- Asked by: Sarah Boyack, MSP for Edinburgh Central, Scottish Labour
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Date lodged: Thursday, 10 October 2002
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Current Status:
Answered by Malcolm Chisholm on 28 October 2002
To ask the Scottish Executive, further to the answer to question S1F-2126 by the First Minister on 26 September 2002, what analysis would need to be carried out on any health implications for staff in the water industry of any fluoridation of the public water supply.
Answer
The consultation document Towards Better Oral Health in Children, published on 24 September, seeks views on a range of possible measures to improve children's oral health, including fluoridation. Questions about the implementation of any particular option would fall to be considered in the light of the consultation.Health and safety procedures are set out for all materials added to the public water supplies. Therefore, where such procedures are followed, there are no health implications for staff for any of the materials added to the public water supplies.
- Asked by: Sarah Boyack, MSP for Edinburgh Central, Scottish Labour
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Date lodged: Wednesday, 18 September 2002
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Current Status:
Answered by Cathy Jamieson on 26 September 2002
To ask the Scottish Executive how it is targeting investment to tackle youth crime.
Answer
拢25.5 million was allocated to local authorities between 2000 and 2003-04 for community-based programmes to help young people stop offending. On 18 September, I announced that the Executive would continue to invest resources to support the 10-Point Action Plan. 拢8 million, 拢24 million and 拢33 million will be provided over the next three years. An additional EYF allocation of 拢15 million is also being made available this year.
- Asked by: Sarah Boyack, MSP for Edinburgh Central, Scottish Labour
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Date lodged: Wednesday, 11 September 2002
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Current Status:
Answered by Malcolm Chisholm on 19 September 2002
To ask the Scottish Executive how it plans to improve the health of homeless people.
Answer
In October 2000, we announced our intention to prioritise the health of homeless people. To this end we appointed a Health and Homelessness Co-ordinator and issued guidance to NHS Scotland that outlined the requirement to pro-actively address the needs of this greatly disadvantaged group of people. As a result all NHS boards have submitted Health and Homelessness Action Plans which identify the activities they have planned to improve the health of homeless people across Scotland. By April 2003 Health and Homelessness Action Plans will also be integrated into Local Authorities' Homelessness Strategies, which will ensure full NHS Scotland involvement in overall developments to tackle homelessness in Scotland.The Health and Homelessness Co-ordinator and Health and Homelessness Steering Group are monitoring the delivery of these activities, and I am following progress with interest.
- Asked by: Sarah Boyack, MSP for Edinburgh Central, Scottish Labour
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Date lodged: Thursday, 15 August 2002
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Current Status:
Answered by Andy Kerr on 11 September 2002
To ask the Scottish Executive what proportion of the Quality of Life funding to local authorities announced on 11 August 2002 was allocated to voluntary sector organisations.
Answer
A number of local voluntary organisations will benefit from the Quality of Life funding through the provision of resources to local clubs, play-schemes and community-based projects. However, the exact allocation to these organisations is a matter for each local authority to decide.
- Asked by: Sarah Boyack, MSP for Edinburgh Central, Scottish Labour
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Date lodged: Wednesday, 28 August 2002
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Current Status:
Answered by Ross Finnie on 5 September 2002
To ask the Scottish Executive how it will meet its new targets for renewable energy.
Answer
The Renewables Obligation Scotland, introduced earlier this year, is resulting in a number of developers applying for consent to build new renewable generating plant. We expect this level of interest to continue and to increase. We will work with developers, planners, the energy industry and the economic development agencies to ensure that we fully exploit Scotland's natural resource and realise the opportunity for Scotland to become a world leader in renewable technology.
- Asked by: Sarah Boyack, MSP for Edinburgh Central, Scottish Labour
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Date lodged: Thursday, 22 August 2002
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Current Status:
Answered by Ross Finnie on 23 August 2002
To ask the Scottish Executive what scope there is to increase the proportion of electricity generated from renewable sources.
Answer
As part of the Scottish Climate Change Programme, the Executive is committed to raising the overall proportion of electricity generated from renewable sources in Scotland to 18% by 2010. I believe that the potential exists to go much further. I am therefore today publishing a consultation paper that examines the opportunities to go beyond our existing policy objectives and further increase Scotland's renewable energy in the period beyond 2010, potentially to as much as 40%.
- Asked by: Sarah Boyack, MSP for Edinburgh Central, Scottish Labour
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Date lodged: Tuesday, 02 July 2002
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Current Status:
Answered by Lewis Macdonald on 5 August 2002
To ask the Scottish Executive whether it has taken any measures to promote current Energy Saving Trust grants for the installation of solar/photovoltaic units in (a) public sector housing, (b) private sector housing, (c) businesses, (d) schools and (e) hospitals.
Answer
The Energy Saving Trust (EST) secured the Department of Trade and Industry contract for this UK initiative in May and the Scottish Executive is currently in discussion with the EST about how best to promote the programme in Scotland. We anticipate a marketing campaign in the autumn, linked to our recently announced Scottish Community Renewables Initiative, which aims to encourage small community renewables projects using a range of technologies, including photovoltaic units.
- Asked by: Sarah Boyack, MSP for Edinburgh Central, Scottish Labour
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Date lodged: Tuesday, 02 July 2002
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Current Status:
Answered by Ross Finnie on 1 August 2002
To ask the Scottish Executive whether it will publish an organic food and farming action plan.
Answer
The Forward Strategy for Scottish Agriculture, developed by the Executive in partnership with stakeholders from the food and farming industries and the environmental sector, sets out an action plan which is relevant to the organic sector as well as to other forms of environmentally sustainable farming. Specific to the organic sector, it challenges the sector to:
(i) identify and tailor production to consumer demand and market outlets;(ii) develop the supply chain so that organic producers are matched by sufficient processing capacity;(iii) in the livestock sector, identify finishers to whom store producers can sell their produce;(iv) ensure the right business and technical advice is available on how to convert to, and, as importantly, maintain organic farming in Scottish conditions, and(v) ensure that Scottish farmers are able to use organic standards which avoid gold plating and reflect Scottish conditions.The Executive encourages the development of the organic sector in Scotland in a number of ways. These include the Organic Aid Scheme (OAS), which provides annual payments for five years for farmers converting their land, assistance under the Processing and Marketing Grants Scheme and the Marketing Development Scheme for projects that strengthen the organic food chain, the funding of an organic helpline operated by the Scottish Agricultural College, and the recently published Guide to Organic Marketing funded by the Executive.The Executive has recently completed a consultation exercise on measures to improve the operation of agri-environment schemes, including the OAS, in the short term. The Executive is considering responses to that consultation paper, and also possible longer-term changes to agri-environmental measures to enable them more effectively to support a range of environmentally sustainable forms of farming.
- Asked by: Sarah Boyack, MSP for Edinburgh Central, Scottish Labour
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Date lodged: Tuesday, 02 July 2002
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Current Status:
Answered by Nicol Stephen on 30 July 2002
To ask the Scottish Executive, further to the answer to question S1W-23320 by Nicol Stephen on 19 March 2002, whether energy efficiency targets will be built into future evaluation criteria under the Public/Private Partnership programme for school modernisation.
Answer
The assessment criteria for the current round of local authority bids for revenue support for outline school Public/Private Partnership projects were set out in Scottish Executive Education Department circular 8/2001. We have also announced our intention to put in place by the end of the year a school estate strategy for Scotland. That will be the most appropriate context in which to address issues of sustainable development in school buildings, including energy efficiency.
- Asked by: Sarah Boyack, MSP for Edinburgh Central, Scottish Labour
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Date lodged: Tuesday, 02 July 2002
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Current Status:
Answered by Andy Kerr on 30 July 2002
To ask the Scottish Executive what the criteria are for distributing the environmental allocation being made available to local authorities under the end-year flexibility arrangements announced in the ministerial statement by the Minister for Finance and Public Services on 26 June 2002.
Answer
Provisional allocations for the additional 拢95 million of end-year flexibility (EYF) were distributed on the basis of each council's general Grant Aided Expenditure allowances for the current year. It will be up to each local authority how it allocates its allowance in support of the two policy themes of "children and young people" and "our local environment".Additionally, I announced on 26 June EYF of 拢76 million for the Environment and Rural Development portfolio, which includes 拢30.2 million for environment programmes. Full details of how this funding will be allocated are provided in the answer to S1W-27441 on 10 July 2002.