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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 Housing and Welfare (Margaret Burgess) SNP Chamber
16 Dec 2014
Welfare Funds (Scotland) Bill: Stage 1
I am delighted to open this stage 1 debate on the general principles of the Welfare Funds (Scotland) Bill. I extend my gratitude to Michael McMahon and the members of the Welfare Reform Committee for both their scrutiny of the bill and their stage 1 report on it. Thanks are al...
Margaret Burgess SNP Chamber
24 Apr 2014
Housing (Scotland) Bill: Stage 1
As I said, the principle that we propose in the bill is to safeguard the social houses that we currently have. The bill is a way of doing that. It goes in conjunction with the Government’s target to increase our supply of affordable housing and to ensure that we build a furthe...
Margaret Burgess SNP Chamber
25 Jun 2014
Housing (Scotland) Bill: Stage 3
I will begin by speaking to amendments 1 and 2. As I said at stage 2, I understand communities’ wish for priority to be given to the housing needs of local people but, as I have previously explained, landlords can already take account of the fact that someone lives in a partic...
Margaret Burgess SNP Chamber
24 Apr 2014
Housing (Scotland) Bill: Stage 1
As I said, we are still considering the committee’s report and will respond to it. The code of practice will be worked up with stakeholders. We have listened to concerns and will introduce amendments at stage 2 to require training for letting agents as a condition of registrat...
Margaret Burgess SNP Committee
10 Feb 2016
Private Housing (Tenancies) (Scotland) Bill: Stage 2
The bill currently provides that, when a sole tenant dies, either a bereaved partner may inherit the tenancy or an executor of the tenant’s estate must bring the tenancy to an end. The amendments in this group would ensure that, if there is no one to succeed the tenant, the te...
The Minister for Housing and Welfare (Margaret Burgess) SNP Chamber
17 Mar 2016
Private Housing (Tenancies) (Scotland) Bill
I thank everyone who contributed to the development of the Private Housing (Tenancies) (Scotland) Bill, including members of all parties and all stakeholders. I am grateful to those stakeholders for their considered thoughts on the bill, while the Government was shaping its po...
The Minister for Housing and Welfare (Margaret Burgess) SNP Chamber
24 Apr 2014
Housing (Scotland) Bill: Stage 1
I am delighted to open this stage 1 debate on the principles of the Housing (Scotland) Bill.I thank the Infrastructure and Capital Investment Committee for its scrutiny of the bill and its stage 1 report on it. I also thank the Finance Committee and the Delegated Powers and La...
Margaret Burgess SNP Chamber
24 Apr 2014
Housing (Scotland) Bill: Stage 1
Yes. Well, I think that standards of housing are higher now.I will move on to address some points that were made during the debate, but I felt that I had to put that in context, given what was said.A number of members talked about the mandatory register of letting agents. I ha...
Margaret Burgess SNP Committee
21 May 2014
Housing (Scotland) Bill: Stage 2
An issue that was raised at stage 1 was the move from a system in which licences run in perpetuity to one of fixed-term three-year licences. Fixed-term licences provide for a regular check that a site licence holder continues to be a fit and proper person, and give the opportu...
The Minister for Housing and Welfare (Margaret Burgess) SNP Committee
28 May 2014
Housing (Scotland) Bill: Stage 2
Amendment 149 seeks to have the owners’ share of tenement management scheme costs calculated as the local authority thinks reasonable, but with the principle of favouring equal shares among owners. I am concerned because the amendment could weaken the tenement management schem...
Margaret Burgess SNP Committee
28 May 2014
Housing (Scotland) Bill: Stage 2
We have accepted a number of non-Government amendments at stage 2, and we have lodged a number of Government amendments following discussions at stage 1. I am certainly willing to meet Sarah Boyack and Jim Eadie prior to stage 3. It is not a case of dismissing their amendment...
Margaret Burgess SNP Chamber
25 Jun 2014
Housing (Scotland) Bill: Stage 3
I will cover the point that Mary Fee has raised. There is a problem with landlords having to reconcile conflicting interests. The fact that the main stakeholders are divided—as Patrick Harvie mentioned—on the merits of amendment 42 suggests that it is unlikely to achieve what...
Margaret Burgess SNP Chamber
25 Jun 2014
Housing (Scotland) Bill: Stage 3
Amendment 6 proposes to remove the transitional provision in the electrical safety inspection regime for private rented housing, which was inserted in the bill at stage 2 by an amendment in the name of Bob Doris. The transitional provision in section 22B would give those who ...
Margaret Burgess SNP Chamber
25 Jun 2014
Housing (Scotland) Bill: Stage 3
I will begin by speaking to Patrick Harvie’s amendments 17 to 22. The equivalents of all those amendments were debated at stage 2 and were rejected by the Infrastructure and Capital Investment Committee. I understand Patrick Harvie’s intention, which is to prohibit letting age...
Margaret Burgess SNP Chamber
25 Jun 2014
Housing (Scotland) Bill: Stage 3
Amendment 29 makes it explicit that a local authority must, when running the fit-and-proper-person test, take into account any issues around the site owner profiteering from providing utilities to residents. The amendments reflect amendments that Mary Fee lodged during stage 2...
Margaret Burgess SNP Chamber
03 Mar 2015
Welfare Funds (Scotland) Bill: Stage 3
I said at stage 2 that I agreed with the views in the Welfare Reform Committee’s stage 1 report, which said that on-going monitoring was preferable to a review clause. My view on the issue remains the same. Our statistical monitoring framework already captures the information ...
The Minister for Housing and Welfare (Margaret Burgess) SNP Chamber
03 Mar 2015
Welfare Funds (Scotland) Bill
I am delighted to open the stage 3 debate on the Welfare Funds (Scotland) Bill. I again thank Michael McMahon and the past and present members of the Welfare Reform Committee for their scrutiny of the bill and of the interim arrangements that are in place. The bill is importa...
Margaret Burgess SNP Chamber
17 Mar 2016
Private Housing (Tenancies) (Scotland) Bill: Stage 3
On the face of it, the idea of a charter that lies behind Ken Macintosh’s amendments may seem an attractive proposition. However, like Jim Eadie and Alex Johnstone, I have to say that no one in the consultations on our proposals for the bill—we consulted extensively—or during ...
Margaret Burgess SNP Chamber
21 Jan 2016
Private Housing (Tenancies) (Scotland) Bill: Stage 1
We are looking into David Stewart’s point, which he raised during the committee’s scrutiny of the bill. He has made the point, and the committee alluded to it in its report. As I said, we will carefully consider the stage 1 report and we will come back on the matter before sta...
Margaret Burgess (Cunninghame South) (SNP) SNP Chamber
28 Jun 2012
Welfare Reform (Further Provision) (Scotland) Bill: Stage 3
Drew Smith is right when he says that his suggestion has been discussed before: it was discussed at stage 1 and again at stage 2. On both occasions it was rejected, and with good reason. I welcome the support of all stakeholders for the overarching aim of the bill, which is to...
The Minister for Housing and Welfare (Margaret Burgess) SNP Chamber
31 Oct 2012
Local Government Finance (Unoccupied Properties etc) (Scotland) Bill: Stage 3
The Scottish Government does not support amendments 14 and 18. As Mr Mackay indicated in the discussion on a similar stage 2 amendment—and as Mrs Mitchell has made clear just now—practice and case law already play their part in determining whether a property should be included...
Margaret Burgess SNP Chamber
31 Oct 2012
Local Government Finance (Unoccupied Properties etc) (Scotland) Bill: Stage 3
The Scottish Government does not support amendments 6 and 7, which relate to the level of council tax being charged on empty properties. As Mr Mackay indicated during stage 2, we intend to give councils the flexibility that they need to set the council tax increase at a high e...
The Minister for Housing and Welfare (Margaret Burgess) SNP Committee
12 Mar 2014
Housing (Scotland) Bill: Stage 1
Thank you, convener. I am pleased to be here to answer questions about the Housing (Scotland) Bill. As you know, it is a wide-ranging bill, with provisions that affect all types of housing. Its policy objectives are to safeguard the interests of consumers, support improved qua...
Margaret Burgess SNP Committee
12 Mar 2014
Housing (Scotland) Bill: Stage 1
I want to wait until stage 1 is over and we have looked at all the evidence and the report, but we will certainly look at strengthening what is required of a letting agent. We are not going down the road of thinking that letting agents have to be a member of a professional bod...
Margaret Burgess SNP Committee
14 May 2014
Housing (Scotland) Bill: Stage 2
I have reservations about amendment 33, because it would require the Scottish ministers to introduce rent controls by 1 January 2015, as Patrick Harvie highlighted. Amendment 33A would provide a slightly longer timescale; it would allow regulations to be laid by that date and ...
Margaret Burgess SNP Chamber
24 Apr 2014
Housing (Scotland) Bill: Stage 1
I agree with others that this has been a good debate with many constructive contributions from across the chamber. I listened to all of them and, as I said, I am still looking at how I will take the bill forward at stage 2. It is also encouraging that the lead committee’s endo...
Margaret Burgess SNP Committee
21 May 2014
Housing (Scotland) Bill: Stage 2
The committee’s stage 1 report identified some concerns about how the regulatory regime will tackle unregistered letting agents. During an evidence session at stage 1, letting agent representatives put forward a strong argument for further powers to be added to the enforcement...
Margaret Burgess SNP Committee
21 May 2014
Housing (Scotland) Bill: Stage 2
Amendments 98 to 104 respond to helpful points that the Delegated Powers and Law Reform Committee made in its stage 1 consideration of the bill. It was concerned that the power in section 60 in relation to appeals is too broad and does not reflect our stated policy intention. ...
Margaret Burgess SNP Committee
28 May 2014
Housing (Scotland) Bill: Stage 2
The purpose of section 79 is to protect the tenants, and indeed the lenders, of registered social landlords, by enabling the Scottish Housing Regulator to act quickly in the event of an RSL suddenly being in imminent danger of becoming insolvent. As I said when I gave evidence...
Margaret Burgess SNP Committee
28 May 2014
Housing (Scotland) Bill: Stage 2
Amendments 155 and 129 give effect to the Government’s commitment to require tenants to be balloted before their registered social landlord becomes a subsidiary or part of a group structure of another body. When I gave evidence to the committee on 12 March, I explained that th...
Margaret Burgess SNP Chamber
25 Jun 2014
Housing (Scotland) Bill: Stage 3
Amendment 32 replaces the current fixed 30-year period for repayment of a debt that is owed to a local authority in connection with work that has been done to repair and maintain private homes with a flexible period of between five and 30 years, to be determined by the local a...
Margaret Burgess SNP Committee
27 Jan 2015
Welfare Funds (Scotland) Bill: Stage 2
Amendments 2 and 8 are linked. Amendment 2 removes section 3, which relates to the outsourcing of welfare funds and joint working across local authorities. The intention behind section 3 was to allow local authorities to outsource provision of welfare funds. I never envisaged...
Margaret Burgess SNP Committee
27 Jan 2015
Welfare Funds (Scotland) Bill: Stage 2
The amendments in this group relate to the role of the Scottish Public Services Ombudsman in undertaking independent review of local authority decisions on welfare funds applications. The bill as introduced had few provisions relating to the role of the ombudsman. It was alway...
Margaret Burgess SNP Committee
27 Jan 2015
Welfare Funds (Scotland) Bill: Stage 2
On amendment 31, I tend to agree with the views that were expressed in the committee’s stage 1 report, which recommended that on-going monitoring is preferable to a review clause. We have put a lot of time and effort into establishing the statistical monitoring framework, whic...
Margaret Burgess SNP Chamber
03 Mar 2015
Welfare Funds (Scotland) Bill: Stage 3
The intention behind the amendment has been the subject of much discussion throughout the passage of the bill, and I know that many stakeholders and MSPs would like to add explicitly to the bill families under exceptional pressure. Although I might have liked to have been able...
Margaret Burgess SNP Chamber
03 Mar 2015
Welfare Funds (Scotland) Bill
We need to work with local authorities to ensure that the people who need help are able to get it when they need it, and we are doing that through a structured programme of improvement work. The Welfare Reform Committee made a number of recommendations in its stage 1 report t...
The Minister for Housing and Welfare (Margaret Burgess) SNP Chamber
21 Jan 2016
Private Housing (Tenancies) (Scotland) Bill: Stage 1
I am pleased to open this stage 1 debate on the principles of the Private Housing (Tenancies) (Scotland) Bill. I thank the Infrastructure and Capital Investment Committee for its scrutiny of and stage 1 report on the bill. The committee published its report last week, and I ...
Margaret Burgess SNP Chamber
21 Jan 2016
Private Housing (Tenancies) (Scotland) Bill: Stage 1
I will have to come back to Ken Macintosh on the timescale for when the bill will receive royal assent and start to come into place. Off the top of my head, I cannot say that the bill will take effect from a particular date, but I will have that information for him at stage 2....
Margaret Burgess SNP Chamber
21 Jan 2016
Private Housing (Tenancies) (Scotland) Bill: Stage 1
As I said earlier, we will not be able to dictate to or direct the tribunal on the evidence that it will need to look at. We are clear that any ground whatever for repossession will have to be evidenced by the landlord. There will not be a tick-box exercise on anything. On an...
Margaret Burgess SNP Committee
10 Feb 2016
Private Housing (Tenancies) (Scotland) Bill: Stage 2
I will speak to my amendments 53, 54, and 111 and respond to Alex Johnstone's amendments 172, 173, 184 and 187, and David Stewart's amendments 183, 185, and 186. Amendments 53 and 54 extend the time that is available to a tenant to meet a liability that arises as a result o...
Margaret Burgess SNP Committee
10 Feb 2016
Private Housing (Tenancies) (Scotland) Bill: Stage 2
Amendment 57 is a minor consequential amendment. Section 27 sets out how rent officers and the first-tier tribunal are to determine the open market rent for a rented property. In doing so, it makes reference to the eviction grounds, which currently require or include a pre-ten...
Margaret Burgess SNP Committee
10 Feb 2016
Private Housing (Tenancies) (Scotland) Bill: Stage 2
I thank the members for lodging their amendments. I am not persuaded of the need for Mr Stewart’s amendment 174. First, the tribunal will already have the power to adjourn under tribunal rules if it sees fit to do so. It will not be obliged to dispose of an application immedia...
Margaret Burgess SNP Chamber
17 Mar 2016
Private Housing (Tenancies) (Scotland) Bill: Stage 3
The bill as introduced specified a 56-day default notice period for tenancies that had lasted more than six months. Amendments 28 and 29 simply tidy up section 39 in consequence of the amendments at stage 2 and do not in any way change the substance of the provision. Amendmen...
Margaret Burgess SNP Chamber
17 Mar 2016
Private Housing (Tenancies) (Scotland) Bill: Stage 3
I have debated that issue previously with Patrick Harvie. We said that we would consult on increasing rents in rent hot-spot areas, and that is what we are doing. What Patrick Harvie proposes would not help the very people whom he suggests would be helped. In areas where rent...
Margaret Burgess SNP Chamber
17 Mar 2016
Private Housing (Tenancies) (Scotland) Bill: Stage 3
I amended the bill at stage 2 to remove the initial period, as I had concluded that having an initial period was likely to cause problems for various groups of tenants, which I judged best to avoid. I noted the concerns that the Infrastructure and Capital Investment Committee ...
Margaret Burgess SNP Chamber
17 Mar 2016
Private Housing (Tenancies) (Scotland) Bill: Stage 3
The bill as introduced would have required an executor to terminate the tenancy if the sole tenant died and nobody inherited, and it gave a right to inherit only to the dead tenant’s bereaved partner. I have listened to the evidence that was given to the Infrastructure and Ca...
Margaret Burgess SNP Chamber
31 Oct 2012
Local Government Finance (Unoccupied Properties etc) (Scotland) Bill: Stage 3
The Scottish Government is willing to support amendment 16, although we do not support amendment 19. As was said at stage 2, we agree with Margaret Mitchell that social landlords should not generally be exempt from paying council tax or a council tax increase. It was never our...
Margaret Burgess SNP Chamber
31 Oct 2012
Local Government Finance (Unoccupied Properties etc) (Scotland) Bill: Stage 3
I am saying that we are making no exemption for social landlords. We are treating social landlords and private residential property owners in the same way. The discretion will still apply, but we are not differentiating between them. That was also said at stage 2.I will finish...
Margaret Burgess SNP Chamber
31 Oct 2012
Local Government Finance (Unoccupied Properties etc) (Scotland) Bill: Stage 3
At stage 2, the Minister for Local Government and Planning said that negotiations with Shetland Islands Council would take place; those negotiations have been on-going. We cannot accept amendment 2, in the name of Tavish Scott, because it would effectively hold the Scottish Go...
The Minister for Housing and Welfare (Margaret Burgess) SNP Chamber
31 Oct 2012
Local Government Finance (Unoccupied Properties etc) (Scotland) Bill
I am pleased to open the stage 3 debate on the Local Government Finance (Unoccupied Properties etc) (Scotland) Bill. I thank the Local Government and Regeneration Committee, in particular, for its scrutiny of the bill throughout its parliamentary stages, and I thank all those ...
Margaret Burgess SNP Committee
12 Mar 2014
Housing (Scotland) Bill: Stage 1
As I think I said in my opening statement, that is something that I will consider when I get the stage 1 report. In evidence I alluded to the fact that three years had not been agreed to be the right period. We are looking at that.We have to balance the need to protect the hou...
Margaret Burgess SNP Committee
12 Mar 2014
Housing (Scotland) Bill: Stage 1
We cannot do that at this stage. Sorry—could you repeat what you said at the start of your question?
Margaret Burgess SNP Committee
12 Mar 2014
Housing (Scotland) Bill: Stage 1
We heard suggestions that it might prevent lenders from lending to site owners, and it is not our intention that that should happen, but we do not have any concrete evidence at this stage that that is the case. Officials are speaking to colleagues in the Welsh Assembly to dete...
Margaret Burgess SNP Committee
12 Mar 2014
Housing (Scotland) Bill: Stage 1
As I said in my opening remarks, the Glasgow and West of Scotland Forum of Housing Associations put forward quite compelling arguments for why, when there is an amalgamation or a merger, tenants should be balloted. Currently, tenants are balloted only if they change their land...
Margaret Burgess SNP Committee
14 May 2014
Housing (Scotland) Bill: Stage 2
I am not dismissing amendments 1 and 2, in the name of John Lamont, out of hand—I am sympathetic—but I believe that social landlords can already take local connection into account when allocating housing. We are also concerned that amendment 1 does not require the applicant to...
Margaret Burgess SNP Committee
14 May 2014
Housing (Scotland) Bill: Stage 2
I will begin by speaking to an aspect of all four amendments. I am happy to accept the Delegated Powers and Law Reform Committee’s recommendation, which was endorsed by this committee, that the guidance that is issued under the powers conferred by sections 4, 7 and 8 should be...
Margaret Burgess SNP Committee
14 May 2014
Housing (Scotland) Bill: Stage 2
Amendment 3, in the name of Jim Hume, would place a duty on the local authority to use section 5 of the 2001 act every time it asked a registered social landlord to rehouse a homeless household. I do not believe that that is necessary or appropriate. Local authorities already ...
Margaret Burgess SNP Committee
14 May 2014
Housing (Scotland) Bill: Stage 2
I note the points that Jackie Baillie has made. I absolutely agree that carers do not operate on a timescale and that they are there to care. I well understand the concerns that they have highlighted.I think that landlords have flexibility on the matter and can consider cases ...
Margaret Burgess SNP Committee
14 May 2014
Housing (Scotland) Bill: Stage 2
As we have heard, amendment 51 would require the Scottish ministers to make regulations to introduce a Scottish starter tenancy. I have explained my views on initial or starter tenancies before. I understand that such tenancies have the support of some tenants groups and landl...
Margaret Burgess SNP Committee
14 May 2014
Housing (Scotland) Bill: Stage 2
Amendment 52 would require that provision is made for legal representation. That could undermine the system that we are aiming for, in which legal representation is not the norm and in which most people can engage directly with the tribunal.As Jim Hume said, tribunal procedure...
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Chamber

Meeting of the Parliament 16 December 2014

16 Dec 2014 · S4 · Meeting of the Parliament
Item of business
Welfare Funds (Scotland) Bill: Stage 1

I am delighted to open this stage 1 debate on the general principles of the Welfare Funds (Scotland) Bill. I extend my gratitude to Michael McMahon and the members of the Welfare Reform Committee for both their scrutiny of the bill and their stage 1 report on it. Thanks are also due to the Finance Committee and the Delegated Powers and Law Reform Committee for their consideration of the bill and their contributions to the lead committee’s scrutiny.

The Welfare Reform Committee should be commended for taking evidence from such a wide range of organisations and individuals. The evidence from users of the fund was especially compelling. I am grateful to those stakeholders for the considered views that they offered to the committee and also for their responses to the numerous Scottish Government consultations, which helped to shape both the policy objectives of the interim Scottish welfare fund and the proposals in the bill.

The committee’s conclusion that the bill provides a suitable framework for establishing the interim Scottish welfare fund on a secure statutory footing is to be welcomed. It captures well what the Government wants to achieve through the bill—that is, to put in place for people on low incomes a permanent and reliable safety net in which they can have confidence.

The committee made a number of suggestions, detailed recommendations and comments, and it called on the Government to consider and respond to them during the later stages of the bill’s parliamentary scrutiny. The Government is still reflecting on some of them, and I will set out our position on all of them in our response to the report prior to stage 2 proceedings. In this afternoon’s debate, the focus should be on the principles of the bill and what we want to achieve through it, although I will try to address some of the more significant points that the committee raised.

It has to be said that the Welfare Funds (Scotland) Bill is a slightly unusual bill in that it seeks to put an existing scheme on to a statutory footing. Members will be aware that the Scottish welfare fund has been operating on a voluntary, interim basis since April 2013, following agreement between the Scottish ministers and Convention of Scottish Local Authorities leaders. It is clear to me from the evidence that the committee heard, and from its report, that delivery of the current scheme is generally viewed in a positive fashion, albeit that there is scope to improve practice.

Most people have told us and the committee that local authorities are the right people to be delivering the fund and that the experience of applicants is generally more positive than under the previous Department for Work and Pensions scheme. Indeed, Scott Robertson from Quarriers observed at the evidence session on 7 October:

“The comparison between the new system and the previous system is like night and day.”—[Official Report, Welfare Reform Committee, 7 October 2014; c 5.]

It is also worth noting that there is no longer an equivalent local welfare scheme in operation across England, so this is a clear example of this Government taking a distinctive approach to protecting vulnerable people in Scotland. Feedback on the patchwork of provision in England gives me confidence that the Scottish Government is doing the right thing in the bill. However, that does not mean that we are complacent. Since the fund was launched, we have done a lot of work to ensure that lessons are learned and good practice is shared, and that work will continue as we move towards the permanent arrangements.

We have been working extensively with local authority practitioners and third sector stakeholders to ensure that learning from the interim scheme is captured and good practice is shared. Only last month, a series of decision-making workshops were held with local authority practitioners across the country to help them to hone their decision-making skills. The workshops included case studies from third sector partners such as Who Cares? Scotland, and Engender, which helped to enhance the quality-improvement measures that we are undertaking with COSLA to make the Scottish welfare fund as effective as possible.

Given its high-level nature, the bill has not been particularly affected by that, but the work will be of great value when we develop the associated regulations and detailed guidance that will really set out how welfare funds will operate under the permanent arrangements.

It would be appropriate at this point to reflect on the rationale for the bill. There were three reasons behind its introduction. First, the bill demonstrates a long-term commitment to the Scottish welfare fund; as I said earlier, the current scheme is administered voluntarily under an agreement between the Scottish ministers and COSLA leaders. Secondly, the bill provides the option of the independent review of cases by the Scottish Public Services Ombudsman, which would not be possible without the bill. Finally, the bill allows for the funding for the welfare funds to be ring fenced if required.

The bill is designed to set a high-level framework that reflects the wording of the section 30 order that gave the powers to the Scottish Parliament to deliver the type of assistance that is provided by the current Scottish welfare fund. The regulations and the associated statutory guidance will set out the detail of how the funds should operate. We will consult on draft regulations and guidance, informed by the evidence that the Welfare Reform Committee has heard on the bill, before the permanent arrangements come into force.

We consulted on a draft bill between November last year and February this year. The most significant change to the draft bill that we consulted on was the proposal that the SPSO should have powers to carry out independent reviews of local authority decisions. Responses to the consultation on the best option for reviewing were divided, but I am convinced that the SPSO best meets the criteria for second-tier reviews that we set out in our consultation.

Most importantly, the SPSO’s independence will ensure that the right decisions are made for applicants. That will give them and the people who work with them greater confidence in the Scottish welfare funds. The SPSO’s national overview will also play an important role in continuing to improve the quality of decision making and helping to maintain the national character of the scheme.

I know that there is significant interest in how the SPSO will discharge its responsibilities with the independent review function that is proposed in the bill; indeed, the ombudsman raised that matter in his written evidence to the committee. We have been in discussion with the ombudsman on how best to enable him to have the powers that he regards as necessary to discharge the proposed review function as effectively as possible. We intend to lodge amendments at stage 2 that will give the SPSO powers in relation to reviews that match its existing powers in relation to complaints in areas such as evidence gathering, confidentiality and reporting.

I know that stakeholders have very different views on the powers to outsource the administration of welfare funds under section 3 of the bill. That was included in the bill because the service is new and we wanted to provide flexibility for the varying approaches to delivery among local authorities. However, others have expressed concerns that the provision would introduce the possibility of outsourcing to private sector firms, and they have highlighted issues with the delivery of welfare-related services by the private sector.

I have given a lot of consideration to the Scottish welfare fund’s unique position in providing a safety net to a local authority’s most vulnerable people and the value added by the local knowledge, signposting and referral to other services as part of a Scottish welfare fund application. I have also considered the different positions that stakeholders hold in the debate, including the position that is taken in the committee’s stage 1 report.

Although I can see a case for local authorities collaborating to provide services across boundaries, I have concluded that effective provision of the Scottish welfare fund is not consistent with outsourcing the service. I therefore intend to lodge an amendment at stage 2 to remove from the bill the ability of local authorities to outsource the provision of welfare funds. [Applause.]

It is clear from the response in the chamber that that is welcome. I welcome that welcome. It was never the intention that the service could be outsourced to the private sector. Although that was never the intention and that was never suggested, it is clear that there was a perception in the evidence that was put to the committee that that could happen and was going to happen. It is right to be very clear at this stage that that ability will be removed from the bill and that we will lodge an amendment to that effect at stage 2.

As the committee recognised, the bill is about putting the interim Scottish welfare fund on a more secure statutory footing. It will enable us to demonstrate a long-term commitment to the Scottish welfare fund, provide for independent review of welfare fund applications and give us the flexibility to ring fence the funding provided.

The bill is about helping the most vulnerable people in our communities the length and breadth of Scotland, and I want to work with all members and all parties across the chamber to secure those objectives. The fact that we have had the interim Scottish welfare fund on a voluntary basis has allowed us to learn a lot of lessons. We hope to progress matters through the bill, and the regulations will set out in detail how we proceed.

I move,

That the Parliament agrees to the general principles of the Welfare Funds (Scotland) Bill.

In the same item of business

The Presiding Officer (Tricia Marwick) NPA
The next item of business is a debate on motion S4M-11877, in the name of Margaret Burgess, on the Welfare Funds (Scotland) Bill. I call on Margaret Burgess...
The Minister for Housing and Welfare (Margaret Burgess) SNP
I am delighted to open this stage 1 debate on the general principles of the Welfare Funds (Scotland) Bill. I extend my gratitude to Michael McMahon and the m...
The Presiding Officer NPA
Before I invite Michael McMahon to speak on behalf of the Welfare Reform Committee, I point out to members that there is a bit of time in hand, so we will be...
Michael McMahon (Uddingston and Bellshill) (Lab) Lab
I welcome the opportunity to speak on behalf of the Welfare Reform Committee following our stage 1 report on the Welfare Funds (Scotland) Bill. I thank the c...
The Deputy Presiding Officer (John Scott) Con
Thank you very much. I call Jackie Baillie, whom I can give an extraordinarily generous 10 minutes to, as we have a bit of time in hand this afternoon. 14:41
Jackie Baillie (Dumbarton) (Lab) Lab
Oh my goodness, Presiding Officer! I am not often made such an offer by you, so I shall take you at your word. I start by saying what pleasure it gives me t...
Bob Doris (Glasgow) (SNP) SNP
I am delighted that Jackie Baillie is excited by some of the new powers over benefits that will be coming to Scotland. Does she agree that, for any benefits ...
Jackie Baillie Lab
I do not think that there has even been a debate on that. The power to top up is exactly that. I would not anticipate clawback. I genuinely think that to top...
Kevin Stewart (Aberdeen Central) (SNP) SNP
Will Jackie Baillie give way?
Jackie Baillie Lab
No. I have already given way and I need to make progress. I will be happy to take an intervention later. Another question is whether it is appropriate to pr...
The Deputy Presiding Officer Con
I call Alex Johnstone, who has a very generous six minutes. 14:54
Alex Johnstone (North East Scotland) (Con) Con
I would like to take an early opportunity in this debate to thank my former colleagues on the Welfare Reform Committee, which I left two weeks ago to go on t...
Kevin Stewart SNP
Oh, no you weren’t!
Alex Johnstone Con
I was waiting for someone to shout, “Look out behind you!” I would have asked them what exactly Willie Rennie is doing. However, the process of the bill has...
The Deputy Presiding Officer Con
Will you draw to a close now, please?
Alex Johnstone Con
Indeed, I will. The committee heard people say that they like face-to-face meetings, but the speed of the phone process is important to many other people. W...
The Deputy Presiding Officer Con
We move to the open debate and we have some time in hand. Clare Adamson has a generous six minutes. 15:05
Clare Adamson (Central Scotland) (SNP) SNP
I welcome the debate on the committee’s stage 1 report and I welcome the minister’s comments about the report and the bill. The report says that this is a su...
Alex Rowley (Cowdenbeath) (Lab) Lab
I, too, speak in support of the stage 1 report. It is interesting that the minister said that one of the bill’s key objectives is to put in place a reliable ...
Kevin Stewart (Aberdeen Central) (SNP) SNP
I welcome the fact that we have reached the first stage of putting the Scottish welfare fund on a statutory footing, and I agree with Councillor Norman MacDo...
Jackie Baillie Lab
Will the member take an intervention?
Kevin Stewart SNP
No, I will not. Ms Baillie did not take an intervention from me. I am sorry to be so petty, but that is how she operates all the time in not taking intervent...
Willie Rennie (Mid Scotland and Fife) (LD) LD
I enjoyed listening to Alex Rowley, because he reminded us that when we think about why many people find themselves in such circumstances and what we can do ...
Bob Doris SNP
I thank Willie Rennie for giving way, as I know that he really wanted to hear from Jackie Baillie. I welcome the fact that Willie Rennie has given that guar...
Willie Rennie LD
It is clear that the Smith commission’s intention was that there should be no clawback. I am sure that issues on the edge that we do not expect will come up ...
Willie Rennie LD
I will not take another intervention, as I have another few points to get through. I am sure that we can discuss the issue on a future occasion. This is a p...
Richard Lyle (Central Scotland) (SNP) SNP
I welcome the opportunity to take part in this debate, which is on an issue that touches all communities in Scotland, not just my Central Scotland region. W...
Joan McAlpine (South Scotland) (SNP) SNP
I am pleased to be able to speak in this stage 1 debate on the Welfare Funds (Scotland) Bill. I am, of course, a new member of the Welfare Reform Committee ...
Rhoda Grant (Highlands and Islands) (Lab) Lab
I refer members to my entry in the register of interests. While I, too, welcome the bill, I cannot help but wish that we did not need it. It is absolutely w...
Bob Doris (Glasgow) (SNP) SNP
I commend the Welfare Reform Committee for its constructive scrutiny of the Welfare Funds (Scotland) Bill. The steady leadership of Michael McMahon and his f...