Results 81–100 of 4665 for speaker:Donald Dewar

Scottish Parliament: First Minister's Question Time — scotTish executive: Secretary of State for Scotland (Meetings) (14 Sep 2000)

Donald Dewar: I speak to the Secretary of State for Scotland frequently on the telephone; indeed, I spoke to him but a couple of hours ago. However, I might not see him until the Labour Party conference, where I am always glad to have civilised conversation.

Scottish Parliament: First Minister's Question Time — scotTish executive: Secretary of State for Scotland (Meetings) (14 Sep 2000)

Donald Dewar: I concede that waiting lists have increased—we have made that clear. Mr McLetchie might be quoting from an Executive press statement, which would be an improvement on many of his previous sources. If he is, he might want to examine the rest of the statement, which indicates that there has been considerable progress in bringing down waiting times. I remember that on many occasions in the...

Scottish Parliament: First Minister's Question Time — scotTish executive: Secretary of State for Scotland (Meetings) (14 Sep 2000)

Donald Dewar: On waiting times, I remind Mr McLetchie that 43 per cent of patients are treated immediately and never join a waiting list. Of those who have to wait, 46 per cent are seen within a month and 83 per cent are seen within three months—that is encouraging. We would like to improve the situation, but those figures are a corrective against some of the excitable comments that we hear on the issue....

Scottish Parliament: First Minister's Question Time — scotTish executive: Pensioner Poverty (14 Sep 2000)

Donald Dewar: I am delighted to see that Mr Neil has been allowed to progress to the second rank. I welcome his question. A comprehensive programme of action is in place for tackling poverty among pensioners in Scotland. That programme includes the minimum income guarantee, with which Mr Neil will be familiar. We calculate that 200,000 Scots can benefit from it; I say can, because we will have to run a...

Scottish Parliament: First Minister's Question Time — scotTish executive: Pensioner Poverty (14 Sep 2000)

Donald Dewar: Mr Neil might acknowledge that, because that was an inflation-linked increase, it was a mark of the fact that inflation is very low in this country. Secondly, Mr Neil's figures on Europe are as spurious as many others that he uses.

Scottish Parliament: First Minister's Question Time — scotTish executive: Pensioner Poverty (14 Sep 2000)

Donald Dewar: That might be the case if one considers only the basic state pension, but as Mr Neil knows, in the United Kingdom we have a very substantial occupational pension sector, which makes a big difference to the statistics. By 2001, as a result of the budget measures that have just been announced, an average UK pensioner will be some £400 a year better off. A 75-year-old pensioner on the minimum...

Scottish Parliament: First Minister's Question Time — scotTish executive: Pensioner Poverty (14 Sep 2000)

Donald Dewar: I welcome the presence of pensioners' delegations in the gallery of Parliament today. I have something of a fellow feeling with them because I will qualify for a state pension in two years. I will tell members a secret—I do not know whether it is an admission or a confession: I am reasonably comfortably off. If anyone tells me that the best way of helping the poor pensioner is to increase...

Scottish Parliament: First Minister's Question Time — scotTish executive: Pensioner Poverty (14 Sep 2000)

Donald Dewar: I have enormous sympathy for the point that Malcolm Chisholm makes. It is important that we deal with the self-evident difficulties with the housing stock. It is true that we want to ensure that houses in which pensioners live are properly heated and insulated. We will have something positive to say about that very shortly.

Scottish Parliament: First Minister's Question Time — scotTish executive: National Health Service (Funding) (14 Sep 2000)

Donald Dewar: Health needs are strongly influenced by deprivation. That is the key factor that is taken into account by the Arbuthnott calculations. The Arbuthnott formula allocates national health service funding to health boards and their local health care partners on what we believe is a more equitable basis. The existing rigorous monitoring arrangements and the annual accountability review will ensure...

Scottish Parliament: First Minister's Question Time — scotTish executive: National Health Service (Funding) (14 Sep 2000)

Donald Dewar: That is an important consideration. Furthermore, it is vital that we have proper discussion and co-ordination and that we make the best use of this opportunity. If I remember rightly, Patricia Ferguson has direct experience of hospital management and, perhaps, of accounting control in hospitals. We must give a very high priority to those matters. I am proud of the Arbuthnott report and the...

Scottish Parliament: First Minister's Question Time — scotTish executive: National Health Service (Funding) (14 Sep 2000)

Donald Dewar: I must take refuge in saying that I will write to Kay Ullrich on that. The amount is on the margin; however, that is important in such areas.

Scottish Parliament: First Minister's Question Time — scotTish executive: National Health Service (Funding) (14 Sep 2000)

Donald Dewar: That sounds right to me. However, I will have to check, as I do not have the figures to hand. The issue is important. For example, Glasgow has been one of the winners and the extra finance that will result will be very welcome, particularly given the difficult period that we face with the health service in Glasgow and the pressing need to alter the profile of hospital provision.

Scottish Parliament written answers — Information Technology: Information Technology (14 Sep 2000)

Donald Dewar: Earlier today, I launched the Executive’s wide-ranging plans for creating a Digital Scotland. I stressed that above all there must be digital inclusion to ensure that everyone in Scotland benefits. Much work is already underway: providing access to computers and the web in libraries and community cybercafes; 80% discounts on the costs of basic courses in computers; and learndirect scotland...

Scottish Parliament written answers — Schools: Schools (14 Sep 2000)

Donald Dewar: All our policies for schools are directed towards ensuring that all children in rural areas benefit from school provision of the highest quality.

Scottish Parliament: Fuel Situation (13 Sep 2000)

Donald Dewar: It is true that the oil companies and the protestors have been having discussions. At Grangemouth, there is a suggestion that no lorry can move without the permission of the protestors. That is an interesting and serious situation.

Scottish Parliament: Fuel Situation (13 Sep 2000)

Donald Dewar: rose —

Scottish Parliament: Fuel Situation (13 Sep 2000)

Donald Dewar: No. I am merely anxious to establish what the SNP's position is. Is Mr Salmond advising the protesters to continue their action, or is he joining the large number of people who are increasingly concerned about the situation and asking the protesters to call the action off?

Scottish Parliament: Fuel Situation (13 Sep 2000)

Donald Dewar: rose —

Scottish Parliament: Fuel Situation (13 Sep 2000)

Donald Dewar: Mr Salmond might like to consider that if oil prices vary at that level, they are not a very sound foundation on which to build the case for independence. My point—and it is very important—is that Mr Salmond is giving the impression that he is in favour of a massive reduction in fuel duty. At the most recent meeting of the Scottish Grand Committee, there was a quite definitive statement...

Scottish Parliament: Fuel Situation (13 Sep 2000)

Donald Dewar: rose—


<< < 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 > >>

Create an alert

Advanced search

Find this exact word or phrase

You can also do this from the main search box by putting exact words in quotes: like "cycling" or "hutton report"

By default, we show words related to your search term, like “cycle” and “cycles” in a search for cycling. Putting the word in quotes, like "cycling", will stop this.

Excluding these words

You can also do this from the main search box by putting a minus sign before words you don’t want: like hunting -fox

We also support a bunch of boolean search modifiers, like AND and NEAR, for precise searching.

Date range

to

You can give a start date, an end date, or both to restrict results to a particular date range. A missing end date implies the current date, and a missing start date implies the oldest date we have in the system. Dates can be entered in any format you wish, e.g. 3rd March 2007 or 17/10/1989

Person

Enter a name here to restrict results to contributions only by that person.

Section

Restrict results to a particular parliament or assembly that we cover (e.g. the Scottish Parliament), or a particular type of data within an institution, such as Commons Written Answers.

Column

If you know the actual Hansard column number of the information you are interested in (perhaps you’re looking up a paper reference), you can restrict results to that; you can also use column:123 in the main search box.