The Official Report is a written record of public meetings of the Parliament and committees.
All Official Reports of meetings in the Debating Chamber of the Scottish Parliament.
All Official Reports of public meetings of committees.
Displaying 140 contributions
COVID-19 Recovery Committee
Meeting date: 29 June 2023
Jackie Baillie
I am trying to get a sense of the urgency with which this is happening. If the registration level for zero to two-year-olds is still sitting at only 25 per cent, that will have a knock-on effect. We know that if we do not prevent disease, it costs more money to treat it later on. Therefore, I am keen to get a sense of when you expect those targets to be achieved. Are you doing any kind of additional remediation to recover from Covid?
COVID-19 Recovery Committee
Meeting date: 29 June 2023
Jackie Baillie
I think that it is lower now than it has ever been.
COVID-19 Recovery Committee
Meeting date: 29 June 2023
Jackie Baillie
Do you think that the kinds of interventions that you have described, particularly for children, are enough to restore registration levels? If so, have you set a target for the percentage of registrations that you expect to have and by what time you will reach it? Obviously, targets drive performance improvements. Equally, have you set targets for closing the inequality gap, a gap that is, in fact, growing?
Citizen Participation and Public Petitions Committee
Meeting date: 28 June 2023
Jackie Baillie
Thank you for the opportunity to contribute to your discussion about the petition. I also thank the petitioners Audrey Baird and Fiona Baker for their continued interest in this area.
I recall asking the then environment minister Màiri McAllan to go out and consider the issue. I understand that she has been too busy to do so. I welcome the fact that the committee has undertaken a visit and that the petitioners’ latest submission centres around their visit from Scottish Forestry officers on location in Argyll in April, which showed first hand the destructive effects of non-native conifers on the ancient woodland.
That visit revealed that, despite the site at Glenbranter forest being described as a rare gem
“where native oakwoods cloak a series of spectacular waterfalls”,
the gorge and the falls are now barely visible, and the ancient oaks are all close to death. Our Scottish historic landscape, which I know we all value, has been overrun by non-native conifers. According to the petitioners, Scottish Forestry officers admitted that they do not know the scale of the non-native conifer wilding problem and that they would be “quickly overwhelmed” if members of the public decided to report it to them.
The University of Stirling published a report recently that is helpful. It looked at the highest-altitude trees and discovered that a colossal 56 per cent of all trees that were recorded at the highest altitude are American Sitka spruce. That gives you an idea of the scale of the problem. It has taken only a few decades for that to happen.
We are allowing—or, if I may be so bold, the Government and the industry are allowing—conifers to self-seed out of plantations, creating new seed sources, which is further encouraging the takeover of our ancient woodlands.
There seems to be a disconnect between what the Scottish Government says in its letter and its sense of urgency on saving ancient woodlands, and its action to reverse its disappearance. It would be extremely useful if the Cabinet Secretary for Rural Affairs, Land Reform and Islands could provide timescales for when work on the new national register of ancient woodlands that is mentioned in her submission will to be undertaken and when it will be completed. It would also be helpful if, through the committee, she could outline what plans the Scottish Government has to identify the scale of the non-native conifer wilding problem on ancient woodlands, and what action it intends to take.
We know from previous discussion that other countries, such as New Zealand, are working to remove non-native conifers where they have seeded in ancient woodlands and elsewhere. It would be good to know whether the Scottish Government has any plans to remove those non-native invasive species from sites such as Glenbranter forest.
The petitioners have also raised valid concerns about what they described as an apparent lack of concern from the cabinet secretary about current regulatory powers not protecting Scotland’s woodland. In England, the Forestry Commission and Crown Prosecution Service pursued four successful prosecutions in 2022 alone, and in Wales, a defendant was convicted and fined £36,000 for illegal felling in October 2022. However, not one prosecution has occurred in Scotland.
The petitioners feel that there is no deterrent to the complete erasure of our natural historic identity if there are no prosecutions, so we need not just to see guidance and warm words but to see proper enforcement action. I would be enormously grateful if the committee would continue to press the Scottish Government on this important issue.
COVID-19 Recovery Committee
Meeting date: 22 June 2023
Jackie Baillie
I literally have seconds in which to finish my questioning. I wonder whether Douglas Thain or David McColl has anything to add. I will throw one final question into the mix, because the convener will not let me back in. Should the Government collect and publish information on the NHS commitment of each dentist or each practice so that we can get a more realistic picture of GDS coverage in Scotland?
COVID-19 Recovery Committee
Meeting date: 22 June 2023
Jackie Baillie
I thank the three of you very much.
COVID-19 Recovery Committee
Meeting date: 22 June 2023
Jackie Baillie
That is helpful. Thank you.
The BDA did a survey that suggested that 59 per cent of dentists have reduced their NHS commitment and that that figure is likely to increase, and that 34 per cent were either retiring or leaving to start a new career. David McColl, can you rehearse for us why people are leaving and why dentists are reducing their NHS commitments?
COVID-19 Recovery Committee
Meeting date: 22 June 2023
Jackie Baillie
Okay. Let me come back to you on one small point; I will then take us on to prevention. You did not mention training at all. Are there sufficient training places in Scotland, but the destination of the trainees is the private sector rather than the NHS?
COVID-19 Recovery Committee
Meeting date: 22 June 2023
Jackie Baillie
I will pursue some of the issues that Murdo started off with, relating them specifically to staffing. Douglas Thain, you referred to NHS dentistry being a “treadmill”. Will you unpack that point a little so that people understand it?
COVID-19 Recovery Committee
Meeting date: 22 June 2023
Jackie Baillie
Sure. I just needed to understand that point so that we are clear about it.
You seemed to suggest that the model that is currently in place with the statement of dental remuneration for treatments and materials clearly disincentivises people from going into NHS dentistry because, as Douglas Thain and you have described, the activity is not matched by the sheer pace of payment. How would you change that to a prevention model?