- Asked by: Joe FitzPatrick, MSP for Dundee West, Scottish National Party
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Date lodged: Monday, 24 January 2011
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Current Status:
Answered by John Swinney on 3 February 2011
To ask the Scottish Executive how many (a) non-governmental agencies, (b) public bodies and (c) quangos there (i) were in May 2007 and (ii) will be in May 2011.
Answer
In October 2007, the Scottish Government published a baseline list of 199 national devolved public bodies as part of its simplification programme. We have reduced this to 152. On present plans, this will reduce further to 147 on 1 April 2011 and we have put the necessary arrangements in place to reduce the number of bodies to 115 by the end of 2011.
- Asked by: Joe FitzPatrick, MSP for Dundee West, Scottish National Party
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Date lodged: Thursday, 13 January 2011
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Current Status:
Answered by Keith Brown on 27 January 2011
To ask the Scottish Executive what the average annual saving for a commuter has been since the abolition of tolls on the Tay Bridge.
Answer
On abolition in 2007, the toll on the Tay Road Bridge for cars and light goods vehicles was £0.80 per crossing, southbound tolling only.
This would have meant an annual cost of tolls of £184 per annum (based on a
five-day working week over a 46-week working year, assuming six weeks holiday per annum).
- Asked by: Joe FitzPatrick, MSP for Dundee West, Scottish National Party
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Date lodged: Thursday, 20 January 2011
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Current Status:
Answered by Shona Robison on 20 January 2011
To ask the Scottish Executive whether it plans to make changes to free personal care.
Answer
The Scottish Government remains absolutely committed to free personal care. It delivers real benefits and better outcomes to over 50,000 older vulnerable people right across Scotland.
We are currently in negotiation with COSLA to a further inflationary increase of free personal and nursing care payments. This will be fourth inflationary increase since 2008.
- Asked by: Joe FitzPatrick, MSP for Dundee West, Scottish National Party
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Date lodged: Tuesday, 14 December 2010
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Current Status:
Answered by John Swinney on 14 January 2011
To ask the Scottish Executive how many properties in each local authority area are eligible for each level of relief under the Small Business Bonus Scheme in 2010-11 following the 2010 rates revaluation.
Answer
The following table shows the potential number of business properties eligible for relief under the Small Business Bonus Scheme (SBBS) in 2010-11 by local authority area.
In order to encourage take-up of SBBS, the First Minister wrote to over 19,300 premises in December 2010 that are potentially eligible for SBBS, but have not yet claimed.
Local Authority | Potential Number of Business Properties Eligible for SBBS Relief | |
|
Aberdeen City | 2,979 | |
Aberdeenshire | 6,027 | |
Angus | 2,889 | |
Argyll and Bute | 5,335 | |
Clackmannanshire | 858 | |
Dumfries and Galloway | 5,662 | |
Dundee City | 2,630 | |
East Ayrshire | 2,198 | |
East Dunbartonshire | 1,256 | |
East Lothian | 1,945 | |
East Renfrewshire | 876 | |
Edinburgh, City of | 8,719 | |
Eilean Siar | 1,373 | |
Falkirk | 2,485 | |
Fife | 6,435 | |
Glasgow City | 11,331 | |
Highland | 10,610 | |
Inverclyde | 1,200 | |
Midlothian | 1,476 | |
Moray | 2,659 | |
North Ayrshire | 2,775 | |
North Lanarkshire | 4,477 | |
Orkney Islands | 1,277 | |
Perth and Kinross | 4,751 | |
Renfrewshire | 3,084 | |
Scottish Borders | 4,491 | |
Shetland Islands | 1,127 | |
South Ayrshire | 2,573 | |
South Lanarkshire | 4,756 | |
Stirling | 2,529 | |
West Dunbartonshire | 1,452 | |
West Lothian | 2,385 | |
Notes:
The table is based on a pre-December 2010 data set.
Some of the above properties may already be in receipt of other reliefs up to the level of their SBBS relief eligibility.
- Asked by: Joe FitzPatrick, MSP for Dundee West, Scottish National Party
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Date lodged: Wednesday, 10 November 2010
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Current Status:
Answered by John Swinney on 18 November 2010
To ask the Scottish Executive how it considers tax incremental financing projects in Scotland will be affected by the decision of HM Treasury to increase interest rates on new loans from the Public Works Loan Board to an average of 1% above UK Government gilts.
Answer
The United Kingdom Government is directly cutting Scotland''s resources by £1.3 billion next year. The decision to increase the interest rates on loans offered to councils by the Public Works Loan Board is an additional handicap. This will increase the overall cost of tax incremental financing projects and also increase the time period over which non domestic rate receipts will repay the associated borrowing. While this will impact on the value for money of each project, the impact will vary from project to project.
- Asked by: Joe FitzPatrick, MSP for Dundee West, Scottish National Party
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Date lodged: Wednesday, 10 November 2010
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Current Status:
Answered by John Swinney on 18 November 2010
To ask the Scottish Executive what impact it considers the decision of HM Treasury to increase interest rates on new loans from the Public Works Loan Board to an average of 1% above UK Government gilts will have on council house building in Scotland.
Answer
The decision to increase the interest rates on loans offered to councils by the Public Works Loan Board will increase the cost of council house building where this is funded from borrowing. Decisions on the investment in new housing are for individual councils to make, but the increase in interest rates will reduce their capacity to build new homes without increasing rent levels or cutting other costs to compensate.
- Asked by: Joe FitzPatrick, MSP for Dundee West, Scottish National Party
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Date lodged: Wednesday, 10 November 2010
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Current Status:
Answered by John Swinney on 18 November 2010
To ask the Scottish Executive what impact it considers the decision of HM Treasury to increase interest rates on new loans from the Public Works Loan Board to an average of 1% above UK Government gilts will have on the ability of Scottish local authorities to borrow.
Answer
The United Kingdom Government is directly cutting Scotland''s resources by £1.3 billion next year. The decision to increase the interest rates on loans offered to councils by the Public Works Loan Board is an additional handicap. By putting even more pressure on local authority budgets, it reduces their capacity to invest in a wide range of infrastructure projects, including on schools, roads, housing and flood prevention schemes.
- Asked by: Joe FitzPatrick, MSP for Dundee West, Scottish National Party
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Date lodged: Tuesday, 02 November 2010
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Current Status:
Answered by John Swinney on 11 November 2010
To ask the Scottish Executive whether it has maintained a policy of limiting end year flexibility (EYF) and what it expects the value of EYF to be at the end of 2010-11.
Answer
This administration has consistently maximised the use of resources and minimised underspends to ensure that further end year flexibility (EYF) balances, to which there is no guaranteed access, have been kept to a minimum. There will be no EYF at the end of 2010-11 following the recent decision by the Chancellor of the Exchequer and Chief Secretary to the Treasury to abolish the current EYF system and all accumulated stocks.
- Asked by: Joe FitzPatrick, MSP for Dundee West, Scottish National Party
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Date lodged: Tuesday, 02 November 2010
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Current Status:
Answered by John Swinney on 11 November 2010
To ask the Scottish Executive whether it was consulted by HM Treasury over plans to abolish end year flexibility.
Answer
No. Spending review guidance issued by HM Treasury in June 2010 made clear that Spending Review 2010 submissions from Whitehall departments should be based on the assumption that access to end year flexibility (EYF) balances was not guaranteed. HM Treasury''s budget guidance has consistently said that departments'' spending plans should not assume drawdown of EYF unless specifically agreed beforehand by HM Treasury.
- Asked by: Joe FitzPatrick, MSP for Dundee West, Scottish National Party
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Date lodged: Tuesday, 02 November 2010
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Current Status:
Answered by John Swinney on 11 November 2010
To ask the Scottish Executive what the value of unallocated end year flexibility was in May 2007.
Answer
The Scottish end year flexibility (EYF) balance published by HM Treasury in July 2007 was £1,529 million. Agreement had already been reached to draw down £655 million of this total in the course of 2007-08. This left a balance of £874 million which the present administration agreed with HM Treasury could be drawn down in full over the Comprehensive Spending Review 2007 period, that is between 2008-09 and 2010-11. These agreements have been honoured in full by HM Treasury.