 Report
We have had written submissions and oral evidence from the remuneration committee, and it was certainly not aware of the SFC guidance. Some members of the remuneration committee said that they were not aware that any guidance existed. Six members of the committee appeared befo...
Mary Scanlon Con Committee
04 Nov 2015
Section 22 Report
But Biggart Baillie thought that the remuneration committee had been advised. I think that we are now much clearer about the remuneration committee, the audit committee and so on, but I am still struggling to understand the role of Roger Mullin. An email from him to John Doyl...
Mary Scanlon Con Committee
25 Nov 2015
Section 22 Reports
You came up with a 6 per cent pay increase and two years’ salary, which is even more than any Edinburgh model. How did you come up with that very generous severance package for John Doyle? Who did you discuss that with, if it was not John Doyle—despite your talking to him at l...
Mary Scanlon Con Committee
25 Nov 2015
Section 22 Reports
We are all very grateful to the family of Francis McGeachie for giving us sight of the Linkston report. I am totally outraged at the amount of money that John Doyle walked away with, but the lack of compassion and empathy for staff at the college, which is evident from reading...
Mary Scanlon Con Committee
09 Mar 2016
Annual Report
When I came here in 1999, David McLetchie was my leader. He offered me the Health and Community Care Committee. I said, “I don’t know much about it. I go to the doctor once a year—that’s about it.” He said, “What is it that you want to do?” I said, “I would like to go on the A...
Mary Scanlon (Highlands and Islands) (Con) Con Committee
04 Nov 2015
Section 22 Report
I have read so much about the witnesses that it feels like you are characters in a novel who are coming to life. I am grateful for your evidence. Last week, John Doyle said, in response to a question that I asked him: “There were no voluntary severance applications prior to ...
Mary Scanlon Con Committee
18 Nov 2015
Section 22 Report
There is quite a significant audit trail from Laurence Howells, which I will not go over again today, throughout October 2013, which was the month before the 4 November meeting. A couple of paragraphs down in appendix 3, the document says: “There followed some discussion on ...
Mary Scanlon Con Committee
28 Oct 2015
Section 22 Report
At that point in time, the funding council had given you guidance to say that anything over 12 months’ pay was not acceptable. You had that information, Mr Doyle, and so did you, Mr Gray. We have evidence in front of us that those on the remuneration committee who made the ...
Mary Scanlon Con Committee
28 Oct 2015
Section 22 Report
Mr Doyle and Mr Gray, did you withhold any information from the remuneration committee before it made the decision on Mr Doyle’s severance agreement or the other agreement for senior staff? Did you withhold any information from the remuneration committee?
Mary Scanlon Con Committee
04 Nov 2015
Section 22 Report
Can you confirm that Mr Doyle asked for a voluntary severance application to be considered by the remuneration committee on 28 January? Were your deliberations on that day a response to Mr Doyle asking about voluntary severance? Did he apply?
Mary Scanlon Con Committee
04 Nov 2015
Section 22 Report
I will be very brief. Mr Doyle said last week that the Auditor General’s report was “incomplete, inaccurate and vexatious”. For the record, do you agree with the contents and accuracy of the Auditor General’s report, or do you agree with Mr Doyle?
Mary Scanlon Con Committee
04 Nov 2015
Section 22 Report
I want to ask about the £400,000 difference between the £1.3 million and the £1.7 million. We heard from Mr Doyle and Mr Gray last week that that money came from commercial activity. Can either of you—the internal or the external auditor—confirm that the additional payments to...
Mary Scanlon Con Committee
18 Nov 2015
Section 22 Report
Given how many lawyers and auditors and accountants were involved, you will have to forgive us if we get a wee bit confused. If there is a legal firm in Scotland that was not involved in the Coatbridge College case, it deserves a gold medal for keeping out of it. It looks as i...
Mary Scanlon Con Committee
18 Nov 2015
Section 22 Report
John Doyle phoned you and told you that you were about to get a call from John Gray. Did he tell you what John Gray was likely to be calling you about?
Mary Scanlon Con Committee
28 Oct 2015
Section 22 Report
So John Doyle and John Gray had the guidance on keeping within the level of severance payments in January and February.
Mary Scanlon Con Committee
28 Oct 2015
Section 22 Report
Well, can I tell you what is appropriate? I looked in the dictionary yesterday, and withholding information is called “deceit”. That is the definition in the dictionary. The Scottish public finance manual uses “The term ‘fraud’ ... to describe a wide variety of dishonest beh...
Mary Scanlon Con Committee
18 Nov 2015
Section 22 Report
It is very important that we know. John Gray was aware of the Scottish funding council guidance, and you were aware of the Scottish funding council guidance, which was that, if someone had been in post for 14 years, they got 12 months’ pay. The remuneration committee, which ma...
Mary Scanlon Con Committee
25 Nov 2015
Section 22 Reports
The letter to the remuneration committee states that “John ... now believes that the best way forward for all concerned, and, bearing in mind that there will only be one Principal’s job ... that we should now agree a severance package with him”. So you are adamant, despite e...
Mary Scanlon Con Committee
25 Nov 2015
Section 22 Reports
Your letter to the remuneration committee asked for a meeting, and you even gave your home phone number. You stated in it: “If you are happy with the proposal that we offer John voluntary severance as outlined above ... I will of course ask Lorraine to convene a Remuneration ...
Mary Scanlon Con Committee
25 Nov 2015
Section 22 Reports
No, I am asking what you discussed with the remuneration committee. What did you tell its members in relation to the SFC guidance, which you knew about and they did not? Did you tell them that the SFC had no objections to your generous offer to John Doyle “to celebrate John’s ...
Mary Scanlon Con Committee
24 Feb 2016
Section 22 Reports
You were given sanctions that you refused to use, which made life easy for John Doyle and John Gray. Have you ever used those sanctions?
Mary Scanlon Con Committee
24 Feb 2016
Section 22 Reports
Do you realise the signal that that puts out? John Gray and John Doyle knew perfectly well that they could do what they wanted.
Mary Scanlon Con Committee
24 Feb 2016
Section 22 Reports
Attending a 10-minute meeting where you were unwelcome and nobody was talking to you was hardly using all the powers at your disposal. You are a serious government agency with a serious budget, but you allowed yourself to be pummelled around by John Doyle and John Gray. They m...
Mary Scanlon Con Committee
04 Nov 2015
Section 22 Report
On 28 January, you agreed to one month’s salary for each year, up to a maximum of 21 months. You also agreed to an extra three months’ pay for successfully taking the college through the merger—which the college opted out of two weeks later—plus another six months. If Mr Doyle...
Mary Scanlon Con Committee
04 Nov 2015
Section 22 Report
I have one more tiny question. My understanding is that the legal advice was that the decisions of the remuneration committee were legally binding on the college. Have you any idea why Roger Mullin from the Scottish Government, who was facilitating the merger process, sent an ...
Mary Scanlon Con Committee
04 Nov 2015
Section 22 Report
Given that Mr Doyle agreed to voluntary severance at the end of January and had a letter of confirmation from John Gray, why is Roger Mullin’s email of 18 August inviting him in to discuss the approach to due diligence, culture study and voluntary severance?
Mary Scanlon Con Committee
18 Nov 2015
Section 22 Report
There is nothing general about the specific discussion of 21 months’ pay for John Doyle, and three months’ pay for taking the college through the merger and six months’ pay plus a £90,000 pension contribution—
Mary Scanlon Con Committee
18 Nov 2015
Section 22 Report
Did you tell them that the Scottish funding council guidance on voluntary severance referred to an amount that was considerably less than—it was less than half of—what they were discussing for John Doyle?
Mary Scanlon Con Committee
18 Nov 2015
Section 22 Report
How were its members made aware of it? John Doyle said that they could go and look at the intranet. Was that making them aware?
Mary Scanlon Con Committee
18 Nov 2015
Section 22 Report
You are saying that John Doyle said that the information was on the intranet for the members of the remuneration committee if they wanted to see it. You did not give them a piece of paper that gave them the basic guidance and told them that they could go over that figure but t...
Mary Scanlon Con Committee
18 Nov 2015
Section 22 Report
Well, I am sure that we will hear from the remuneration committee. I have one final question. Ms Gunn, you are probably the only person who had access to John Doyle’s contract of employment. Was the 30 months’ pay—which was hugely generous at a time of a public sector funding...
Mary Scanlon (Highlands and Islands) (Con) Con Committee
25 Nov 2015
Section 22 Reports
Mr Gray, did I hear correctly that you said in your opening statement that John Doyle never asked for a severance package?
Mary Scanlon Con Committee
25 Nov 2015
Section 22 Reports
Did you never discuss a severance package with John Doyle prior to the remuneration committee deliberations on 28 January 2013?
Mary Scanlon Con Committee
25 Nov 2015
Section 22 Reports
Did Mark Batho say that it was fine to give John Doyle a 6 per cent pay rise and that it was fine to pay 21 months’ salary plus three months’ salary plus an extra six months’ salary? Did Mark Batho endorse that?
Mary Scanlon Con Committee
25 Nov 2015
Section 22 Reports
It is in the Auditor General’s report. We would be failing in our duty as the Public Audit Committee if we did not cover it. My next question is for John Doyle. As the accountable officer, why did you not inform the internal auditor or instruct the internal auditor to be info...
Mary Scanlon Con Committee
25 Nov 2015
Section 22 Reports
Given that ministers appoint the chairs of college boards, which creates a direct line of accountability to ministers, it concerns me—and, I think, the public, who have taken a fair interest in the Coatbridge situation—that, if it had not been for the Auditor General’s section...
Mary Scanlon Con Committee
24 Feb 2016
Section 22 Reports
I want to talk more about being forceful. I refer you to the letter of 17 February that you sent to the convener, in which you seem to accept—grudgingly—the recommendations of the committee. I do not want to pick over the coals, because we have already spent huge amounts of...
Mary Scanlon Con Committee
24 Feb 2016
Section 22 Reports
I am interested in preventing the senior team from receiving an unjustifiable package, and I do not want to digress, but if you want to answer quickly I am happy about that. The point that really concerns me is that you had sanctions but did not use them. The college probably...
Mary Scanlon: Con Committee
26 Jan 2010
New Petitions
Convener, thank you for allowing me to speak to the petition even though I am not a member of the committee. I have supported the petition on the website, so I will just briefly add some points about my support.When I tried to intervene earlier—for which I apologise, convener,...
Mary Scanlon (Highlands and Islands) (Con) Con Chamber
04 Feb 2014
Marriage and Civil Partnership (Scotland) Bill
I commend my colleague and friend Jackson Carlaw on his speech. As a fellow Conservative, I fully understand and empathise with many of the thoughts and views that he expressed.I have received many of the emails that John Finnie received, to which I will come back.I welcome th...
Mary Scanlon (Highlands and Islands) (Con) Con Chamber
24 Nov 2011
Orthopaedic Trauma Services (Ayr Hospital)
I, too, thank John Scott for securing this debate. I am standing in for my colleague Jackson Carlaw, who is unable to attend Parliament today. John Scott is, indeed, a worthy local champion for health services in his constituency—and rightly so. After all, it is the duty and ...
Mary Scanlon Con Committee
28 Oct 2015
Section 22 Report
Was the excessive payment to Mr Doyle—let us forget the rest of the team—part of an attempt to incentivise him to move on and clear the way for the merger?
Mary Scanlon Con Committee
28 Oct 2015
Section 22 Report
Was Mr Doyle an impediment to the merger?
Mary Scanlon Con Committee
28 Oct 2015
Section 22 Report
Your focus was on the merger process. There was an agreement that, for the merger to be a success, Mr Doyle had to move on, and he walked away with a significant amount of public money.
Mary Scanlon Con Committee
28 Oct 2015
Section 22 Report
Tavish Scott asked about Mr Doyle being asked to move on. Surely that was part of the merger process.
Mary Scanlon Con Committee
28 Oct 2015
Section 22 Report
After paragraph 17, the Auditor General’s report says: “The Chair and Principal of Coatbridge College did not provide the college’s Remuneration Committee with advice provided by the SFC”. Paragraph 13 says: “There is no evidence that the Remuneration Committee or the Board...
Mary Scanlon Con Committee
28 Oct 2015
Section 22 Report
Not even in relation to Mr Doyle being told that he could not apply for the post of principal?
Mary Scanlon Con Committee
28 Oct 2015
Section 22 Report
I will ask about something that has not been raised yet. Paragraph 16 of the Auditor General’s report says that a member of staff in the principal’s office received a pay increase of 19 per cent in January 2013, which was in the middle of the public sector pay freeze. That was...
Mary Scanlon Con Committee
04 Nov 2015
Section 22 Report
We have to establish the facts here. The Auditor General’s report talks about information being withheld, and the fact is that you came to a decision on the basis of the information that you had and the voluntary severance decision that you made was much more generous than it ...
Mary Scanlon Con Committee
04 Nov 2015
Section 22 Report
Is it fair to say that, if you had the Scottish funding council guidance that you are aware of now, you would not have agreed to give Mr Doyle 21 months’ pay plus an extra three and then another six?
Mary Scanlon Con Committee
04 Nov 2015
Section 22 Report
I am asking the question because the Scottish Parliament information centre, the Parliament’s research unit, has highlighted that “The term ‘fraud’ is ... used to describe ... concealment of material facts” and “is usually used to describe the act of depriving a person of s...
Mary Scanlon Con Committee
04 Nov 2015
Section 22 Report
Over the years, we have heard quite a few opinions about Auditor General reports, but we have never heard them described as “incomplete, inaccurate and vexatious”. Auditor General, can I ask you to respond to Mr Doyle’s description—or opinion—of the Auditor General’s report on...
Mary Scanlon Con Committee
04 Nov 2015
Section 22 Report
I am very grateful—I think that it was important to get that on the record. I appreciate that you have listened to all the evidence that we have heard. Are you any clearer now about who developed the terms of the severance payments to Mr Doyle that were presented to the remun...
Mary Scanlon Con Committee
18 Nov 2015
Section 22 Report
That is hardly a general discussion—it is specific to Mr Doyle.
Mary Scanlon Con Committee
18 Nov 2015
Section 22 Report
Did you point out that the generous terms for Mr Doyle that the committee was discussing were way above those that the SFC guidance recommended?
Mary Scanlon Con Committee
18 Nov 2015
Section 22 Report
That is not what they said. You are saying that they were given a copy of the SFC guidance that said that, after 14 years’ service, someone could get 12 months’ pay. You are saying that they all ignored that guidance and that, when they came here, they told us mistruths about ...
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Chamber

Meeting of the Parliament 09 February 2016

09 Feb 2016 · S4 · Meeting of the Parliament
Item of business
Colleges
Scanlon, Mary Con Highlands and Islands Watch on SPTV

This has been an excellent debate. In all the years that I have been on the Public Audit Committee, it is the first debate that that committee has had in the chamber. I hope that there will be more in the next session of Parliament.

I thank every member who contributed to the debate, and I have to say that I detected a bit of additional anger coming from those MSPs who are members of the committee. When Paul Martin spoke about the hours that we spent taking evidence, he did not mention the hours that we spent reading the hundreds and hundreds of pages of evidence that we all received.

I acknowledge a point that was made by Colin Beattie and the cabinet secretary. Because things were so bad at Coatbridge and North Glasgow, at the outset of this speech I point out that it would be wrong to say that all colleges are the same—they are not. There is absolutely excellent best practice in Scotland that should be put on the record.

However, we regularly debate how money should be allocated in Scotland’s public sector. We do that every week and in every debate, but we should perhaps scrutinise a bit more thoroughly how well the money is spent in relation to delivering value for money and high-quality public services. When we meet someone like John Doyle, it is right that they are named and shamed and that we were willing to use the Parliament’s powers to compel him to give evidence. It is only right that that has been done across the chamber today.

The debate highlights the work of the Parliament’s Public Audit Committee. I commend the excellent chairing of the committee by Paul Martin, who ensured that a fair, thorough and measured approach was taken to the volumes of information and figures brought forward. The inquiry showed the Parliament's Public Audit Committee at its best, doing the job that it is tasked to do. This Parliament is at its best when every member on every committee works together and we certainly did that on this occasion.

We also received the Linkston report, which was conducted as a review of the merger process at Coatbridge College. I thank the family of Francis McGeachie, who insisted that the committee should see the report, which highlighted that the arrogant approach pursued by the principal of the college allowed no duty of care to the rest of the staff. Tragically, depute principal Francis McGeachie took his own life during the merger process at Coatbridge College.

Even the college trade unions were described as going ballistic when they heard of the principal's pay-off, which was far in excess of anything they may ever have dreamed of.

The Public Audit Committee has been monitoring the college mergers, but we still do not have an accurate figure for the cost of the process, although £52 million was allocated for the purpose. We cannot monitor the promised improvements in the quality of education, as it seems that there are no baseline figures for comparison. The £50 million of savings that were promised are hard to find, although the Scottish funding council says that it is on track to achieve those savings.

An Audit Scotland report in 2012 on “Learning the lessons of public body mergers” was available to guide organisations through the merger process. However, we have found serious issues relating to police reform; a huge funding gap in the Scottish Fire and Rescue Service; and college reform sometimes following worst rather than best practice.

The Auditor General described the section 22 report on Coatbridge as highlighting

“very serious failures of governance ... among the most serious that I have seen during my time as Auditor General.”—[Official Report, Public Audit Committee, 9 September 2015; c 11.]

At the outset of the merger process, the Scottish Government and the Scottish funding council should have set out the parameters for severance payments. The information and guidance was there, but the Government and the SFC allowed colleges to go their own way. The committee’s report asks that the Government looks again at the operation of the Scottish funding council and the effectiveness of its role. That is quite a stark recommendation, and I hope that we will hear back from Government on what its plans are.

It was that lack of rigour that allowed Mr Gray to present to the remuneration committee a severance package for John Doyle that was well over the level that was specified in the guidance. When the remuneration committee agreed the package, there was no agenda and no formal papers. John Doyle received written confirmation of the deal—and it was a deal—within 24 hours, yet the minutes of the meeting were not written up for nine months. It seems that the board of management at the college was not notified either, despite every member of the remuneration committee sitting on the board.

There is no doubt that information was withheld from the remuneration committee members in order to ensure that John Doyle got the package of more than £300,000, with no business case whatsoever to support it. Even the legal advice that was given was based on a lack of information, given that the lawyer was unaware of John Doyle’s letter confirming his severance pay. While there was a public sector pay freeze, John Doyle gave his personal assistant a pay rise of 19 per cent on the basis of her communication skills. The college was out of control at that time.

The Public Audit Committee has carried out a rigorous piece of work on Coatbridge College and it is now for others to follow the process through. I agree with other members that John Doyle should pay back the additional lump sum that he received.

It is now 11 years since the Parliament set up the Office of the Scottish Charity Regulator. The evidence that the committee received pointed to the need for extended powers in order to deal with the other John Doyles around Scotland, who think that public money can be exploited to benefit themselves rather than being used for the purpose of educating and training people and providing high-quality public services.

One of the most disappointing aspects of the inquiry and the report was the failure of the Scottish funding council to hold further education colleges to account. The funding council’s lack of effectiveness and governance allowed for public money to be exploited at Coatbridge College, and it is the Scottish Government’s responsibility to ensure that it now steps up to the mark and carries out the job that it is tasked to do.

There is a substantial amount of evidence in the committee’s report, in addition to the documentation that we received, to enable Police Scotland to carry out an investigation, and I trust that the committee’s recommendation in that respect will be fulfilled.

Finally, I hope that the investigation in Coatbridge will serve as a warning to all other institutions and other individuals in Scotland that, when scarce public money is wasted, they will receive a polite invitation to the Parliament’s Public Audit Committee to account fully for their actions.

In the same item of business

The Deputy Presiding Officer (Elaine Smith) Lab
The next item of business is a debate on motion S4M-15584, in the name of Paul Martin, on the Public Audit Committee’s three reports: “Report on Scotland’s c...
Paul Martin (Glasgow Provan) (Lab) Lab
On behalf of the Public Audit Committee, I welcome the opportunity to highlight our work on the colleges sector, which has been a major component of the comm...
The Cabinet Secretary for Education and Lifelong Learning (Angela Constance) SNP
I welcome the opportunity to set out the success of Scotland’s colleges, to reflect on the need for stronger accountability and to look to the future of this...
Jackie Baillie (Dumbarton) (Lab) Lab
I welcome the opportunity to contribute to the debate. Colleges are critically important institutions that provide vocational education and improve employabi...
Liz Smith (Mid Scotland and Fife) (Con) Con
When the Auditor General for Scotland says that this case was among the most serious failures of governance that she has ever seen in her time, the Scottish ...
The Deputy Presiding Officer Lab
We come to the open debate. Members have been advised that speeches would have to be of four minutes. I can give members very slightly longer than that. 16:35
Colin Beattie (Midlothian North and Musselburgh) (SNP) SNP
The Auditor General’s report “Scotland’s colleges 2015” confirmed that college finances were sound, that planning for mergers was good and that, overall, the...
Nigel Don (Angus North and Mearns) (SNP) SNP
I am very grateful to the member for taking an intervention. As a member of the Public Audit Committee, I sat there thinking all the things that he has just ...
Colin Beattie SNP
The cabinet secretary mentioned that the college governance task force is looking at such issues as training of board members, so I hope that that will be ad...
The Deputy Presiding Officer Lab
Could you draw to a close, please?
Colin Beattie SNP
The investigation highlighted the unacceptable behaviour of a few people in the college sector, but we should remember that not everyone in the sector should...
James Kelly (Rutherglen) (Lab) Lab
I thank the Public Audit Committee for the in-depth work that it carried out on the reports on Coatbridge College and North Glasgow College. I think that the...
Tavish Scott (Shetland Islands) (LD) LD
This debate would not be happening were it not for Audit Scotland and Caroline Gardner, the Auditor General for Scotland. It is on days like this that a numb...
George Adam (Paisley) (SNP) SNP
I am not a member of the Public Audit Committee, but I sat on it during the first year of this session, and I am only too aware of its work programme. I appr...
Patricia Ferguson (Glasgow Maryhill and Springburn) (Lab) Lab
I, too, thank the Auditor General for illuminating the entire saga, and I thank the Parliament’s Public Audit Committee for the thorough and analytical repor...
Stuart McMillan (West Scotland) (SNP) SNP
As someone who studied at college before attending university, I have a huge amount to thank further education for. I was happy to support the proposals for...
Liz Smith Con
In her opening speech, the cabinet secretary was quite correct to say that this is a response to three serious reports. Stuart McMillan has eloquently explai...
The Deputy Presiding Officer Lab
Before I move on, I point out that Mr Kelly was mentioned in Liz Smith’s speech but unfortunately was not in the chamber. I remind members that they should c...
Mark Griffin (Central Scotland) (Lab) Lab
I am pleased to have the opportunity to speak in the Public Audit Committee’s debate on Scotland’s colleges. I pay tribute to the Auditor General, her staff ...
Angela Constance SNP
Once again, I want to reinforce how important the work of Audit Scotland is in helping us to focus on the actions that we can and should take. When I was fir...
Nigel Don SNP
Will the cabinet secretary take an intervention?
Angela Constance SNP
I am running out of time, but I will take a brief intervention.
The Deputy Presiding Officer Lab
Be very brief.
Nigel Don SNP
I am grateful for the cabinet secretary’s comments about governance. Was she as surprised as I was at the very limited powers that OSCR seemed to have to dea...
The Deputy Presiding Officer Lab
Cabinet secretary, I can give you a few seconds more.
Angela Constance SNP
Yes, and Government officials remain in contact with OSCR to deal with any outstanding concerns that it has in relation to the powers that it has or does not...
The Deputy Presiding Officer Lab
Cabinet secretary, I must ask you to conclude.
Angela Constance SNP
Seeking that approval is a term and condition of grant, and ministers now have far more explicit powers to remove incorporated college boards for serious or ...
Mary Scanlon (Highlands and Islands) (Con) Con
This has been an excellent debate. In all the years that I have been on the Public Audit Committee, it is the first debate that that committee has had in the...