- Asked by: Christine Grahame, MSP for South of Scotland, Scottish National Party
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Date lodged: Wednesday, 14 May 2003
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Current Status:
Answered by Jim Wallace on 3 June 2003
To ask the Scottish Executive how much has been received by each further education college for social inclusion in (a) 1999-2000, (b) 2000-01, (c) 2001-02 and (d) 2002-03.
Answer
Figures across the time period requested are not available on a consistent basis. This is because the method of funding further education (FE) colleges changed when responsibility for the methodology responsibility transferred to the Scottish Further Education Funding Council (SFEFC) from 2000-01.Because of the fundamental role that FE colleges have in encouraging people of all ages and from different backgrounds to participate in post-school learning, a large proportion of the resources available to FE colleges are associated in some way with the promotion of social inclusion. However, the amounts cannot be determined separately.The figures provided in the following table relate to the specific elements that cover the additional costs of social inclusion over and above the standard funding per student place.
College | 2000-01 | 2001-02 | 2002-03 |
Aberdeen College | £115,257 | £279,914 | £313,326 |
Angus College* | £72,942 | £97,586 | £105,396 |
Anniesland College | £256,365 | £504,858 | £530,400 |
Ayr College | £82,338 | £194,423 | £228,091 |
Banff and Buchan College of Further Education* | £87,403 | £109,942 | £115,083 |
The Barony College* | £27,636 | £24,557 | £24,486 |
Borders College* | £101,806 | £92,915 | £95,721 |
Cardonald College | £256,339 | £507,839 | £549,134 |
Central College of Commerce | £134,295 | £312,708 | £383,692 |
Clackmannan College of Further Education | £39,253 | £71,797 | £71,157 |
Clydebank College | £210,907 | £352,497 | £362,290 |
Coatbridge College | £120,543 | £249,642 | £277,925 |
Cumbernauld College | £25,657 | £60,515 | £85,598 |
Dumfries and Galloway College* | £116,836 | £186,400 | £177,781 |
Dundee College | £270,339 | £522,863 | £607,668 |
Edinburgh's Telford College | £198,813 | £395,741 | £436,261 |
Elmwood College* | £57,231 | £83,227 | £100,560 |
Falkirk College of Further and Higher Education | £92,192 | £181,450 | £207,886 |
Fife College of Further and Higher Education | £112,473 | £244,891 | £266,292 |
Glasgow College of Building and Printing | £139,200 | £313,173 | £356,887 |
Glasgow College of Food Technology | £91,455 | £273,557 | £258,752 |
Glasgow College of Nautical Studies | £119,644 | £208,757 | £250,934 |
Glenrothes College | £32,944 | £80,217 | £94,603 |
Inverness College*@ | £101,968 | £109,356 | £155,683 |
James Watt College of Further and Higher Education | £281,725 | £771,276 | £781,620 |
Jewel and Esk Valley College | £79,881 | £151,101 | £164,458 |
John Wheatley College | £272,332 | £342,172 | £406,437 |
Kilmarnock College | £87,962 | £227,707 | £255,300 |
Langside College | £179,501 | £387,034 | £433,678 |
Lauder College | £50,681 | £104,890 | £144,578 |
Lews Castle College ***@ | £22,902 | £36,692 | £50,081 |
Moray College*@ | £113,740 | £90,427 | £85,099 |
Motherwell College | £211,157 | £445,416 | £528,230 |
North Glasgow College | £114,838 | £311,894 | £385,984 |
Oatridge Agricultural College* | £36,080 | £31,980 | £37,288 |
Perth College*@ | £121,624 | £117,203 | £130,414 |
Reid Kerr College | £204,736 | £473,557 | £506,320 |
South Lanarkshire College | £52,604 | £108,815 | £112,477 |
Stevenson College | £174,005 | £350,942 | £309,010 |
Stow College | £153,122 | £248,674 | £301,584 |
The North Highland College**@ | £92,156 | £98,087 | £131,785 |
West Lothian College | £33,116 | £73,292 | £95,256 |
Orkney College***@ | £46,461 | £48,282 | £61,181 |
Shetland College of Further Education***@ | £16,434 | £13,311 | £9,743 |
Source: Scottish Further Education Funding CouncilNotes:1. These figures consist of the entry costs social inclusion premium; retention and achievement social inclusion premium, and remote student element part of the core formula funding provided to colleges by SFEFC. (NOTE - in 2000-01 the retention and achievement premium did not exist.)2. In addition to the figures shown above, colleges in receipt of the remote student element also received a remote institutional based element at a base rate of £176,000 for 2000-01, £178,640 for 2001-02 and £183,999 for 2002-03 (rising to £191,359 in 2003-04). Mainland colleges that are classed as extremely remote received a 15% increase on this base rate and island colleges received a 30% increase. Remote colleges are marked *, extremely remote **, and island colleges ***3. Colleges marked @ are part of the UHI Millennium Institute (UMI). From 2001-02 their advanced level activity was no longer funded via SFEFC and was instead funded via SHEFC as part of UMI. Therefore the figures for these colleges are not stated on a comparable basis for 2000-01 and 2001-02.
- Asked by: Christine Grahame, MSP for South of Scotland, Scottish National Party
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Date lodged: Wednesday, 14 May 2003
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Current Status:
Answered by Cathy Jamieson on 3 June 2003
To ask the Scottish Executive what information it has on provision of legal services for Peebles and district if the sheriff court in Peebles is not re-established.
Answer
There is no information currently available on the future provision of legal services in Peebles. It is hoped that the on-going discussions between Scottish Court Service, Scottish Borders Council and Lothian and Borders Police will culminate in court services being re-established in Peebles.If court services cannot be re-established in Peebles, provision of legal services could be considered as part of the consultation process on the delivery of court services.
- Asked by: Christine Grahame, MSP for South of Scotland, Scottish National Party
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Date lodged: Wednesday, 14 May 2003
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Current Status:
Answered by Cathy Jamieson on 3 June 2003
To ask the Scottish Executive whether any decision has been made with regard to re-establishing a sheriff court in Peebles.
Answer
No.
- Asked by: Christine Grahame, MSP for South of Scotland, Scottish National Party
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Date lodged: Wednesday, 14 May 2003
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Current Status:
Answered by Ross Finnie on 3 June 2003
To ask the Scottish Executive what criteria are used to assess social exclusion in a rural context.
Answer
Social Exclusion can take many forms and is often complex and multi-dimensional. The Social Justice Milestones are used throughout Scotland to measure a range of issues that can lead to social exclusion. The Scottish Executive is ensuring that the needs of rural areas are identified through urban/rural disaggregation of social statistics. For example, the Social Justice Annual Report's technical report disaggregated 12 of the social justice milestones on an urban and rural basis. A compendium of rural statistics - Social Focus on Urban Rural Scotland - was published on 22 May 2003.
- Asked by: Christine Grahame, MSP for South of Scotland, Scottish National Party
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Date lodged: Wednesday, 14 May 2003
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Current Status:
Answered by Jim Wallace on 3 June 2003
To ask the Scottish Executive what social inclusion funding was available for further education (FE) colleges in (a) 1999-2000, (b) 2000-01, (c) 2001-02 and (d) 2002-03.
Answer
Figures across the whole of the time period requested are not available on a consistent basis. This is because the method of funding FE colleges changed when responsibility for the methodology transferred to the Scottish Further Education Funding Council (SFEFC) from 2000-01.Because of the fundamental role that FE colleges have in encouraging people of all ages and from different backgrounds to participate in post-school learning, a large proportion of the resources made available to FE colleges by SFEFC are associated in some way with the promotion of social inclusion. The Scottish Executive expects SFEFC to exercise its the judgement and expertise in allocating the resources placed at its disposal, and does not instruct SFEFC on the proportion of funding which must be applied to social inclusion initiatives. The figures in the following table show, from 2000-01, the sums which SFEFC made available to further education colleges to cover the additional costs of social inclusion over and above the standard funding per student place.
Year | £ |
2000-01 | 5,208,896 |
2001-02 | 9,891,576 |
2002-03 | 10,986,126 |
Source: Scottish Further Education Funding Council.
- Asked by: Christine Grahame, MSP for South of Scotland, Scottish National Party
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Date lodged: Wednesday, 14 May 2003
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Current Status:
Answered by Nicol Stephen on 3 June 2003
To ask the Scottish Executive what funding it is giving to a feasibility study into the restoration of a station at Reston.
Answer
No funding has been sought from the Scottish Executive for such a study. The opening or re-opening of railway stations is generally considered a local transport issue and as such we would expect the relevant local authority to take a project forward. It is a matter for Scottish Borders Council to determine whether the restoration of a station at Reston is one of its transport priorities and to identify appropriate funding for a feasibility study. Any proposal to re-open a station at Reston would also require the Scottish Borders Council to consult the Strategic Rail Authority.
- Asked by: Christine Grahame, MSP for South of Scotland, Scottish National Party
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Date lodged: Monday, 19 May 2003
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Current Status:
Answered by Peter Peacock on 2 June 2003
To ask the Scottish Executive what its position is on whether children who have attended a nursery attached to a primary school should be transferred to that school or another school on reaching primary school age.
Answer
This is a matter for local education authorities. Subject to the terms of sections 28A and 28B of the Education (Scotland) Act 1980, it is for the local education authority to set out and make available guidelines indicating how they will place children in schools under their management.
- Asked by: Christine Grahame, MSP for South of Scotland, Scottish National Party
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Date lodged: Wednesday, 14 May 2003
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Current Status:
Answered by Peter Peacock on 2 June 2003
To ask the Scottish Executive whether local authority education appeals committees are compliant with the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR) and, in particular, with Article 6.
Answer
Education authority committees are not concerned with the determination of "civil rights and obligations or of any criminal charge" and therefore ECHR, and in particular Article 6, is not applicable. We consider that the system for dealing with cases considered by the committees, which includes the availability of a further appeal to the sheriff court, is nonetheless compatible with the requirements of the convention.
- Asked by: Christine Grahame, MSP for South of Scotland, Scottish National Party
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Date lodged: Wednesday, 14 May 2003
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Current Status:
Answered by Peter Peacock on 2 June 2003
To ask the Scottish Executive whether it will make legal aid available in respect of local authority education appeal committee proceedings.
Answer
The Scottish Executive has no plans to make legal aid available in respect of local authority education appeal committee proceedings. Legal aid is available for appeals from the committees to the sheriff court.
- Asked by: Christine Grahame, MSP for South of Scotland, Scottish National Party
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Date lodged: Wednesday, 14 May 2003
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Current Status:
Answered by Peter Peacock on 2 June 2003
To ask the Scottish Executive what publicity is given to procedures for placement requests.
Answer
Section 28 of the Education (Scotland) Act 1980 requires each education authority to publish or otherwise make available their arrangements for the placing of children in schools under their management.In addition, each year the Scottish Executive publishes a guide for parents entitled
Choosing a School, which includes within it information on the placing request system. This booklet is available at
http://www.scotland.gov.uk/library5/education/casg-00.asp.