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Document : 1141
Title    : Scottish Parliament: Committees: Local Government: Official
Reports: Meeting 4, 2003
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Text

Session 1 (2003) 
Scottish Parliament
Local Government Committee
Official Report 
Meeting No 4, 2003 

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
28 January 2003 
CONTENTS

Tuesday 28 January 2003


LOCAL GOVERNMENT COMMITTEE 4TH MEETING 2003, SESSION 1
   
ITEM IN PRIVATE
DOG FOULING (SCOTLAND) BILL: STAGE 2
PUBLIC APPOINTMENTS AND PUBLIC BODIES ETC (SCOTLAND) BILL



LOCAL GOVERNMENT COMMITTEE
4th Meeting 2003, Session 1

CONVENER

*Trish Godman (West Renfrewshire) (Lab)

DEPUTY CONVENER

*Dr Sylvia Jackson (Stirling) (Lab)

COMMITTEE MEMBERS

*Mr Keith Harding (Mid Scotland and Fife) (Con)
*Tricia Marwick (Mid Scotland and Fife) (SNP)
*Dr Richard Simpson (Ochil) (Lab)
*Iain Smith (North-East Fife) (LD)
*Ms Sandra White (Glasgow) (SNP)

COMMITTEE SUBSTITUTES

Robert Brown (Glasgow) (LD)
Angus MacKay (Edinburgh South) (Lab)
John Young (West of Scotland) (Con)

*attended

THE FOLLOWING ALSO ATTENDED:

Peter Peacock (Deputy Minister for Finance and Public Services)

CLERK TO THE COMMITTEE

Eugene Windsor

SENIOR ASSISTANT CLERK

Ruth Cooper

ASSISTANT CLERK

Neil Stewart

LOCATION

Committee Room 1
 
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
28 January 2003 
Scottish Parliament

Local Government Committee

Tuesday 28 January 2003

(Afternoon)

[THE CONVENER opened the meeting at 14:02]

Item in Private

The Convener (Trish Godman): Okay comrades, we may begin. Before we deal
with the Dog Fouling (Scotland) Bill, I ask the committee to agree to take
item 4 in private, as it concerns our draft report on the Prostitution
Tolerance Zones (Scotland) Bill.

Members indicated agreement.

 
Dog Fouling (Scotland) Bill:
Stage 2

The Convener: I welcome the Deputy Minister for Finance and Public
Services, Peter Peacock, and his officials, and Keith Harding, who is the
member in charge of the bill and a member of the Local Government
Committee.

We begin stage 2 of the Dog Fouling (Scotland) Bill.

Sections 1 and 2 agreed to.

Section 3—Exceptions to offence

The Convener: Amendment 1 is grouped with amendments 16 and 17.

Mr Keith Harding (Mid Scotland and Fife) (Con): At stage 1, I highlighted
my intention to lodge an amendment to extend the definition of "assistance
dog". I was pleased to note that the committee welcomed my intention to do
so in its report. Section 3 provides that disabled persons who would have
difficulty in clearing up after a dog that had been trained to help them
with their disability will be exempt from the offence created by the bill,
which is that of failing to clear up after a dog of which a person is in
charge.

Only disabled persons in charge of assistance dogs trained by Scottish
charities are exempt from the provisions of the bill as drafted. The
purpose of amendment 1 is to widen that exception by removing the
restrictive reference to Scottish charities. That would mean that a person
with a disability that affects their ability to clear up after a dog
trained to assist them with that disability would be excepted from the
offence created by the bill, irrespective of where and by whom their
assistance dog was trained. I would like to make it clear at this point
that having an assistance dog is not enough—the person must also have a
disability that affects their ability to clear up and the dog must have
been trained to assist them with that disability. The exemption relates to
the person with the disability; anyone else in charge of the dog would not
be exempt and would be required to clear up after the dog.

Amendments 16 and 17 are consequential amendments to delete the definitions
of "assistance dog" and "recognised body". The existing exceptions for
blind persons in charge of dogs that are being used for guidance and for
people in charge of working dogs such as police dogs, HM Customs and Excise
dogs, rescue dogs and sheepdogs, are unaffected by the amendments.

I hope that the committee will feel able to support the amendment.

I move amendment 1.

The Deputy Minister for Finance and Public Services (Peter Peacock): Keith
Harding has explained the position fully. The Executive supports his
amendments.

Amendment 1 agreed to.

Section 3, as amended, agreed to.

Section 4 agreed to.

Section 5—Issue of fixed penalty notices

The Convener: Amendment 2 is grouped with amendments 3 and 4.

Peter Peacock: I will speak to amendment 4 first. Amendment 4 would require
someone who was suspected of failing to clean up after their dog to give
their name and address to a local authority officer when requested to do
so. Failure to do so would, on conviction, result in a maximum fine of
£500 being imposed by the courts.

It is important that, if local authority officers are to be largely
responsible for enforcing the new provisions, they have sufficient powers
to do so and that the primary purpose of the bill is not undermined. In the
Executive memorandum, we indicated that we wanted to strengthen the powers
of local authority officers to enable them to enforce the provisions. As
members will recall, the committee welcomed that move in its stage 1 report
and agreed that it would go a considerable way to meeting concerns about
the ability of local authority officers to enforce the proposed provisions.
The proposal would encourage offenders to co-operate because they would
know that failure to do so could result in police involvement and a court
appearance for committing a criminal offence. Amendment 4 has been
consulted on and is considered by the Executive and local authority
officers to be essential if the provisions of the bill are to be
effectively enforced.

Amendments 2 and 3 are consequential to amendment 4.

Under the bill as drafted, the trigger for the exercise of the powers of a
local authority officer or constable would be having "reason to believe"
that a person has committed an offence. That is different from the test of
"reasonable grounds for suspecting" in relation to the constable's powers
under the Criminal Procedures (Scotland) Act 1995.

The amendments would ensure that there is no doubt that the constable's
powers under section 13 of the 1995 act are exercisable in relation to the
new dog fouling offence. Further, they would ensure that the test applied
by the constable in issuing a fixed-penalty notice would be the same as
that of a local authority officer.

I understand that Keith Harding, as promoter of the bill, recognises that
the amendments would make important improvements to the workability of the
bill and I trust that he will indicate his support for them.

I move amendment 2.

Mr Harding: The amendments address concerns that were expressed over
difficulties that might be faced by authorised officers when enforcing the
provisions in the bill. Those concerns were raised at an early stage and I
am grateful to the minister for drafting the amendments, the aim of which I
agree with. Indeed, I take this opportunity to thank the minister and his
officials for all their assistance, both on this issue and throughout the
progress of the bill.

The amendments would meet a concern that was expressed about people
refusing to provide details to the authorised officers and might go a long
way towards preventing such situations from arising.

I note that taking action under this power will require corroboration,
unlike the situation in relation to the substantive provisions in the bill.
However, it would remain a useful addition to the options available to the
local authority and I am happy to support the amendments.

Amendment 2 agreed to.

Amendments 3 and 4 moved—[Peter Peacock]—and agreed to.

The Convener: Amendment 5 is in a group on its own.

Mr Harding: Section 5(1) provides that an authorised officer or constable
may issue a fixed-penalty notice where they have reason to believe that an
offence under section 1 has been committed. Section 5(2) provides that that
fixed-penalty notice must be issued as soon as reasonably practicable and
no later than 72 hours after the offence to which the notice relates.

At stage 1, the committee heard evidence from local authority officers
that, in practical terms, the 72-hour period may be too short. Although
fixed-penalty notices should be issued at the time of the offence or on the
same day, that cannot be guaranteed. The committee and I accepted that the
time limit of 72 hours should be extended.

In line with the suggestion that the committee made in its stage 1 report,
amendment 5 would extend the maximum period for issuing a fixed-penalty
notice to seven days, while still requiring notices to be issued as soon as
reasonably practicable. That would take into account any problems generated
by work or shift patterns or public holidays and any difficulty with
establishing the suspected offender's full address or identity.

I hope that the committee will feel able to support the amendment.

I move amendment 5.

Ms Sandra White (Glasgow) (SNP): When we discussed the bill a couple of
weeks ago, Keith Harding mentioned changing the period from 72 hours to
seven days. That is eminently sensible. I thank him for taking the
committee's recommendation on board.

Peter Peacock: Keith Harding has again set out the background fully. We
anticipate that the majority of fixed penalties will be handed out on the
spot by local authority officers or by the police.

However, for the reasons that Keith Harding has set out and others, there
may be occasions when further inquiries require to be made before the
fixed-penalty notice can be issued. In such circumstances, the
fixed-penalty notice will require to be posted to the alleged offender's
address.

I confirm that we have taken soundings from the informal focus group that
we have on the subject. It, too, supports amendment 5, which the Executive
therefore also supports.

Amendment 5 agreed to.

The Convener: Amendment 6 is grouped with amendment 7.

Mr Harding: Section 5(4) contains three methods of issuing a fixed-penalty
notice: handing or delivering it to the person, leaving it at the person's
last known address or posting it to their last known address. The reason
for amendment 6 is to ensure that the authorised officer attempts to issue
the fixed-penalty notice personally either by handing it or delivering it
to the person before any other method is used. Only where personal service
has been unsuccessful may the penalty notice be left at or sent to the
person's address.

The second part of amendment 6—proposed subsection (4B)—has been
drafted in response to concerns over what could happen if an offender gave
someone else's name and address when the notice is issued personally. It
would ensure that, when the notice is issued personally, a copy notice
would be sent to the person's address. That would alert the recipient if
their details had been falsely used and allow them to raise their concerns
by requesting a hearing as provided for in section 8.

Amendment 7 is a consequential amendment.

I hope that the committee will feel able to support the amendments.

I move amendment 6

Peter Peacock: As Keith Harding has indicated, the purpose of amendments 6
and 7 is twofold. First, wherever possible, an enforcement officer should
attempt to hand or deliver a fixed-penalty notice in person. The amendment
clarifies the other methods that could be attempted if personal service
were not possible.

Secondly, the Executive suggested to Keith Harding that a copy of any
fixed-penalty notice that is issued in person should be forwarded within
seven days to the address that the person provided. That would protect
anyone whose name and address was falsely given to an enforcement officer
by allowing him or her to contact the local authority with a view to having
the penalty notice withdrawn. If the local authority were not prepared to
withdraw the notice, it would be open to the person to notify the local
authority that he wished a hearing.

The Executive therefore supports amendments 6 and 7.

Amendment 6 agreed to.

Amendment 7 moved—[Mr Keith Harding]—and agreed to.

Section 5, as amended, agreed to.

Sections 6 and 7 agreed to.

Section 8—Request for hearing

The Convener: Amendment 8 is in a group on its own.

Mr Harding: Amendment 8 is designed to assist the administration of the
fixed-penalty notice procedure by local authorities. Section 8 provides
that a person who has received a fixed-penalty notice and who disputes that
they have committed an offence may request a hearing in respect of the
offence. The request will be made to the local authority, which must notify
the procurator fiscal.

Under the bill as drafted, only the officers who are authorised to issue
fixed-penalty notices are able to refer requests for hearings to the
procurator fiscal. Given that making those requests is a purely
administrative task, it is unnecessary for those officers to be required to
undertake that task. However, concern has been expressed that, as drafted,
the bill could be interpreted as requiring those officers to do so.
Amendment 8 would remove any doubt about the matter. It would give local
authorities the flexibility to authorise any person to notify the
procurator fiscal of requests for hearings under section.

I move amendment 8.

Peter Peacock: I am grateful to Keith Harding for lodging amendment 8. The
Executive brought to the attention of Keith and his colleagues that the
bill as drafted did not fully reflect the circumstances under which local
authorities operate. The provisions could have prevented the head of legal
services or a legal officer from passing the relevant papers to the
procurator fiscal. We are pleased that Keith Harding lodged amendment 8, as
it clarifies the matter. We support amendment 8.

Amendment 8 agreed to.

Section 8, as amended, agreed to.

Section 9 agreed to.

Section 10—Increase in fixed penalty

14:15

The Convener: Amendment 9 is in a group on its own.

Mr Harding: Section 5 provides for fixed-penalty notices to be issued by
authorised officers and constables who have reason to believe that a person
has committed an offence under section 1.

Section 10 provides that the amount payable is automatically increased by
50 per cent if the original penalty is not paid within the period for
paying. Under section 8(4)(a), a fixed penalty is not payable if a person
has requested a hearing before the expiry of the period for paying.

A slight concern was expressed that section 10 as drafted could give rise
to doubt as to whether a fixed penalty would still be liable to an
automatic increase under that section, even when a request for a hearing
under section 8 had been made.

Amendment 9 would make it clear that a fixed penalty would increase only if
the original fixed penalty remained unpaid and a hearing had not been
requested. Amendment 9 would put beyond doubt the circumstances in which an
increase in the fixed penalty would become due.

I move amendment 9.

Peter Peacock: Amendment 9 is another helpful clarification and would make
the provisions of the bill much more concise. We support amendment 9.

Amendment 9 agreed to.

Section 10, as amended, agreed to.

Section 11—Recovery of unpaid fixed penalties

The Convener: Amendment 10 is grouped with amendments 11 and 13.

Mr Harding: Amendments 10 and 13 would cover the withdrawal of a
fixed-penalty notice, and amendment 11 would provide a mechanism to resolve
certain administrative disputes that could arise.

As I indicated earlier, section 5 provides for fixed-penalty notices to be
issued by authorised officers and constables who have reason to believe
that a person has committed an offence under section 1. Section 9 provides
that fixed penalties are payable to the local authority. Section 11 allows
local authorities to take enforcement action to recover fixed penalties
when the sum due has not been paid and a request for a hearing has not been
made by the end of period for paying.

Section 12 allows a fixed-penalty notice to be withdrawn in certain
circumstances, for example when the offender has given a false name. In
such cases, the notice should not have been issued to the person who is
named in it. Concerns have been expressed that it is not certain whether
the withdrawal of a fixed-penalty notice would prevent a local authority
from taking enforcement action in respect of the fixed penalty. Amendment
10 would put it beyond doubt that the enforcement of unpaid fixed penalties
is subject to the provisions in section 12. Therefore, section 11 would not
apply and enforcement action could not be taken if a notice were
withdrawn.

Section 12 provides that a fixed-penalty notice can be withdrawn in certain
circumstances and that, when that occurs, any money that has been paid in
respect of the fixed-penalty notice to the local authority must be repaid
to the person who paid it.

I indicated earlier that section 10 provides for an increase in the fixed
penalty if it has not been paid and a hearing has not been requested.
Doubts have been expressed that the wording in the bill is not sufficiently
clear that the withdrawal of a fixed-penalty notice means that there can be
no liability for an increase in the fixed penalty under section 10. For the
avoidance of any doubt, amendment 13 would make it clear that no amount
whatsoever would be payable under a fixed-penalty notice that has been
withdrawn.

If the period for paying has expired and no payment or request for a
hearing has been received, and the fixed-penalty notice has not been
withdrawn under section 12, section 10 provides that the amount payable for
the fixed penalty is automatically increased by 50 per cent. Under section
11, the sum due by way of fixed penalty is enforceable by the local
authority against the recipient of the fixed-penalty notice.

Under section 8(4)(a), a fixed penalty is not payable if a person has
requested a hearing before the expiry of the period for paying. Following
on-going discussions, I believe that it is conceivable that a dispute could
arise between a local authority and a recipient of a fixed-penalty notice
over whether a fixed penalty had been paid or whether a hearing had been
requested before the expiry of the period for paying.

It is anticipated that disputes would usually be resolved between the local
authority and the recipient without having to involve the courts, but
concern has been expressed about the lack of a mechanism within the bill by
which the courts could resolve any such disputes. As the bill contains no
such mechanism, disputes might require to be determined by the Court of
Session. Amendment 11 would introduce a mechanism to allow a summary
application to be made to the local sheriff for a decision. Summary
application is an established procedure and is used in numerous other
statutes, particularly where administrative appeals are allowed.

Amendment 11 would make provision for the application to be made only on
the limited grounds that I have indicated. Under proposed subsection (2) of
the new section that would be introduced by the amendment, the sheriff
could declare that the fixed penalty was or was not paid on time, or that a
hearing was or was not requested within the time limit. Where the court
finds in favour of the person who received the fixed penalty, the sheriff
would also be able to declare that the penalty was not enforceable.

I move amendment 10.

Peter Peacock: We agree that amendment 10 would improve the drafting of the
bill by making it clear that there could be no recovery of an unpaid fixed
penalty where the notice had been withdrawn under section 12.
Notwithstanding that, we are conscious that section 11 does not contain a
mechanism for resolving disputes between the local authority and an
individual over whether a fixed penalty had been paid or a hearing
requested within the period allowed.

We expect that, in the vast majority of cases, such disputes could be
resolved by the individual and the local authority without recourse to the
court system. However, as a safeguard and to ensure that the bill complies
with the European convention on human rights, we consider it necessary to
provide the individual with the right to appeal to the sheriff court in the
event that such a dispute could not be resolved by other means.

Amendment 13 is a technical drafting amendment and would make it clear that
no sum would be payable if a fixed penalty were withdrawn.

The Executive is grateful to Keith Harding for lodging the amendments to
address the concerns that have arisen. We fully support the amendments.

Amendment 10 agreed to.

Section 11, as amended, agreed to.

After section 11

Amendment 11 moved—[Mr Keith Harding]—and agreed to.

Section 12—Withdrawal of fixed penalty notice

The Convener: Amendment 12 is in a group of its own.

Mr Harding: Amendment 12 would clarify who has the power to withdraw
fixed-penalty notices and the circumstances in which they may do so.

Section 5 will provide that an authorised officer or a constable may issue
a fixed-penalty notice when they have reason to believe that an offence has
been committed under section 1 of the bill. By virtue of section 15, an
"authorised officer" is any person who is authorised in writing by the
local authority to issue fixed-penalty notices.

Section 12 outlines certain circumstances in which a fixed-penalty notice
can be withdrawn. Currently, only an authorised officer would be able to
withdraw a fixed-penalty notice that had been issued by an authorised
officer. Similarly, only a constable could withdraw a fixed-penalty notice
that had been issued by a constable. It has been suggested that the bill as
drafted is a little restrictive and that that could lead to operational
difficulties because only local authority staff who have been authorised to
issue fixed-penalty notices would be able to withdraw them.

Amendment 12 would allow local authorities to authorise persons—for
instance, administrative or legal staff—specifically to withdraw
fixed-penalty notices. The power would allow such staff to withdraw only
fixed-penalty notices that had been issued by authorised officers within
their own local authority area. Amendment 12 would not alter the position
of fixed-penalty notices that had been issued by constables; such notices
could still be withdrawn only by a constable.

I turn now to the grounds for withdrawal. Amendment 12 seeks to clarify the
circumstances that must exist before a fixed-penalty notice can be
withdrawn. The bill as drafted provides that a fixed-penalty notice can be
withdrawn when it ought not to have been issued or when it ought not to
have been issued to the person named. The only time when a notice ought not
to have been issued is when no offence was committed—if, for example, the
fouling took place in a permitted area or if one of the exceptions in
section 3 applied. Amendment 12 would clarify that by substituting the
words "was not committed" for

"ought not to have been issued".

The second ground, which relates to notices that have been issued to
wrongly named persons, is unchanged.

I move amendment 12.

Iain Smith (North-East Fife) (LD): I thank Keith Harding for seeking to
clarify section 12, but there is still a lack of clarity about the
circumstances in which an individual can challenge a fixed-penalty because
it was wrongly issued, and I am still not clear about the circumstances in
which it would be possible to withdraw a notice. If, for example, a notice
were issued to the wrong person, it would be a case of, "The big dug did it
and ran away." If a person applies to say that they have been wrongly
named, or that they are exempt under one of the exceptions in section 3,
and if that person requests a hearing, it is not clear whether the local
authority or constable concerned can then, having reviewed the case and
accepted the person's evidence, withdraw the notice without the matter
having necessarily to go to a hearing. I would like some clarity on that
and further thought to be given to the matter before stage 3. I am
concerned about the matter; it was raised at stage 1 and I thought that it
might have been clarified by amendments at stage 2.

Dr Sylvia Jackson (Stirling) (Lab): I think that I am clear about the
matter, but I would like to double check with Keith Harding. Are we saying
that, if a constable has issued a fixed-penalty notice, any authorised
person could now withdraw it?

Mr Harding: No—an authorised person can be nominated by council
officials, but a constable must withdraw any notice that has been issued by
a constable.

Dr Jackson: What is the difference between a constable issuing a
fixed-penalty notice and a person who is authorised by the local authority
issuing that notice?

Peter Peacock: Keith Harding set out fully the reasons for moving amendment
12. We are grateful to him for lodging that amendment and we support it.

I know that it is for Keith Harding to answer the question that Iain Smith
asked, but it might be helpful and reassuring for Iain Smith and other
members if, before stage 3, I were to give the Executive's interpretation
of the situation. Iain Smith is unnecessarily concerned—there are
mechanisms for dealing with the matter he raised. We will also be able to
issue guidance that will cover some of the points that he has raised.
Otherwise, we strongly support amendment 12.

Mr Harding: I am grateful to Iain Smith for raising his concerns with me
before the meeting. As the minister said, we will look at the matter
further and address it at stage 3, if necessary. However, we will come back
to him in writing with our views.

In response to Sylvia Jackson's question about constables and authorised
officers, there is no real difference between them, but they operate under
different regimes. One group is employed by the council and the other by
the police authority.

Dr Jackson: I thought that that was the reason.

Amendment 12 agreed to.

Amendment 13 moved—[Mr Keith Harding]—and agreed to.

Section 12, as amended, agreed to.

Section 13 agreed to.

Section 14—Orders

The Convener: Amendment 14 is grouped with amendment 15.

Mr Harding: I have lodged amendments 14 and 15 to take account of the view
of the Subordinate Legislation Committee that statutory instruments made
under made under sections 6(2), 9(2) and 10 should be subject to
affirmative procedure. That means that an instrument cannot be made unless
a draft of the instrument has been approved by a resolution of the
Parliament. I will be happy to provide further details, if the committee
wants them, about each of the powers concerned.

I move amendment 14.

14:30

Peter Peacock: Again, the Executive is happy to support the amendments that
were lodged by Keith Harding to address the concerns that were raised by
the Subordinate Legislation Committee.

Amendment 14 agreed to.

Amendment 15 moved—[Keith Harding]—and agreed to.

Section 14, as amended, agreed to.

Section 15—Interpretation

Amendments 16 and 17 moved—[Keith Harding]—and agreed to.

Section 15, as amended, agreed to.

Section 16 agreed to.

Section 17—Amendment of the Criminal Procedure (Scotland) Act 1995

The Convener: I call Keith Harding to move and speak to amendment 18.

Mr Harding: Section 302(9)(a) of the Criminal Procedure (Scotland) Act 1995
allows procurators fiscal to issue conditional offers in respect of
offences that can be tried before district courts. A conditional offer is a
fixed penalty that is issued as an alternative to prosecution. Section 17
of the bill will amend the 1995 act to prevent procurators fiscal from
making conditional offers. The intention behind that was to prevent
offenders from requesting hearings in the hope that they will receive
conditional offers from procurators fiscal that might be lower than the
fixed penalty payable under the bill. Concern has been expressed that that
will fetter the discretion of procurators fiscal. On reflection, I agree
that it is not appropriate to restrict the options available to procurators
fiscal, and amendment 18 would remove the restriction by deleting section
17 from the bill. It might be considered unlikely that any such conditional
offer would be made or, if it were made, accepted given that an opportunity
to pay without prosecution will already have been declined. However, the
option to make the offer should properly be available to procurators
fiscal. Amendment 18 is also appropriate given that one of the bill's aims
is to keep such matters out of the courts.

I move amendment 18.

Peter Peacock: As Keith Harding indicated, section 17 sought to prevent
people from requesting a hearing in the hope of receiving a fiscal fine
that was lower than the fixed-penalty notice. The Executive took the view
that it would not be appropriate to fetter the discretion of procurators
fiscal in that matter, so I am pleased that Keith Harding has lodged an
amendment to remove the restriction. We support amendment 18.

Amendment 18 agreed to.

Section 18 agreed to.

Long title agreed to.

The Convener: That ends consideration of stage 2 of the bill. I thank Keith
Harding and members of the non-Executive bills unit for all their hard
work. I also thank the minister and his staff—in particular for the
amendments snapshot, which was helpful.

14:33

Meeting suspended.

14:34

On resuming—

Public Appointments and
Public Bodies etc (Scotland) Bill

The Convener: Members will have seen among their papers a letter from Peter
Peacock regarding the proposal by the Executive to lodge at stage 3
amendments to the Public Appointments and Public Bodies etc (Scotland)
Bill. The amendments would have the effect of not dissolving the Royal
Commission on the Ancient and Historical Monuments of Scotland, which is
one of the bodies that were to be dissolved under the bill.

Given what happened the last time the committee experienced an Executive
decision to do something at the last minute, I have put the matter on the
agenda today because there are different ways in which to deal with it. We
can accept that this was something that the Executive did not foresee and
that, therefore, there will be a late amendment to the bill. There is time,
however, for us to invite the appropriate minister—Dr Elaine Murray—to
come to the committee next week to be cross-examined. We could seek answers
to any questions that committee members have and I could thereafter write
to Peter Peacock about any decision that the committee makes. We cannot
return to stage 2 to change anything, however. We can either accept that,
although it is late, the amendments are understandable, or we can ask the
minister to come before the committee. It is up to members to decide what
we should do.

Tricia Marwick (Mid Scotland and Fife) (SNP): I understand the convener's
preamble and I welcome the fact that Peter Peacock has taken the
opportunity to write to the committee. The suggested amendments are of the
type that I would expect to see at stage 3. The issue was unforeseen and
the suggested changes will be necessary to ensure good legislation. I
regret the fact that, obviously, not enough work had been done before the
bill was introduced; however, I welcome the fact that the minister has
advised us of the amendments. It would be sensible for the amendments to be
lodged at stage 3; otherwise, the bill would be incompetent.

Ms White: At first glance, when I saw that the letter was about the Public
Appointments and Public Bodies etc (Scotland) Bill, I thought that we
should take up the invitation to have the minister here to explain the
amendments. However, after reading the letter, I think that it explains the
issue regarding the Scottish Charity Law Review Commission. My main concern
is that, once again, the Royal Commission on the Ancient and Historical
Monuments of Scotland is involved. 

Perhaps I am being ultra-cautious but, because that body is involved again,
I wonder whether we should have the minister here to offer further
explanation. The letter explains the fact that the new body would not have
charitable status under the bill as drafted, but it is the same body that
is at issue again, and that concerns me.

Iain Smith: It is a slightly unfortunate coincidence that the body in
question is the one about which there has been most controversy at stages 1
and 2 of the bill. I am surprised that the information regarding the loss
of its charitable status came to light only at such a late stage. To be
frank, the constitution, funding and legal status of a body should be the
first things that are examined in consideration of its future. It should
not be possible to find out at the last minute that a body has a particular
legal status that is disadvantageous. That is the one issue on which we
should take evidence from the minister. We should ask her why that was not
picked up earlier in the examination of the bodies. Nonetheless, Tricia
Marwick is right to say that our only course of action, other than sending
£400,000 down to the Treasury—which I am not keen to do—is to accept
the amendments.

Dr Jackson: I agree with Iain Smith. I am concerned that the information
has come to light only now—I would have thought that such information
would have come to light earlier. I do not know who is responsible for
that—whether civil servants or ministers—but we must address the
issue.

Dr Richard Simpson (Ochil) (Lab): I do not disagree. However, we could find
out the relevant information by writing a letter, rather than by calling
the minister before us. We are all agreed that we have to accept the
amendments; the question is why joined-up thinking was not applied. When
the McFadden report was published, it was clear that there was going to be
a problem with non-departmental public bodies that had charitable status.
It is not just a Scottish issue; it is a UK issue, and sizeable sums of
money are involved.

There really should have been joined-up action within the Executive, but
there was not, and we should write to ask why. We should ask for an
undertaking that the matter will be fully examined, and that other
cross-cutting issues should be addressed properly. I propose that we write,
rather than taking up our, and the minister's, time.

The Convener: It seems that there are three positions. Tricia Marwick has
said that questions need to be asked about the matter coming to us so late,
but does not see the need for us to see the minister. Others seem to think
that the minister should come along to the committee. The other position,
which could address both views, is for us to write to the minister,
expressing our concerns and thoughts. We could then see whether we get an
answer.

Tricia Marwick: I will put forward a fourth point of view. My reason for
not wanting to call the minister before is that he would have to come
before us next Tuesday. We consider the Public Appointments and Public
Bodies etc (Scotland) Bill at stage 3 on Wednesday afternoon next week, so
we will not really have the opportunity to question the minister about his
further thinking on how we can proceed. We could still write to the
minister, but I suggest that we invite him to speak to us a couple of weeks
down the line, when he has had a chance to think about what went wrong. The
Deputy Minister for Finance and Public Services says in his letter:

"We need to discuss this with RCAHMS, but we would expect this to be taken
forward later this year."

We need to know how that will happen. Perhaps it would be appropriate to
ask the minister questions about the matter in a couple of weeks—but not
next Tuesday.

The Convener: The slight problem with that idea is that the bill will be
considered next week. There is the possibility that the committee could
write to the Executive and ask for its thoughts, but the matter of the
RCAHMS might come up during the debate on Wednesday next week.

Iain Smith: Would it be competent for us to do what Tricia Marwick
suggests? Our interest in the RCAHMS lies solely in the fact that it is
named in a bill on which we are the lead committee. We will have no
interest in it after Wednesday next week. If we are going to do anything
about the matter, it has to be this week. I am happy to go along with
Richard Simpson's suggestion to write to the minister.

Mr Harding: I, too, support Richard Simpson's idea. I think it is a better
solution.

The Convener: So the committee—if we are all agreed—supports Richard
Simpson's position, which is that we write a letter to the minister, rather
than having the minister appear before us.

Dr Jackson: Can I just check that we are all agreed, and that we are not
going to split on the matter in a debate?

The Convener: Are members agreed that the provisions in the bill covering
the RCAHMS have to be withdrawn?

Members indicated agreement.

The Convener: That is fine. We will not have any split about that.

Tricia Marwick: There is no alternative.

The Convener: No, there is not.

Dr Jackson: The alternative is to have the minister come before us.

The Convener: No—the alternative is that members of the committee vote
different ways when the bill gets to Parliament for stage 3.

Tricia Marwick: That is the alternative.

Dr Jackson: I meant that it is the alternative to Richard Simpson's idea of
writing to the minister. Is Tricia Marwick quite happy that we write a
letter, as opposed to have the minister come along to the committee?

Tricia Marwick: Absolutely.

The Convener: Is there anything specific that members want to put in the
letter? I do not want us to miss anything out.

Ms White: We should ask why the situation was not noticed previously.

The Convener: Yes, and we should ask why the matter was not brought to our
attention.

Tricia Marwick: We have spoken about cross-cutting issues. I know that we
have responsibility for the Public Appointments and Public Bodies etc
(Scotland) Bill, but the Education, Culture and Sport Committee also has an
interest in it. I notice that the letter from the minister was addressed to
us in view of our consideration of the bill as lead committee. Although it
might not be appropriate for this committee to call the minister back
before it, such action might be appropriate for the Education, Culture and
Sport Committee. Can you find out whether that committee received a copy of
the letter?

The Convener: We have copied the letter to that committee. It will make its
own decision. I suspect that time, as it is against us, is against the
Education, Culture and Sport Committee. Richard Simpson said it all: the
knowledge about the situation with the RCAHMS existed and, as Iain Smith
said, questions should have been asked in the first instance about how that
body was funded. We can put together a letter making those points. Can we
agree to that?

Iain Smith: I would also like us to ask the Executive how it intends to
take things forward, and what proposals it has for the RCAHMS.

The Convener: Do we agree to write to the minister a letter along those
lines?

Members indicated agreement.

14:43

Meeting continued in private until 15:31.


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