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Seòmar agus comataidhean

Official Report: search what was said in Parliament

The Official Report is a written record of public meetings of the Parliament and committees.  

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Dates of parliamentary sessions
  1. Session 1: 12 May 1999 to 31 March 2003
  2. Session 2: 7 May 2003 to 2 April 2007
  3. Session 3: 9 May 2007 to 22 March 2011
  4. Session 4: 11 May 2011 to 23 March 2016
  5. Session 5: 12 May 2016 to 4 May 2021
  6. Current session: 13 May 2021 to 9 March 2026
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Displaying 1388 contributions

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Criminal Justice Committee [Draft]

Budget 2026-27 and Scottish Spending Review

Meeting date: 4 March 2026

Sharon Dowey

And what about my question on the SSI?

Criminal Justice Committee [Draft]

Budget 2026-27 and Scottish Spending Review

Meeting date: 4 March 2026

Sharon Dowey

So that is a huge concern. Thank you.

Criminal Justice Committee [Draft]

Subordinate Legislation

Meeting date: 4 March 2026

Sharon Dowey

I was just making a point about short-term sentences. Even though we have diversion from prosecution, the number of short-term sentences is increasing. That option might be there for judges and sheriffs, but we had 1,064 more short-term sentences in 2023-24 than we had in 2022-23. Obviously, we do not have the most recent figures yet, but there has still been an increase in short-term sentences, even though we have diversion from prosecution.

Criminal Justice Committee [Draft]

Subordinate Legislation

Meeting date: 4 March 2026

Sharon Dowey

Thank you.

Criminal Justice Committee [Draft]

Subordinate Legislation

Meeting date: 4 March 2026

Sharon Dowey

I just want to reiterate the point that I raised with the chief constable. The regulations come more than 10 years after the Human Trafficking and Exploitation (Scotland) Act 2015. They are probably needed and should have been introduced earlier. However, I am concerned about whether we are giving the proper authorities the amount of funding that they need to ensure that the regulations are implemented properly.

Criminal Justice Committee [Draft]

Criminal Justice System (Challenges for Session 7)

Meeting date: 4 March 2026

Sharon Dowey

That is fine. I do not know whether you can answer my next question. We have spoken about the problems with recruitment and retention. I have been told that colour vision testing for firefighters has recently been brought in. Can you give us an insight into what the benefit of that will be? I am told that there are appliances that can be off the run due to somebody not being allowed to work because they have failed the colour-blindness test. Can you give me more information on that?

Criminal Justice Committee [Draft]

Criminal Justice System (Challenges for Session 7)

Meeting date: 4 March 2026

Sharon Dowey

Thank you.

Criminal Justice Committee [Draft]

Budget 2026-27 and Scottish Spending Review

Meeting date: 4 March 2026

Sharon Dowey

I will try to be quick.

DCC Speirs, you said that you are looking at ways of freeing up officers earlier in the process but, in many instances, the police should never have got the call in the first place. I do not know whether you saw the evidence that we took a couple of weeks ago from the NHS. The witnesses spoke about frameworks for collaboration, community triage guides and so on. Do you have any comments on what the NHS is doing to try to prevent calls from going to the police in the first place? Is the NHS moving at enough pace or putting in enough help so that you do not get the calls?

Criminal Justice Committee [Draft]

Budget 2026-27 and Scottish Spending Review

Meeting date: 4 March 2026

Sharon Dowey

Chief constable, in your opening statement, you mentioned the cost of public inquiries and legislation. We were having a review of grooming gangs and you were allocated money for that. That has now been changed into an inquiry. Will that mean additional cost for Police Scotland? If so, has the Scottish Government given you the extra money that will be required for it?

You did not get what you asked for in your budget. You said that what you are getting would just keep you standing still. With the lesser amount of money that you are getting, how can we ensure that your police officers are able to investigate fully any concerns that are brought to them about grooming gangs?

I have a last question—I am sorry that it is my third one. A lot of Scottish statutory instruments come to the committee. One on trafficking is coming to us today. It will not come into force until February next year, but costs will be associated with that, even if just for training. Because the commencement date is February, it will still be within the new year’s budget. Do you have conversations with the Scottish Government in advance of it bringing SSIs to the committee? Has it committed more money so that that SSI can be implemented properly?

Criminal Justice Committee [Draft]

Subordinate Legislation

Meeting date: 4 March 2026

Sharon Dowey

Going back to the issue of capacity, I think that everybody agrees that diversion from prosecution is a good thing, and it is something that we want to look at, where we can do it and where it is working. However, the figures that we have been sent show that more than 1,000 more short-term sentences were given out in 2023-24 than in 2022-23, so something must be going wrong, or must not be working, with diversion from prosecution.

In your answer to Jamie Hepburn, you said that there will be another 460 spaces in the new prisons that we are building, and the early release scheme for short-term prisoners will, I think, give us up to 312 more spaces in the prisons.

However, many of the longer-term prisoners who are taking up capacity are in prison for historical sexual offences; they have been charged and convicted and are now, quite rightly, in prison. Given that we have just upgraded a grooming gangs review to an inquiry, it is probably safe to say that we will start to see a lot more prosecutions of serious sexual offences, as a result of which we will need more spaces in prisons. Is any planning being done at the moment to ensure that we have space for those offenders in prison and that we do not find ourselves back here again, with the Government saying, “We need to release other offenders early”?