- Asked by: Kenneth Gibson, MSP for Glasgow, Scottish National Party
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Date lodged: Tuesday, 24 April 2001
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Current Status:
Answered by Margaret Curran on 17 May 2001
To ask the Scottish Executive, further to the answer to question S1W-13378 by Ms Margaret Curran on 28 February 2001, what guarantee it can provide that the costs of servicing any residual debt following Glasgow housing stock transfer will be met indefinitely by resources provided by the Scottish Executive indefinitely.
Answer
The arrangements will take account of Glasgow's existing loan portfolio and will be discussed with Glasgow City Council as part of the appraisal of the transfer proposal.
- Asked by: Kenneth Gibson, MSP for Glasgow, Scottish National Party
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Date lodged: Tuesday, 24 April 2001
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Current Status:
Answered by Margaret Curran on 17 May 2001
To ask the Scottish Executive whether any residual debt resulting from housing stock transfer in Glasgow will (a) be removed from Glasgow City Council (GCC) and taken on by the Executive as outlined in Glasgow Housing Association's January newsletter which states "the Scottish Executive has agreed to remove the debt from GCC tenants and transfer it to tax payers across Scotland if tenants vote in favour of stock transfer" or (b) remain with GCC and be serviced by the Executive as outlined in the answer to question S1W-13378 by Ms Margaret Curran on 28 February 2001 which states "the cost of servicing the remaining (i.e. residual) debt would also be met by resources provided by the Scottish Executive" and what steps will it take to ensure that tenants are advised of the correct situation.
Answer
The arrangements are as set out in my answer to question S1W-13378. It is for Glasgow City Council in undertaking statutory consultation with tenants prior to any transfer to consider what further information in relation to this issue should be provided.
- Asked by: Kenneth Gibson, MSP for Glasgow, Scottish National Party
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Date lodged: Wednesday, 28 March 2001
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Current Status:
Answered by Sarah Boyack on 16 May 2001
To ask the Scottish Executive how much and what percentage of the #640 million funding for roads projects will be spent in (a) 2001-02, (b) 2002-03 and (c) 2003-04, within each local authority boundary.
Answer
On 27 March 2001 I announced a £680 million programme of investment in motorways and trunk roads for the three years to March 2004. Table 8.2 of the Executive's Annual Expenditure Report published on 30 March sets out detailed categories of spending. The estimated costs of individual schemes costing more than £0.5 million are shown in my answer to question S1W-14599 on 23 April. Details of planned spending are not held by local authority area.
- Asked by: Kenneth Gibson, MSP for Glasgow, Scottish National Party
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Date lodged: Tuesday, 03 April 2001
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Current Status:
Answered by Nicol Stephen on 15 May 2001
To ask the Scottish Executive what the current level of unemployment is among young people leaving care.
Answer
This information is not held centrally.
- Asked by: Kenneth Gibson, MSP for Glasgow, Scottish National Party
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Date lodged: Tuesday, 01 May 2001
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Current Status:
Answered by Malcolm Chisholm on 15 May 2001
To ask the Scottish Executive whether it will provide additional resources to local authorities to improve community relations and develop strategies to encourage awareness and understanding between local residents and asylum seekers.
Answer
This is a matter for local authorities and I know that, particularly in Glasgow, much good work is being done within existing resources. The key is to have strategies in place to encourage awareness and understanding between local residents and asylum seekers before asylum seekers arrive.
- Asked by: Kenneth Gibson, MSP for Glasgow, Scottish National Party
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Date lodged: Tuesday, 01 May 2001
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Current Status:
Answered by Sarah Boyack on 15 May 2001
To ask the Scottish Executive how many people were injured in accidents involving footways in each of the last three years for which figures are available, broken down by local authority area.
Answer
Data about accidents on roads (including footways) in which a vehicle is involved, and which result in death or personal injury, are collected by the police and reported to the Scottish Executive using the STATS 19 statistical report form. Information about accidents in which no vehicle was involved, such as injury to a person after slipping on a pavement, is not held centrally.The table gives the numbers of people killed or injured in accidents in which a vehicle was on the footway or a pedestrian was on the footway or verge. The information is broken down by local authority area. Figures for years prior to 1999 are not available because the information required to identify vehicles which were on the footway (pavement) at the time of the accident has only been collected in the STATS 19 returns with effect from 1999.The total numbers of people killed or injured in road accidents which involvedeither (i) a vehicle whose location, at the time of the accident, was on the footway (pavement) or (ii) a pedestrian casualty whose location was on the footway or verge
Local authority area | 1999 | 2000(provisional) |
Aberdeen City | 12 | 4 |
Aberdeenshire | 7 | 12 |
Angus | 8 | 5 |
Argyll & Bute | 15 | 4 |
Clackmannanshire | 5 | 4 |
Dumfries & Galloway | 10 | 7 |
Dundee City | 5 | 6 |
East Ayrshire | 5 | 2 |
East Dunbartonshire | 5 | 4 |
East Lothian | 2 | 5 |
East Renfrewshire | 6 | 7 |
Edinburgh, City of | 28 | 20 |
Eilean Siar | - | - |
Falkirk | 9 | 6 |
Fife | 28 | 25 |
Glasgow, City of | 52 | 53 |
Highland | 21 | 13 |
Inverclyde | 7 | 3 |
Midlothian | 2 | 2 |
Moray | 1 | - |
North Ayrshire | 10 | 11 |
North Lanarkshire | 13 | 9 |
Orkney Islands | 1 | 2 |
Perth & Kinross | 10 | 4 |
Renfrewshire | 10 | 15 |
Scottish Borders | 2 | 1 |
Shetland Islands | - | 1 |
South Ayrshire | 4 | 5 |
South Lanarkshire | 18 | 12 |
Stirling | 10 | 8 |
West Dunbartonshire | 5 | 6 |
West Lothian | 7 | 2 |
Total for Scotland | 318 | 258 |
Notes:The figures for 2000 are provisional because the process of checking police forces' returns for 2000 has not been completed.The STATS 19 returns do not distinguish between pedestrian casualties who were on the footway and those who were on a verge.These figures cover all people who were injured in the kinds of accidents described in the table heading - not just pedestrian casualties.
- Asked by: Kenneth Gibson, MSP for Glasgow, Scottish National Party
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Date lodged: Tuesday, 01 May 2001
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Current Status:
Answered by Iain Gray on 15 May 2001
To ask the Scottish Executive what its position is on whether heroin addicts on methadone should be gradually weaned off the drug or remain on it for life.
Answer
Clinical guidance issued to all medical practitioners involved in treating drug misuse in 1999 acknowledges that some people can become drug-free in the short term, others require support over a long period of time.Substitute prescribing of methadone should not be delivered in isolation, however, but as part of a wider social care programme which will assist drug misusers to address the difficulties which drug use causes to them, their families and the wider community. The Executive has provided an additional £20.4 million to local authorities for rehabilitation services over the next three years for that purpose. It has also allocated a further £6.5 million to assist reforming drug misusers prepare for training and employment.
- Asked by: Kenneth Gibson, MSP for Glasgow, Scottish National Party
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Date lodged: Tuesday, 01 May 2001
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Current Status:
Answered by Iain Gray on 15 May 2001
To ask the Scottish Executive how many users of class "A" drugs there currently are in each local authority area and how much funding has been provided to each local authority to deal with drug misuse in the current financial year.
Answer
Information on the number of users of class "A" drugs is not held centrally. The Executive, however, is currently funding a National Prevalence Study of Problematic Drug Use, which will assist DATs, local authorities and health boards to determine the need for services in their areas.Local authorities fund drug rehabilitation services from within their general allocations. Additional funding of £20.4 million is being allocated specifically for these services over the next three years. Allocations for this financial year are as follows:
| Remaining Social Work Services |
Primary Indicator Total Pop. | GAE (£000) | of which;Drug Rehabilitation (£000) |
Aberdeen City | 212,650 | 1,992 | 282 |
Aberdeenshire | 227,440 | 2,131 | 302 |
Angus | 109,840 | 1,029 | 146 |
Argyll & Bute | 89,730 | 841 | 119 |
Clackmannanshire | 48,530 | 455 | 65 |
Dumfries & Galloway | 146,800 | 1,375 | 195 |
Dundee City | 144,430 | 1,353 | 192 |
East Ayrshire | 120,940 | 1,133 | 161 |
East Dunbartonshire | 110,690 | 1,037 | 147 |
East Lothian | 90,430 | 847 | 120 |
East Renfrewshire | 89,280 | 837 | 119 |
Edinburgh, City of | 451,710 | 4,232 | 600 |
Eilean Siar | 27,560 | 258 | 37 |
Falkirk | 144,370 | 1,353 | 192 |
Fife | 349,200 | 3,272 | 464 |
Glasgow City | 611,440 | 5,729 | 812 |
Highland | 208,600 | 1,954 | 277 |
Inverclyde | 85,190 | 798 | 113 |
Midlothian | 81,680 | 765 | 108 |
Moray | 85,210 | 798 | 113 |
North Ayrshire | 139,410 | 1,306 | 185 |
North Lanarkshire | 327,940 | 3,073 | 436 |
Orkney | 19,600 | 184 | 26 |
Perth & Kinross | 134,030 | 1,256 | 178 |
Renfrewshire | 177,230 | 1,661 | 235 |
Scottish Borders | 106,400 | 997 | 141 |
Shetland | 22,740 | 213 | 30 |
South Ayrshire | 114,250 | 1,070 | 152 |
South Lanarkshire | 307,520 | 2,881 | 408 |
Stirling | 84,700 | 794 | 113 |
West Dunbartonshire | 94,980 | 890 | 126 |
West Lothian | 154,680 | 1,449 | 205 |
Scotland | 5,119,200 | 47,964 | 6,800 |
- Asked by: Kenneth Gibson, MSP for Glasgow, Scottish National Party
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Date lodged: Tuesday, 01 May 2001
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Current Status:
Answered by Iain Gray on 15 May 2001
To ask the Scottish Executive how much is being spent on heroin addicts on methadone programmes in the current financial year, broken down by health board area.
Answer
Information on the total cost of treating heroin addicts with methadone is not held centrally.Total costs include the cost of the methadone, fees to pharmicists to dispense methadone and to supervise consumption, the cost of counselling and social support and fees to GPs participating in shared care schemes. There are also costs of providing specialist drug services.Current resources for treatment services in this financial year total £14.352 million. This includes £2 million from the £100 million package of additional resources provided through the 2000 Spending Review.
- Asked by: Kenneth Gibson, MSP for Glasgow, Scottish National Party
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Date lodged: Tuesday, 01 May 2001
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Current Status:
Answered by Nicol Stephen on 15 May 2001
To ask the Scottish Executive what services are currently available for young runaways and what plans it has for the future provision of such services.
Answer
Services for young runaways are provided by a wide range of statutory, voluntary and private agencies. The Scottish Executive is helping to tackle many of the underlying problems which can cause children to run away. We are supporting a variety of initiatives focused on the development and well being of children within the family and others are aimed at improving the quality of care for children who are looked after by local authorities. We will continue to keep this under review, taking account of the recommendations of the Aberlour Trust's publication Missing Out - Young Runaways in Scotland and other related work.