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Showing 60 of 2,354,908 contributions. Latest 30 days: 0. Coverage: 12 May 1999 — 25 Mar 2026.
Mr Keith Raffan (Mid Scotland and Fife) (LD): LD Chamber
28 May 2002
Drug Misuse in North-East Scotland
The most dramatic part of the Social Inclusion, Housing and Voluntary Sector Committee's inquiry into drug misuse in deprived communities is between pages 42 and 47 of the report, and I refer members to those pages. Maps of Scotland and the regions of Scotland are used to show...
Mr Raffan: LD Chamber
20 Jan 2000
Drug Misuse
I am not going to give way again at this stage. We need to see the evidence of that balance in terms of spending. As I said, the Government's own figures show that for every £1 spent on treatment, £3 is saved elsewhere. I want to be constructive, but we need to focus more on t...
Mr Keith Raffan (Mid Scotland and Fife) (LD): LD Chamber
25 Nov 1999
Law and Order
I will concentrate almost entirely on drugs issues. It is 13 years ago since I took a private member's bill through the House of Commons, with the support of all parties: the Scottish nationalists, Plaid Cymru, Tories, Labour, the Liberal Democrats and the unionists. That was ...
Mr Raffan: LD Chamber
20 Jan 2000
Drug Misuse
No—I have taken enough interventions and I really must make progress. There is too much variation from one education authority to another. We need best practice to be shared and we must emphasise the importance of making information available outside schools. It is a sad truth...
Mr Raffan: LD Chamber
22 Mar 2001
Drug Misuse and Deprived Communities
Not at this stage. The committee and the Executive are at one in their approach; we both want a balanced approach. Unlike Mr Sheridan, I recognise the need for enforcement, although I lean more towards treatment and rehabilitation. We must cut supply through enforcement and cu...
Mr Keith Raffan (Mid Scotland and Fife) (LD): LD Chamber
01 Mar 2000
Drugs Strategy
I do not often agree with Tommy Sheridan, but I agree with the last point that he made. I think that the emphasis of Executive policy is wrong, and the minister knows that I think that. There is too much emphasis on enforcement and not enough on treatment and prevention.I have...
Mr Keith Raffan (Mid Scotland and Fife) (LD): LD Chamber
28 Nov 2002
Drugs Courts
I disagreed with nothing that Ms Cunningham said in her speech and I agreed with nothing that Mr Aitken said in his speech. So much for Iain Duncan Smith's attempts at social inclusion, meagre though they were—they have crashed down today with Mr Aitken's appalling and dreadfu...
Mr Keith Raffan (Mid Scotland and Fife) (LD): LD Chamber
01 Jun 2000
Rough Sleeping
I will concentrate my remarks on how rough sleepers are affected by drug abuse and alcohol misuse. Janis Hughes quite rightly said that not all rough sleepers have alcohol or drug problems. However, a huge majority of them do.There has been a consultation paper on alcohol misu...
Mr Raffan: LD Chamber
22 Mar 2001
Drug Misuse and Deprived Communities
No. I have an awful lot to say and, sadly, I know the Tory approach by heart.I am glad that Mr Aitken has moved his position. He made a very positive contribution to the Social Inclusion, Housing and Voluntary Sector Committee report and I hope that he has some effect on Mr Ga...
Mr Keith Raffan (Mid Scotland and Fife) (LD): LD Chamber
11 May 2000
Drugs Action Plan
Like other members, I welcome the direction of the minister's statement, but the proof of a strategy is in its effective implementation. I especially welcome the fact that policy will be increasingly research and evidence based. Does the minister agree that our strategy should...
Mr Keith Raffan (Mid Scotland and Fife) (LD): LD Chamber
14 Nov 2002
Crime
In the short time that is available to me, I will focus on drug and alcohol problems and their relation to the criminal justice system. It is in everybody's interests, especially victims' interests, that we break the cycle of reoffending. Ultimately, that is what prison and al...
Mr Raffan: LD Committee
03 Nov 1999
Evidence
The second thing I want to mention is the involvement of the private sector. To what extent have you examined what happens in other countries, particularly the United States? We do not want to follow them blindly, but in areas such as mentoring—I am surprised that it has not b...
Mr Raffan: LD Committee
10 May 2000
Drug Inquiry
I would like to ask about funding. COSLA talks about inequalities in service provision; you talk about treatment services being patchy. Last week, the minister gave me some figures: 46 per cent of the drug budget is for enforcement; 39 per cent is for treatment and rehabilitat...
Mr Keith Raffan (Mid Scotland and Fife) (LD): LD Chamber
07 Dec 2000
Alcohol Misuse
I am sorry to see that the minister appears to be leaving. I hope that he will return to the chamber shortly, because it is traditional for ministers to sit through the whole debate, particularly if the debate is on a subject as serious as alcohol misuse.I have been involved i...
Mr Keith Raffan (Mid Scotland and Fife) (LD): LD Chamber
15 Jun 2000
Crime and Punishment
The issue of tackling drug abuse should be central to this debate. The number of injecting heroin addicts in Glasgow is estimated at between 12,500 and 15,500. The figure for Scotland—which I think is an underestimate given by the Executive—is more than 30,000. The addicts in ...
Mr Raffan: LD Chamber
27 Oct 2004
Drugs Misuse
I will not give way; the member did not give way to me. If Miss Goldie starts to show courtesy to other members during her speeches, I will show courtesy to her. She should sit down and listen and learn, because her speech was outrageous. It undermined the work of many people ...
Mr Raffan: LD Chamber
17 Jun 1999
Question Time · Drug Treatment Programmes
Does the minister share my serious concern—and that of members from all parties— about the shortage of treatment programmes in Scotland, particularly in certain health board areas such as Fife and Forth Valley, in my constituency of Mid Scotland and Fife? Does she share my con...
Mr Keith Raffan (Mid Scotland and Fife) (LD): LD Chamber
20 Jan 2000
Drug Misuse
I welcome the debate and hope that it will become an annual event to have a general, all-day debate on tackling drug misuse in Scotland. I also hope that we will have specific debates on aspects of the issue. We look forward to the appointment of the director of the drugs enfo...
Mr Keith Raffan (Mid Scotland and Fife) (LD): LD Chamber
23 Sep 1999
Crime Prevention
Duncan McNeil made a fair point. I was going to start by apologising to the chamber and the minister for not being here at the beginning of the debate. I apologise for that unintentional discourtesy. I was in the middle of preparing a speech for this afternoon's voluntary sect...
Mr Raffan: LD Committee
16 May 2000
Drugs Inquiry
I will try to be brief—excuse me if I am abrupt. You will be aware of the national treatment outcome study, which shows that for every £1 spent on treatment, £3 is spent on enforcement. You will also be aware that the RAND organisation backs that up even more dramatically in t...
Mr Raffan: LD Chamber
23 Sep 1999
Crime Prevention
At least I am honest about my dubious past. With the support of every party in the House of Commons, the act increased the maximum sentence for trafficking in class A drugs from 14 years to life. That was important. I played a lesser part in passing the Drug Trafficking Offenc...
Mr Raffan: LD Chamber
06 Oct 1999
Expenditure Plans
I will not give way. I have a shorter time in which to make my speech than was given to the other front-bench members, and I have a lot to say in response to the points that they made. Members of the SNP ought to listen to my point. They have glossed over the fact that a lot o...
Mr Raffan: LD Chamber
23 Sep 1999
Crime Prevention
That is a commendable ambition. However, when Mr McLeish had responsibility for this issue as a member of the UK Government, he brought sniffer dogs into prisons. At Saughton, the deputy governor informed me that dogs had been in the previous day but had not found anything. An...
Mr Keith Raffan (Mid Scotland and Fife) (LD): LD Chamber
18 Jan 2001
Hepatitis C
First, I apologise to the chamber as I will not be present for the winding-up speech; I have to go for a medical check-up. I hasten to add that I am all right. However, I will read the minister's response with great interest.Alex Neil has covered the size and scale of the epid...
Mr Keith Raffan (Mid Scotland and Fife) (LD): LD Chamber
30 Jun 2004
Hepatitis C
I am glad to have the opportunity to open this debate, which in my view is the most important in which I have ever spoken in this Parliament. The hepatitis C epidemic is a public health crisis. That was the opening key message of the final consensus statement that was produced...
Mr Raffan: LD Committee
15 Sep 1999
Drugs Misuse
When it comes to treatment and rehabilitation there are other parts of the country and, indeed, other parts of the world that are a long way ahead of us. Obviously, the Parliamentary Bureau would call a halt to our bringing people over from the United States, but as so many of...
Mr Raffan: LD Committee
15 Sep 1999
Briefing
I accept all that the minister is saying, but there is some concern about what is seen by many people to be an imbalance in Government expenditure. In the UK, £1.4 billion is spent on the war on drugs: three quarters of that is spent on crime prevention and a quarter is spent ...
Mr Raffan: LD Chamber
16 Jun 1999
Legislative Programme
I have lodged a motion, which I hope will gain support from all parties, on that specific point of the need for more resources for drug treatment, aftercare and rehabilitation. Of the £1.4 billion United Kingdom budget to tackle drug abuse, three quarters is spent on the court...
Mr Keith Raffan (Mid Scotland and Fife) (LD): LD Chamber
02 May 2001
Crime
I want to focus on drug-related crime. The statistics are stark, and on a scale that is difficult to absorb. The Office for National Statistics estimates that the UK trade in illegal class A and class B drugs is 1 per cent of national output, or £8.5 billion. The National Crim...
Mr Keith Raffan (Mid Scotland and Fife) (LD): LD Chamber
05 Sep 2002
Prisons
I agree with the minister that, if we are to meet the central challenge of slowing down the rise in prisoner numbers, much of which is due to drug misuse, we have to develop alternatives to custody and introduce innovative ways of breaking the cycle of reoffending. Does the mi...
Mr Keith Raffan (Mid Scotland and Fife) (LD): LD Chamber
28 May 2002
Alternatives to Custody
It was Winston Churchill who said—no doubt when he was a Liberal—that one can judge how civilised a country is by the state of its prisons. I believe that the effectiveness of the penal system must be judged on its record in breaking the cycle of reoffending. That means that t...
7. Mr Keith Raffan (Mid Scotland and Fife) (LD): LD Chamber
17 Jun 1999
Question Time · Drug Treatment Programmes
To ask the Scottish Executive what plans it has to increase the provision of drug treatment programmes in Scotland in the next year. (S1O-8) The Minister for Health and Community Care (Susan Deacon): The provision of drug treatment will be at the heart of the Executive's strat...
Mr Keith Raffan (Mid Scotland and Fife) (LD): LD Chamber
27 Apr 2000
First Minister's Question Time · Prime Minister (Meetings)
Does the First Minister share my concern about the slow take-up of the drug treatment and testing orders, which so far number only six? Furthermore, will he tell the chamber what measures the Executive is taking to increase that take-up? Although cutting the supply of drugs th...
Mr Raffan: LD Committee
18 Sep 2001
“Public audit in Scotland”
I was going to make a similar point on cross-cutting issues—perhaps I will take it slightly further. The issue is central. I am convener of the cross-party group on drug misuse, which has sent a detailed all-party—I hasten to add—letter to the minister, with a range of questio...
Mr Raffan: LD Committee
04 Feb 2003
“Dealing with offending by young people”
I take the point about investing in process to cut offending, but one hopes that that is investing to save in the long term. If we are to break the cycle of reoffending, I presume that that will require investment not only in prevention but in treatment, rehabilitation and thr...
Mr Raffan: LD Committee
18 Mar 2003
“How government works in Scotland”
I should also have said that the response on cross-cutting issues, which uses drug and alcohol action teams as an example, is rather disappointing—I find it superficial, shallow and general. The issue is not only about making progress, but about making progress that members of...
Mr Raffan: LD Committee
13 Jun 2000
Budget 2001-02
As far as I am concerned, if there is a good index that allows me to access information, I would rather have all the detail. No one is going to read through the damn thing; people are going to look for certain information in it. The main requirement is that such information sh...
Mr Raffan: LD Committee
19 Dec 2000
Budget Process
To an extent, it is up to us to make specific proposals or requests—perhaps requests would be more appropriate. I know that the cross-party group in the Scottish Parliament on drug misuse has sent an all-party letter, asking for a breakdown of spending on drug misuse, so that ...
Mr Raffan: LD Committee
15 Sep 1999
Drugs Misuse
I do not want to widen the focus of the inquiry because it is important that it is focused, but we cannot ignore the fact that drugs are as prevalent in some prosperous areas of Scotland as in others. For example, oil-rich, cash-rich Aberdeen, Fraserburgh and the Broch are amo...
Mr Raffan: LD Committee
29 Sep 1999
Drugs Inquiry
I am not happy with what Alex has just said, simply because the drugs issue is a crisis in Scotland that knows no boundaries, whether of class or wealth. The drugs problem in oil-rich, cash-rich Aberdeen, for example, is severe. The city has been called the heroin capital of E...
Mr Keith Raffan (Mid Scotland and Fife) (LD): LD Committee
06 Oct 1999
Objective 3
I do not want to discuss this too broadly. The trouble with going through all European Union documents is that it is like reading a foreign language. I would like to translate this one down to ground level, taking a territorial example and a specific thematic example, to use t...
Mr Raffan: LD Chamber
17 Jun 1999
Question Time · Drug Treatment Programmes
Is Susan Deacon committed to a reallocation of resources from prevention, detection and the courts to treatment and rehabilitation, which has by far the smaller share of the budget at the moment?
Mr Keith Raffan (Mid Scotland and Fife) (LD): LD Chamber
16 Dec 1999
Cornton Vale Prison
Okay, I get the message.I congratulate Sylvia Jackson on obtaining this debate, and thank her for inviting me to accompany her on her visit to Cornton Vale last Friday. It was an interesting visit, with an impressive governor. I am sure the Deputy Minister for Justice is aware...
Mr Raffan: LD Chamber
20 Jan 2000
Drug Misuse
Not yet—I want to finish the point. We must have a change of emphasis to treatment, rehabilitation and education. I was reassured by what the Deputy Minister for Justice said today—if he wants to reassure me further, I will give way.
Mr Raffan: LD Chamber
22 Jun 2000
Question Time · Scottish Prison Service (Drugs Testing)
That seems to be a dramatic increase on the figure of £8 million that was given in the Scottish Prison Service press release just a week ago. Perhaps the minister can explain the discrepancy. Is he aware of the increasing number of those working in the drugs field who question...
Mr Keith Raffan (Mid Scotland and Fife) (LD): LD Chamber
07 Sep 2000
First Minister's Question Time · Drugs
What assurance can the First Minister give to the chief constable and deputy chief constable from different Scottish police forces who, in meetings with me, have questioned the need for the Scottish Drug Enforcement Agency and the difference that it will make? They have expres...
Mr Raffan: LD Chamber
22 Mar 2001
Drug Misuse and Deprived Communities
I want to support the minister on this point. She is making the point forcefully and she is absolutely correct. Cannabis, along with alcohol, is a gateway drug to the use of harder drugs. We must not tolerate that. As Richard Simpson rightly said, the discussion on cannabis is...
Mr Keith Raffan (Mid Scotland and Fife) (LD): LD Chamber
13 Jun 2002
Question Time · Drug Abuse
Has the minister seen last week's The Economist, which cited the UK Government's own figures showing that, despite the increased enforcement measures that have been taken in the UK, the street price of class A drugs has sharply fallen in the past five years and is still fallin...
Mr Keith Raffan (Mid Scotland and Fife) (LD): LD Chamber
27 Oct 2004
Drugs Misuse
I agree with Mr Sheridan that we must have a balanced approach—not an imbalanced one that favours enforcement as opposed to treatment and rehabilitation, or the other way round—but I caution the Executive that there are two ways of tackling drug misuse: one is by cutting suppl...
Mr Raffan: LD Chamber
27 Oct 2004
Drugs Misuse
Of course we have to do that. I am glad that the Social Inclusion, Housing and Voluntary Sector Committee's inquiry, during the first session of the Parliament, into drug misuse and deprived communities helped to move the Executive away from an unbalanced emphasis on enforceme...
Mr Raffan: LD Committee
23 Jan 2001
National Health Service in Scotland 1999-2000
I was glad to hear Mr Jones say that he had no evidence of falling clinical standards. However, I must ask whether the pressure on clinicians to reach targets on waiting lists and waiting times and bring those figures down rapidly has an effect on treatment. While they are und...
Mr Raffan: LD Committee
23 Jan 2001
National Health Service in Scotland 1999-2000
I will return to the recovery plan, as I am still worried about a point that was made earlier. We all know that there is an uneven spread of services and treatment among different health board areas. I have an interest in the area of drug misuse and can cite the example of Ayr...
Mr Raffan: LD Committee
02 Apr 2001
National Health Service (Tayside)
You mentioned two significant pressures—the European working time regulations and junior hospital doctors' pay—but there are others. There are clinical pressures, for example the hepatitis C epidemic that Scotland faces and the cost of combination therapy treatment, which is £...
Mr Raffan: LD Committee
15 May 2001
National Health Service (Tayside)
You are clearly well aware that you were appointing clinicians who were at the cutting edge of cancer treatment. Furthermore, you were aware of the extra costs of the treatment they were likely to prescribe. As chairman, what action did you take to ensure that funding was avai...
Mr Raffan: LD Committee
04 Feb 2003
“Dealing with offending by young people”
How specialised are the five mental health nurses and what are they trained to do? Are they there in a caring capacity or do they provide treatment? If they provide treatment, how do they do so? Scotland has a shortage of child psychologists and psychiatrists, who are needed f...
Mr Raffan: LD Committee
04 Feb 2003
“Dealing with offending by young people”
I have a supplementary question about the services side. I understand that the number of residential places has been reduced by approximately half in the past five years—it is down to about 2,300 or 2,500—and that residential treatment or disposal for young offenders is notabl...
Mr Raffan: LD Committee
09 Nov 1999
Draft Scotland Act 1998 (Transitory and Transitional Provisions) (Appropriations) Amendment Order 1999
In your statement on 6 October, you announced £10.5 million for the drugs enforcement agency. You also announced a comprehensive audit of all treatment and after-care services connected with drug misuse. I have taken this up with you before, and I wondered whether you were yet...
Mr Raffan: LD Committee
30 Jun 1999
Remit
I do not want to repeat a point that has been made already, but Mike and I have both made points about visits. That is tremendously important. I had a meeting with Scottish Drugs Forum last week, and there is a feeling that officials in the public health policy unit and at the...
Mr Raffan: LD Committee
26 Apr 2000
Drug Inquiry
The balance of figures—46 per cent enforcement, 39 per cent treatment, 13 per cent prevention—is markedly different from the equivalent ratio for the UK figure. That £1.4 billion is traditionally quoted as 75 per cent enforcement, 13 per cent treatment and 12 per cent preventi...
Mr Raffan: LD Committee
10 May 2000
Drug Inquiry
Why were you so worried about the comprehensive audit of all drug treatment services that the Minister for Finance announced on 6 October last year?Could you define for us what community-based treatment services means?
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Chamber

Plenary, 28 May 2002

28 May 2002 · S1 · Plenary
Item of business
Drug Misuse in North-East Scotland
Raffan, Mr Keith LD Mid Scotland and Fife Watch on SPTV
The most dramatic part of the Social Inclusion, Housing and Voluntary Sector Committee's inquiry into drug misuse in deprived communities is between pages 42 and 47 of the report, and I refer members to those pages. Maps of Scotland and the regions of Scotland are used to show comparisons of general acute hospital admissions for drug misuse in Scotland in 1990 and 1999. Those maps show how drug misuse has spread to every part of Scotland and how it has increased dramatically in the north-east, as it has done in Fife, which I represent.

No one denies the particular character of drug misuse in the north-east, particularly in Fraserburgh—or the Broch. When I stood for Parliament there in 1974, alcohol was the main problem in the area. It has been targeted by drug dealers because of the amount of money that the fishermen earn. There are now 450 heroin addicts in Fraserburgh—that is 2 per cent of the population.

I congratulate Mr Lochhead on securing the debate. He was right to emphasise the importance of waiting times for referrals and for getting on the methadone programme. Anyone who knows anything about addiction knows that it is crucial to catch addicts when they have reached rock bottom, when they have had enough and they want to get into recovery. They have to be got into treatment at that stage. If that moment is missed, the addict is likely to relapse and get back into the cycle of addiction.

I pay tribute to the general practitioners and pharmacists throughout Scotland and the work that they do, particularly on methadone programmes. During the inquiry, I visited a pharmacist in Torry who had an unusually large number of addicts on his books. He was providing a social and public service. Although shoplifting in his pharmacy was up by 2 or 3 per cent, he thought it was his role to help addicts. If an addict came into his shop who seemed to have health difficulties, the pharmacist would alert the medical authorities or refer the addict to a doctor.

We must have more community and day programmes. I have three or four brief points I wish to make about residential treatment. Most residential treatment is based on the 12-step programme of intensive group therapy. Addicts are isolated from the outside world. That is how the 12-step programme is most effective. Addicts are taken away from the people with whom they have used and from the places where they have used. We desperately need more residential care places. However, I am not necessarily saying that addicts from Aberdeen should go to a treatment centre in Aberdeen. It might well be better for them to go a treatment centre in the Borders, and for addicts from the Borders to come to a treatment centre in Aberdeen.

Secondly, if treatment is going to be effective, addicts must be given the opportunity to build up so-called clean time. If someone is to build up clean time, they will have to spend between six weeks and six months in intensive treatment and then they should go to a halfway house, where they can work towards the crucial stage of being clean for a year. Halfway houses are crucial; otherwise money spent on residential treatment may well be wasted.

Thirdly, funding must be more easily obtainable. There was an addict in Buckhaven in my constituency. His mother was very brave. She fought to get funding from the local health board and local authority so that her son could go to the Links project in Leith. She was meeting his dealers on the high street and they were asking her when he was coming back. The last place he wanted to come back to was Buckhaven. He went to a halfway house down south.

I also want the minister to respond to a point on the care home regulations and their impact on residential treatment. Another key aspect of residential treatment is that addicts should spend as little time as possible on their own. Addicts should not be staying in single rooms. In the most effective treatment centres in the United Kingdom, such as Clouds House in Wiltshire, or in the United States—Cottonwood de Tucson and Sierra Tucson—people share rooms. That helps to make treatment effective and we do not want those care home regulations having a detrimental impact on residential treatment.

Finally, I am glad that Mr Lochhead mentioned alcohol. It should have been mentioned in the previous debate. The Parliament is too ambivalent about alcohol. We have not yet had a debate on the national plan for alcohol. Most people are cross-addicted and alcohol is a serious problem. There are five times as many chronic misusers of alcohol in Scotland as there are heroin addicts. The figure is 250,000. We need far more resources to help them and we probably also need to consider alcohol treatment and testing orders.

In the same item of business

The Deputy Presiding Officer (Mr George Reid): SNP
The final item of business is a members' business debate on motion S1M-3051, in the name of Richard Lochhead, on drug misuse in north-east Scotland.
Motion debated,
That the Parliament notes with concern that drug misuse in the north east of Scotland has increased dramatically in recent years, with an estimated 50% rise ...
Richard Lochhead (North-East Scotland) (SNP): SNP
I begin by thanking all those, from a number of the parties, who signed my motion.In this day and age, it is utterly appalling that, despite the technology a...
Mr Keith Raffan (Mid Scotland and Fife) (LD): LD
The member is obviously making a specific point about a drug action team in the north-east. In certain areas, such as Glasgow and Fife, DATs work well. Does ...
Richard Lochhead: SNP
I accept that point. I am not specifically criticising local DATs; I am saying that they need to have identifiable leaders, whom the public and the Governmen...
The Deputy Presiding Officer: SNP
Nine members have asked to speak. I remind members that the debate is specific to north-east Scotland, although I will allow references to other areas when t...
Elaine Thomson (Aberdeen North) (Lab): Lab
I thank Richard Lochhead for securing the debate. Drug abuse is undoubtedly an extremely serious issue, which affects many of us either directly or indirectl...
Brian Adam (North-East Scotland) (SNP): SNP
Will the member give way?
Elaine Thomson: Lab
I have just got into my speech, so if Brian Adam does not mind, I will continue.
Brian Adam: SNP
Is this a debate?
The Deputy Presiding Officer: SNP
Order. It is up to the member whether she wants to take an intervention.
Elaine Thomson: Lab
Yes, it is up to me.Aberdeen has had substantial funding from that package, including more than £0.5 million for treatment, £860,000 for rehabilitation, £1.2...
Mr David Davidson (North-East Scotland) (Con): Con
The debate is very important for the north-east. The subject has been talked about for a long time, but there has not been dedicated action on all fronts on ...
Brian Adam (North-East Scotland) (SNP): SNP
I am disappointed that Elaine Thomson has left the chamber and that she did not take any interventions during her speech. I was pleased that she made represe...
Dr Sylvia Jackson (Stirling) (Lab): Lab
Does Brian Adam agree that Forth Valley is a good example? There is a community representative on the substance abuse action team, which is proving very useful.
Brian Adam: SNP
I would be delighted to see greater involvement of community representatives. I know that there are already representatives from the voluntary sector—I belie...
Mr Keith Raffan (Mid Scotland and Fife) (LD): LD
The most dramatic part of the Social Inclusion, Housing and Voluntary Sector Committee's inquiry into drug misuse in deprived communities is between pages 42...
Shona Robison (North-East Scotland) (SNP): SNP
I begin by congratulating Richard Lochhead on securing tonight's debate on what is a crucially important subject not just for the north-east but for the rest...
The Deputy Presiding Officer: SNP
Before I call Maureen Macmillan, I inform members that I am not going to get everybody in in the time that is available. If the minister agrees, I will be pr...
Motion moved,
That, under Rule 8.14.3, the debate be extended until 6.00 pm.—Richard Lochhead.
Motion agreed to.
Maureen Macmillan (Highlands and Islands) (Lab): Lab
It so happens that I travelled down on the train from Inverness to Aberdeen in the company of the regional fiscal. Our conversation naturally turned to crimi...
Irene McGugan (North-East Scotland) (SNP): SNP
There is no denying that drug misuse is a major problem in the north-east and that members who represent the area are only too well aware of its negative imp...
Mr Jamie McGrigor (Highlands and Islands) (Con): Con
I congratulate Richard Lochhead on securing the debate. I am grateful to have been given the opportunity to speak in a debate of such importance.I wish to ma...
Richard Lochhead: SNP
Will the member give way?
Mr McGrigor: Con
Can I give way, Presiding Officer?
The Deputy Presiding Officer: SNP
No. Our time is tight. I want to squeeze in the last speakers.
Mr McGrigor: Con
Fourthly, I want to ask whether enough is being done to identify the real financial costs of drug abuse. Crime now exists in areas where it hardly existed be...