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Showing 60 of 2,354,908 contributions. Latest 30 days: 0. Coverage: 12 May 1999 — 25 Mar 2026.
The Minister for Communities (Ms Wendy Alexander): Lab Chamber
10 Nov 1999
Homelessness
Let me make one observation. We had a debate in the chamber on 16 September, during which I announced that we were increasing the previous allocation of £14 million to £20 million, and that I would come back to the chamber to explain how that money would be spent. That is what...
The Minister for Communities (Ms Wendy Alexander): Lab Chamber
01 Jun 2000
Rough Sleeping
It is fitting that we are having a debate about rough sleepers and their needs while the Parliament is meeting in Glasgow, where Scottish homelessness is at its most acute. Today I want to update Parliament on how we are expanding the rough sleepers initiative to address the t...
Ms Alexander: Lab Chamber
16 Sep 1999
Homelessness
That exact point was the basis for the report, undertaken as part of the rough sleepers initiative, that hit my desk 10 days ago. Three quarters of the rough sleepers in Glasgow had used drugs in the last month; 60 per cent had mental health problems; few had medical support. ...
The Minister for Communities (Ms Wendy Alexander): Lab Chamber
16 Sep 1999
Homelessness
Tackling homelessness is a fitting challenge for this Parliament. The most extreme form of homelessness—rough sleeping—is one of the most serious forms of social exclusion in Scotland. It is demeaning, damages self-esteem and blights life chances, sometimes forever. That is wh...
Ms Alexander: Lab Chamber
01 Jun 2000
Rough Sleeping
Thank you. I shall be brief and shall answer directly.As part of that allocation, we are providing £26,000 for the resettlement project at Barlinnie. I can also confirm that we are providing £709,000 for Turning Point, to allow it to replicate the outstanding facility that exi...
Ms Alexander: Lab Chamber
01 Jun 2000
Rough Sleeping
No, I am sorry—I have taken a number of interventions.That additional funding will extend partnership working at local level. The single-agency approach will fail; we need to work across service boundaries. Seamless services through joined-up working are a top Executive priori...
Ms Alexander: Lab Committee
23 May 2000
Budget Process
That is an important point and I take it in the spirit in which it was made. To publish a budget, we have to make notional allocations—I stress notional. Under the comprehensive spending review, we inherited £330 million for housing in Scotland. Calum MacDonald undertook a not...
Ms Alexander: Lab Committee
23 May 2000
Budget Process
It is likely that more resources will be needed to meet the pledge. However, the most important thing is to get a strategic response in Glasgow and Edinburgh. As members may know, when we announced the additional resources for the rough sleepers initiative in April, we held ba...
Ms Alexander: Lab Chamber
10 Nov 1999
Homelessness
That was a very seriously asked question so I will give a serious answer. When the rough sleepers initiative was launched, the fact that it contained a challenge fund element was controversial. It had such an element because it was obvious that we were not solving the problem ...
Ms Alexander: Lab Chamber
01 Jun 2000
Rough Sleeping
It is simply not true that anybody in Glasgow who has been involved in the rough sleepers initiative was screaming for this money six months ago. We set up a Glasgow review team after people who are close to the ground in that city said that a new approach was needed. It was a...
Ms Alexander: Lab Chamber
10 Nov 1999
Homelessness
All the Lanarkshire authorities have successfully bid for rough sleepers money. One of the aspects of today's statement that has been commented on less is the commitment that every area of Scotland should benefit from the rough sleepers initiative. A number of local authoritie...
Ms Alexander: Lab Chamber
10 Nov 1999
Homelessness
I thank the member for his question, which is very reasonable in the context of what we are trying to achieve. I mentioned that, from the basis of the evaluation, it is clear that we need to talk to colleagues in the justice department and the health department who have shown ...
Ms Alexander: Lab Chamber
10 Nov 1999
Homelessness
I had not considered that, but given that one in 10 rough sleepers is an ex- serviceman, it seems a wholly fair suggestion. I am happy to raise that positively with the rough sleepers advisory group.
The Minister for Communities (Ms Wendy Alexander): Lab Chamber
08 Jun 2000
Local Government
Presiding Officer, I shall make a statement about our plans for modernising local government, which follows on appropriately from the debate that we have just had on local enterprise companies. As in that debate, the issue concerns the creation of opportunity for innovation an...
Ms Alexander: Lab Committee
29 Mar 2000
Housing Stock Transfer
The main problem has been a prolonged period of under-investment. From reading the considerations of the committee, I know that people are aware that the tenanted market value of all the housing stock in Scotland is assessed to be around £2 billion. Nevertheless, there is a hu...
Ms Alexander: Lab Committee
29 Mar 2000
Housing Stock Transfer
We would be interested in your view on that point, as I do not have a fixed view on it. The advisory board was established to introduce a degree of scrutiny and expertise into how we were choosing what areas to support. We have tried to follow that principle a fair amount in t...
Ms Alexander: Lab Committee
29 Mar 2000
Housing Stock Transfer
As I say, we are increasing investment by 40 per cent more than the Tories had planned. Not all of that is new housing partnerships money. Much of it is Scottish Homes development money, and much of it will go on our largest ever energy programme. Money for the rough sleepers ...
Ms Alexander: Lab Committee
23 May 2000
Budget Process
Oh God. I was going to say that it would take us back nicely to where we started. We have said that the voluntary sector issues unit should set up a management board that talks in a serious, grown-up way to the voluntary sector, as one of Scotland's social partners, about how ...
Ms Alexander: Lab Chamber
23 Sep 1999
Voluntary Sector
No, let me continue.Many individual cases have been raised here—it is right that people do that. I will talk about some of the individual cases that I have seen recently. It devalues the stability and responsibility of health boards if I parachute a response in now. Of course ...
Ms Alexander: Lab Chamber
10 Nov 1999
Homelessness
Almost all the authorities that have not benefited so far from the rough sleepers initiative, largely because they have not submitted bids that deal with the problem, are in rural areas. We are now working with those authorities to ensure that all areas of Scotland benefit fro...
Ms Alexander: Lab Chamber
10 Nov 1999
Homelessness
I have already said that further discussions will take place centrally, involving the rough sleepers initiative advisory group. The guidelines that were issued to local authorities today invite them to work locally with partners to think about how they can provide a package of...
Ms Alexander: Lab Chamber
01 Jun 2000
Rough Sleeping
I can offer Fiona Hyslop the reassurance that she seeks. The additional funding for the rough sleepers initiative that we are announcing today will be met from underspends that are carried forward from the previous financial year. The Minister for Finance will issue a more det...
Ms Alexander: Lab Chamber
01 Jun 2000
Rough Sleeping
Is Fiona Hyslop really suggesting that it is spin to continue every rough sleepers initiative project in Glasgow, and to provide an additional 250 flats, a rent deposit scheme, a credit union and a resettlement scheme for discharged prisoners from Barlinnie? Is that spin?
Ms Alexander: Lab Committee
27 Oct 1999
Evidence
I think that it is wholly misplaced to suggest that there is a hostile attitude towards local government in Scotland. McIntosh was widely regarded as an agenda for local government for which many people had campaigned for more than 20 years. It was widely welcomed, and we over...
Ms Alexander: Lab Chamber
16 Sep 1999
Homelessness
I am happy to commit that, tomeet the pledge, every area must have a comprehensive rough sleeping strategy. The challenge element, however, has allowed the people who put forward the best strategy to be the beneficiaries of the money. Sometimes the local authority has the best...
Ms Alexander: Lab Chamber
13 Feb 2003
Budget (Scotland) (No 4) Bill: Stage 3
As the member knows, the Executive is committed to the current constitutional settlement. He timed his intervention beautifully to allow me to move on to the fact that a week is a long time in politics for Opposition parties. For the next 10 weeks, the case that I imagine Alas...
Ms Wendy Alexander (Paisley North) (Lab): Lab Chamber
03 Mar 2004
Institute for Science Education in Scotland
I thank Lord James Douglas-Hamilton for initiating this debate. The fact that the Presiding Officer is already limiting the length of time members have to speak indicates the degree of commitment to the issue, throughout the chamber.Lord James started his speech by referring t...
Ms Alexander: Lab Committee
22 Dec 2004
Work Programme
Paragraph 9 says that we should consider the report because integrated community schools are"a key component of the Executive's education policy".I might be wholly wrong, but my impression is that the matter is not a key component of the Executive's education policy, partly in...
Ms Alexander: Lab Committee
05 Sep 2006
Public Finance (Management)
Arthur Midwinter's paper was certainly a meaty paper for me to come back to. However, the resolution that I am making on my return is that I will try to practise a less-is-more approach.Clearly, the paper identifies the three appraisal mechanisms for the evaluation of expendit...
The Convener: Lab Committee
23 Jan 2007
Efficient Government
Agenda item 3, on the Executive's efficient government initiative, is the substance of this morning's meeting. As members know, we have been scrutinising the initiative for some time. In the wake of Audit Scotland's report, we will take evidence today from the Auditor General,...
Ms Alexander: Lab Chamber
08 Jun 2000
Local Government
Mr Adam asked about the difference between general competence and a community initiative. The difference is essentially semantic. We have chosen the phrase "community initiative" because it was COSLA's favoured option; COSLA felt that it matched more closely the vision of comm...
Ms Alexander: Lab Chamber
25 Apr 2001
Scotland's Skills for Tomorrow
Making demands before even discovering whether production will continue at the site is a case of selling the jerseys.Kenny MacAskill raised the delicate issue of hairdressing in Glasgow. It has come up in the Parliament before. As I am regularly told to get a haircut in Glasgo...
Ms Alexander: Lab Chamber
06 Dec 2007
Devolution Review
The Scottish National Party should be careful before it attempts to strangle at birth an initiative that is based on what the people of Scotland want. It is depressing that the SNP has not allowed the initiative to proceed. We have a different viewpoint. We want to make the Un...
Ms Wendy Alexander (Paisley North) (Lab): Lab Committee
27 May 2009
Energy Inquiry
I want to pursue the point about investor confidence. My questions are really about how policy is driven forward and the minister's role in that in Government. It is desirable for Scotland to realise its wind energy potential, but that requires investor confidence. We can make...
Ms Alexander: Lab Committee
09 Sep 2009
National Trust for Scotland
You are not carrying any individual liabilities that are a drag—liabilities associated with any particular joint project or initiative that you would wish to move over to Historic Scotland or offload.
Ms Wendy Alexander (Paisley North) (Lab): Lab Committee
26 Jan 2005
Social Work Services Inspectorate
I apologise for being late.My question arises from the local reports that you kindly sent us, which link with your main annual report. I refer in particular to the time lags involved in the work of the children's hearings system. The report on Renfrewshire, my area, states:"th...
Ms Alexander: Lab Committee
07 Oct 2003
Convener's Report
What Margaret Ewing said hints at thinking a little more about our objectives for the meeting or conference. Three laudable objectives are involved and the ideal would be to have a single event of sufficient visibility to cover them all. One objective is visibility to the wide...
Ms Wendy Alexander (Paisley North) (Lab): Lab Committee
28 Oct 2003
Budget Process 2004-05
I have three questions but I will restrict myself to the first two at this point. The first is on the data and the second is on total spending levels.On the data, I compliment the author of the paper that we have received by saying that his recommendations get to the heart of ...
Ms Alexander: Lab Committee
23 Nov 2004
Cross-cutting Review of Economic Development
Many parliamentary questions have received answers that the Scottish Executive is undertaking an efficiency initiative that is as ambitious as the Gershon review in its scope, and it has said that it and will seek"to secure comparable or greater gains in efficiency."—Official ...
Ms Alexander: Lab Committee
07 Dec 2004
Efficient Government
I realise the discomfort that arises from holding any minister accountable for what other members of the Administration have said. Instead, I will focus on what Tom McCabe has said.You were helpful enough to confirm to me at the end of September that"The Scottish Executive is ...
Ms Alexander: Lab Committee
22 Feb 2005
Efficient Government
I see smiles all round, because committee members and witnesses know that efficient government has been a recent hobby-horse of mine. Grahame Smith's introduction was very helpful, because talk of crowding out is entirely misplaced in the context of Scotland. The issue is how ...
Ms Alexander: Lab Committee
10 May 2005
Efficient Government
I accept the minister's point about not denigrating staff.My second question is about cash-releasing savings, because time-releasing savings are the ones that involve staff. On cash-releasing savings, the technical efficiency notes confirm that the plan is to release just over...
Ms Alexander: Lab Committee
29 Mar 2000
Housing Stock Transfer
The entire new housing partnership programme is financed from the windfall of additional money that we have received. Support for councils continues at the same level; it has not been cut at all to finance the programme. There are other elements of the programme, such as rough...
Ms Alexander: Lab Committee
29 Mar 2000
Housing Stock Transfer
Yes. That is a feature not only of housing associations, but of tenant-management co-operatives. The notion of tenant-led, locally responsive services and management has been a major factor in the success of the initiative.
The Minister for Communities (Ms Wendy Alexander): Lab Chamber
03 Nov 1999
Voluntary Sector
Five weeks ago, when the eyes of Scotland were on the Hamilton by-election, this Parliament had its first chance to debate the voluntary sector—or, as it is more appropriately called, the third sector. I said then that we wanted to redefine the relationship between the third s...
Ms Alexander: Lab Chamber
24 Nov 1999
Social Justice
Tricia Marwick will have two hours, and should let me finish. We need to make decisions that recognise that Glasgow has one in eight households in Scotland, but that as only one in three of the homeless come from there, a special solution is needed, which Jackie Baillie is sor...
Ms Alexander: Lab Chamber
16 Dec 1999
Question Time · Poverty
I will try to address those points.The figure that is quoted about the uptake of free school meals reflects the skill of Glasgow City Council in ensuring that every child in that city who is eligible for free school meals gets them. On the point about unemployment, Fiona knows...
The Minister for Communities (Ms Wendy Alexander): Lab Chamber
30 Mar 2000
Question Time · Rural Housing
As part of the rural partnership for change initiative, which I announced on 11 March, we are considering whether provision needs to be made in the forthcoming housing bill to designate a specified period for pressured rural areas during which new tenants would not be able to ...
Ms Alexander: Lab Chamber
08 Jun 2000
Local Government
I apologise if the statement was received by Mr Gibson's office only 40 minutes beforehand; I will check the arrangements. We anticipate that the three areas covered today will have a statutory basis in primary legislation. The purpose of the pre-legislative consultation that ...
Ms Alexander: Lab Chamber
14 Sep 2000
Scottish Executive's Programme
In line with empowering local communities, I take it that we can look forward to Conservative party support for the power of community initiative, which enables local authorities in Scotland to lead community planning in their communities.
Ms Alexander: Lab Chamber
28 Mar 2001
Tourism and the Economy
The package of emergency relief is available. Yesterday, we put in place new leadership for visitscotland. Those people have industry expertise that stretches back many years and they want to take forward leadership of the industry. We were asked to introduce plans to deal wit...
The Minister for Enterprise and Lifelong Learning (Ms Wendy Alexander): Lab Chamber
25 Apr 2001
Motorola
I am sure that everyone in every party was shocked and dismayed by Motorola's announcement yesterday that it proposes to close its plant at Easter Inch in Bathgate. The news was devastating to the work force and I am sure that everyone will agree that we now have to do everyth...
Ms Alexander: Lab Chamber
25 Apr 2001
Motorola
I absolutely agree. Before I answer the specific points that she raises, I point out to members that Mary Mulligan has been in daily contact with the members of the Executive who have been involved in those very difficult discussions over recent weeks, and I record our gratitu...
Ms Alexander: Lab Chamber
25 Apr 2001
Motorola
Although in the past we might not have done all that we could have done for people who had been made redundant, if there is any silver lining to a horror story such as the one that we are discussing, it is the success of the wider Lothian area in dealing with major redundancie...
Ms Alexander: Lab Chamber
25 Apr 2001
Motorola
On the latter point, we think that there needs to be much improvement in the consultation and information framework for workers, which would operate through a workers council framework. The hostility of Motorola to trade union organisation globally is well known and is a matte...
The Minister for Enterprise and Lifelong Learning (Ms Wendy Alexander): Lab Chamber
03 May 2001
Question Time · Higher and Further Education (Partnerships)
The Scottish Executive's approach to knowledge transfer, innovation and business development is set out in two reports: "A Smart, Successful Scotland: Ambitions for the Enterprise Networks" and the knowledge economy cross-cutting initiative report. Both documents highlight the...
The Minister for Enterprise and Lifelong Learning (Ms Wendy Alexander): Lab Chamber
10 May 2001
Question Time · Schools (Promotion of Industry)
There is a wide range of education for work activities in schools, which are designed to give young people direct experience of the world of work. From this summer, the Scottish Executive will be conducting a review of education for work, focusing on establishing best practice...
Ms Alexander: Lab Chamber
10 May 2001
Question Time · Schools (Promotion of Industry)
There is no doubt that Jack McConnell, the Minister for Education, Europe and External Affairs, is much better informed on that part of the question than I am. The job of my department is simply to encourage industry to engage with schools.However, Jack McConnell has kindly pr...
Ms Alexander: Lab Chamber
20 Dec 2001
NEC Semiconductors
It is significant to record this while all members are here. The West Lothian action plan has been drawn up through an exemplary partnership between local agencies. We talk often about partnership working on economic issues. There has been an exceptional partnership, which has...
Ms Alexander: Lab Chamber
20 Dec 2001
NEC Semiconductors
I mentioned that some of the money that is being announced today is being spent on the creation of high-technology business units. In the east of Scotland, the availability of suitable property—particularly with short-term leases, which tends to be what high-technology compani...
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Chamber

Plenary, 10 Nov 1999

10 Nov 1999 · S1 · Plenary
Item of business
Homelessness
Let me make one observation. We had a debate in the chamber on 16 September, during which I announced that we were increasing the previous allocation of £14 million to £20 million, and that I would come back to the chamber to explain how that money would be spent. That is what I am doing now; I did not move one iota beyond that in saying to the press that that was what we were doing today.

There are a number of items in my statement— mindful of the guidance that we received last week—that will be news to the chamber. Of course, the Opposition has had pre-access to the statement and is therefore aware of its contents. I will now move on to my statement.

I am pleased to have the opportunity to bring to the Parliament my proposals for the next phase of the rough sleepers initiative. Since 1997, we have directed £16 million to projects that address the problems of those who live on the streets, under bridges and in disused buildings in the cities and villages of Scotland. We targeted the first tranche of money at those whom we knew, or thought we knew, were sleeping rough. It was important to get the first projects started because that would bring people in from the cold.

Many of the early projects were about outreach and street workers, but from the outset we knew that we needed to understand the issues better and to have work carried out at grass-roots level, so we set up a research project to evaluate what we were doing and to inform us on how the initiative might be taken forward. That was the inheritance that my ministerial colleagues and I in the communities team inherited in May: £16 million already allocated and new research just about to arrive.

It was on that basis that we chose to highlight in the programme for government that our pledge above all others was that by 2003 no one should have to sleep rough in Scotland. As everyone working in the field acknowledges, that is an ambitious goal and one with which we are proud to associate ourselves. Today, I am announcing the next phase in making that pledge a reality. I am inviting local authorities and their partners to bring forward proposals to spend a further £20 million in the next two years.

Crucially, the evaluation report that we are publishing today gives us the evidence to target the new investment at the heart of the problem. First and foremost, the evaluation tells us that many more people across Scotland than had previously been estimated have had the experience of sleeping rough. As many as 8,000 to 11,000 people in Scotland sleep rough during a year. They are not necessarily people who have no accommodation; they are people whose access to accommodation is so precarious that at times it is necessary for them to sleep in the open. In many cases, they will be the same people who

stay for brief periods in hostels, or in other forms of temporary accommodation provided by local authorities, voluntary organisations, friends and family.

Overwhelmingly, such people have been connected with the housing, social work or health services at some time. What the research tells us is that they slip through the net. Whatever solutions are available to them are not enough or are not sufficiently co-ordinated to give them the help they desperately need.

As is true of us all, rough sleepers have a complex cocktail of personal circumstances, although they are invariably more complex for rough sleepers than for most of us. That complex cocktail of personal circumstances goes well beyond housing. One in three rough sleepers surveyed had alcohol problems, one in three had a drug problem, one in four had a physical health problem and one in five had a mental health problem.

The message is that Scotland's rough sleepers need support to address their health needs, addiction issues and accommodation problems. Unless we can offer help on all those big issues— health, housing and addiction—the greatest risk is that people will quickly find themselves sleeping on the streets again.

The research shows how comprehensively we fail those for whom the state purports to care. One in four rough sleepers has been in local authority care, four in 10 have done time in prison, more than one in 10 have been in long-term care in hospitals and more than one in 10 have been in the armed forces. Quite simply, we have comprehensively failed those people as they have moved from our care into independent living.

The overriding message to us, Scotland's new legislators willing and anxious to solve the crisis of rough sleeping, is simple: provide the right support at the right time. That means support not just in a time of crisis, when the personal, social and financial costs are high, but Scottish support services available at the point where they are most needed, before the street becomes the only option. Above all, it means vital services in hostels and day centres not a bus ride across the city and not just during office hours. It means a package of support that addresses the whole person— sustained for as long as it is needed—because the cost of failing is a cost that we all bear.

Making that happen will depend on teamwork. I am delighted that the Minister for Health and Community Care and the Minister for Justice have agreed to involve formally the health and justice departments in the next phase of the rough sleepers initiative. We will examine the co-ordination of health and social work services with the provision of accommodation, the provision of advice and support for ex-offenders on their release from prison, the availability of alcohol and drugs detoxification and rehabilitation services for homeless and roofless people. We will consider how best to ensure that rough sleepers receive accessible health care.

In the guidelines I will issue today, local authorities are being invited to develop proposals that will make those connections on the ground. I have increased the budget by 40 per cent—to £20 million—to help them do that. A sum of £2 million will go to fund projects that address the full range of rough sleepers' needs and provide integrated, supported accommodation with some support services on site.

I am targeting authorities that have not yet developed strategies for addressing the problems of rooflessness in their area. I am making available £2 million to ensure that rough sleeping is tackled throughout Scotland.

We need to intervene earlier to ensure that people move out of hostels into homes, rather than from hostels to the street. A sum of £2 million is therefore being made available for effective preventive measures, such as rent deposit schemes, which will reduce the number of people who reach the point of having to sleep rough. The remaining £14 million will be directed towards projects that further develop existing strategies for tackling rough sleeping, some of which will involve continuation funding for projects that were developed in the earlier stages of the initiative.

Both the national evaluation that I have discussed today and the recently published Glasgow evaluation suggest that there is a particular problem with the provision of services for rough sleepers and homeless people in Glasgow. Glasgow has one in eight of the households in Scotland, but one in three homelessness applications come from that city. The Glasgow evaluation study found that 60 per cent of rough sleepers were regular hostel dwellers, that almost half of them had some sort of accommodation ban from hostels in the city, that 65 per cent had held a tenancy that had failed and that 70 per cent had at one time been evicted from their hostel or other accommodation.

Those statistics paint a stark picture of how the present system is failing. It fails to accommodate people and it fails to support and protect people if they are provided with accommodation. I know that many rough sleepers find living on the streets less frightening than staying in some of the hostel accommodation that is available. Too often, the mix of people in hostels exacerbates the problem. The hostels are too large. Some of them house more than 200 people in the most unsuitable accommodation, and little more than a caretaker is

available. Hostels mix young with old, and the vulnerable with those who are most likely to prey on them, and little is offered by way of co-ordinated help and support. That system belongs to the past and we mean to change it.

No one could argue with the conclusion that the problem of rough sleeping is at its most acute in Glasgow. Jackie Baillie, as chair of the homelessness task force, and I have therefore decided that we must make special arrangements to ensure that the scale and nature of the problem in Glasgow are fully addressed.

Today, I am announcing that a high-level team is being set up to review the current efforts to tackle the problems of street homelessness in Glasgow. It will determine what more needs to be done to improve the provision of accommodation— particularly hostel accommodation—and of social and other support for people with complex needs, and it will make recommendations for action. I expect the review to be thorough and fundamental. The team must therefore take the necessary action. That will take time. It will have to form an early view on proposals for rough sleepers initiative funding that are due to be submitted from Glasgow in early January.

One of the issues that I expect the team to consider is the present state of hostels in Glasgow and what should be done to improve them. I am under no illusions. I know that some will need to be replaced, others upgraded and others simply improved. I want the team to advise on how that can best be achieved, considering all the options, including the use of private finance.

The team will report through Jackie Baillie's homelessness task force. It will be chaired by the Scottish Executive, and I am pleased to say that the following experienced people have agreed to take part: Margaret Vass of Glasgow City Council housing department; Rab Murray of Glasgow City Council social work department; Catriona Renfrew of Greater Glasgow Health Board; Ian Robertson of the Hamish Allan Centre; Margaret Taylor of the Glasgow Council for Single Homeless; Liz Nicholson of Shelter Scotland; Mel Young of The Big Issue; Suzanne Fitzpatrick of the University of Glasgow centre for urban studies; and Louise Carlin, the co-ordinator for the rough sleepers initiative in Glasgow.

The Executive is serious about its commitment to end by 2003 the need for anyone to have to sleep rough in Scotland. To make it happen, we are prepared to make the necessary commitment in terms of funding and the additional effort that will be needed and to ensure that the different strands of government are connected. I am confident that through the rough sleepers initiative, through the homelessness task force, through the efforts of the new Glasgow strategy group and through the commitment of colleagues in other departments, long-term solutions can and will be developed. This is about the Parliament working in partnership with people at the sharp end across Scotland to make a difference. We can succeed.

In the same item of business

The Presiding Officer (Sir David Steel): NPA
Our next item of business is a statement on homelessness by Ms Wendy Alexander. The minister will take questions at the end of the statement, so there should...
Fiona Hyslop (Lothians) (SNP): SNP
On a point of order. Following the point of order last week about Executive ministers pre-announcing statements that are coming to the chamber, the Minister ...
The Presiding Officer: NPA
I regret to say that I heard that interview this morning. While it is fine for ministers to trail proceedings of the Parliament on the radio—that is a regula...
Bill Aitken (Glasgow) (Con): Con
On a point of order.
The Presiding Officer: NPA
Is it the same point of order?
Bill Aitken: Con
It is. Given that this is at least the second time that this matter has had to be raised by you in this chamber, will you undertake to raise the matter with ...
The Presiding Officer: NPA
The First Minister and I meet from time to time.
The Minister for Parliament (Mr Tom McCabe) rose— Lab
The Presiding Officer: NPA
Tom McCabe, do you have a point of order as well?
Mr McCabe: Lab
I wish to provide some clarification. Two points of order have been raised. It is a pity that the members concerned do not fully recollect previous announcem...
The Presiding Officer: NPA
Let us hear the statement.
The Minister for Communities (Ms Wendy Alexander): Lab
Let me make one observation. We had a debate in the chamber on 16 September, during which I announced that we were increasing the previous allocation of £14 ...
Fiona Hyslop: SNP
I thank the minister for her statement. I am sure that she agrees that 11,000 rough sleepers are Scotland's scandal. The minister confirmed that the £20 mill...
Ms Alexander: Lab
Fiona raises an interesting issue. I said in September that I was increasing the available money to £20 million. I talked to colleagues about whether it was ...
The Presiding Officer: NPA
There are many more members who want to ask questions than are on the lists that were submitted beforehand. Short questions—and answers—will help to get us t...
Bill Aitken: Con
I am obliged to the minister for her statement and for the fact that it was released in advance. Of the £14 million referred to in the minister's statement, ...
Ms Alexander: Lab
Those are two very pertinent issues. We are very concerned about what is happening in terms of waiting lists. Jackie Baillie's task force is examining that i...
Robert Brown (Glasgow) (LD): LD
I welcome the minister's statement on rooflessness. Should it represent only a partial solution, it is nevertheless welcome. Will the minister elaborate on t...
Ms Alexander: Lab
I thank the member for his question, which is very reasonable in the context of what we are trying to achieve. I mentioned that, from the basis of the evalua...
Paul Martin (Glasgow Springburn) (Lab): Lab
I understand that the minister and her team have visited several homelessness organisations to discuss matters with homeless people and their representatives...
Ms Alexander: Lab
I would like to draw members' attention to the fact that the money that has been spent so far—the £16 million—is beginning to make a real difference. I encou...
Mr Lloyd Quinan (West of Scotland) (SNP): SNP
I, too, would like to thank the minister for outlining where the money will go. Given the scale of the problem as revealed by the research, is the Executive'...
Ms Alexander: Lab
It is hugely ambitious, but it is worth it and we will do our best. We have not changed it.
Cathie Craigie (Cumbernauld and Kilsyth) (Lab): Lab
I welcome the minister's investment and the recognition that she is giving to homelessness and rooflessness. Glasgow has been highlighted as an area with maj...
Ms Alexander: Lab
All the Lanarkshire authorities have successfully bid for rough sleepers money. One of the aspects of today's statement that has been commented on less is th...
Fiona McLeod (West of Scotland) (SNP): SNP
The evaluation report indicates that the escalation in rough sleeping was closely associated with retrenchment in welfare provision, particularly in relation...
Ms Alexander: Lab
As Fiona knows, a consultation is taking place about how we should best support this vulnerable group of young people, which the current arrangements have fa...
Cathy Jamieson (Carrick, Cumnock and Doon Valley) (Lab): Lab
In relation to young people leaving the care system, I perhaps have a slightly different view from Fiona McLeod, because I know that young people leaving the...
Ms Alexander: Lab
Almost all the authorities that have not benefited so far from the rough sleepers initiative, largely because they have not submitted bids that deal with the...
Mary Scanlon (Highlands and Islands) (Con): Con
I welcome the initiative and the recognition of people with mental health problems who are sleeping rough. Will the minister outline the arrangements to supp...