1. Mr. Douglas Alexander (Paisley, South): What progress is being made in the development of one-stop clinic services in Scotland. [56101]
The Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Scotland (Mr. Sam Galbraith): We are making good progress towards modernising the national health service. About 80 one-stop clinics have so far been established throughout Scotland. That is an important step towards our aim of better and quicker treatment for everyone.
Mr. Alexander: Can the Minister tell the House what steps are being taken to support one-stop clinics for my constituents in Paisley, South?
Mr. Galbraith: My hon. Friend's local hospital has made considerable progress. There are already one-stop clinics for breast cancer, colorectal cancer, prostatic assessment, early pregnancy and cardiology. Those clinics are well on their way to providing better and quicker treatment for all their patients.
2. Mrs. Ray Michie (Argyll and Bute): What steps he is taking to encourage more Gaelic-speaking teachers to undertake training for work in Gaelic-medium units. [56102]
The Minister for Education, Scottish Office (Mrs. Helen Liddell): The Government are committed to Gaelic and plan to spend £5 million more on Gaelic education over five years, including £200,000 annually for in-service teacher training.
Teacher education institutions have targets for Gaelic student numbers; suitable Gaelic-speakers taking a primary postgraduate certificate in education receive free tuition, regardless of any previous support that they may have received; and the Scottish Office funds publicity promoting Gaelic-medium teaching.
Mrs. Michie:
I thank the Minister for that comprehensive answer. My particular concern relates to
I invite the Minister to tear herself away from the central belt and visit the units in Mull, Tiree and Islay. She will see what excellent work they are doing, but they are always on a knife-edge in case they lose a teacher whom they cannot replace.
Mrs. Liddell:
I am grateful to the hon. Lady for her generous invitation, which I should love to take up. I know that she has had a particular concern about Salen primary school on Mull, which lost its Gaelic teacher and then lost the supply teacher, who moved away rapidly. I understand that a teacher is now in place, so that difficulty should have been resolved.
It may reassure the hon. Lady to know that Her Majesty's inspectorate of schools has undertaken research which shows that there are a substantial number of Gaelic-speaking teachers who are interested in teaching through the medium of Gaelic. Education authorities can provide support for those teachers to enable them to teach in Gaelic-medium units. The Government have set aside an additional £200,000 annually for in-service training for Gaelic teachers. Earlier this year the General Teaching Council held a seminar on Gaelic-medium education. My officials, together with the GTC, are seeking to address the issues that were raised at that seminar, with a view to making further progress.
Mr. Michael Connarty (Falkirk, East):
I welcome my right hon. Friend to her position on the Scottish Front Bench and congratulate her on her rise in status to membership of the Privy Council. She will recall that I wrote to her recently about other modern languages, as well as Gaelic. Can she tell the House what plans she has in store for Scottish schools to advance the learning of other modern languages, which are so vital in the present European context?
Mrs. Liddell:
I thank my hon. Friend for his generous comments. I am aware of the correspondence that he sent me in relation to the teaching of modern languages. He will know that a recent report by Her Majesty's inspectorate of schools revealed rather disturbing news about the teaching of modern languages in Scottish schools. As a result, I have asked officials to strengthen the guidelines for initial teacher training to include stronger encouragement for developing modern language skills. I am also setting up a languages action group to work with the Scottish Consultative Council on the Curriculum to tackle a programme, including a review of the guidelines on modern languages for five to 14-year-olds, and to give advice on attainment targets for modern languages in primary and secondary schools. I will also ask the Scottish qualifications authority to review the standard grade arrangements for modern languages because, quite frankly, we cannot have a modern Scotland if the Scottish people are not proficient in modern European languages.
3. Mr. Eric Clarke (Midlothian):
What steps he has taken to assist Scottish businesses in respect of the recent international financial crisis. [56103]
The Secretary of State for Scotland (Mr. Donald Dewar):
Although my hon. Friend is right to be concerned about the turbulence in the world economy, the latest monthly figures show that unemployment in Scotland continues to decline and employment to increase. The Government endeavour to help businesses by promoting a competitive, stable domestic economy. Scottish Enterprise is reviewing its economic development strategy at my request and, with my Department, is providing specific assistance to areas experiencing particular problems.
Mr. Clarke:
May I take this opportunity to thank everyone who wrote to me and sent get well cards--particularly you, Madam Speaker?
The Secretary of State knows that many businesses go to the wall because confidentiality is imperative in their day-to-day dealings. Does his Department have a hotline or an equivalent service from which businesses may seek assistance? If businesses could consult such a service more quickly, there would be fewer redundancies and less unemployment.
Mr. Dewar:
My hon. Friend's reappearance on the Bench, in fighting form, is very welcome. In Scottish terms, the House is a much quieter place when he is absent. I am delighted to see him back and boisterous.
As to his specific question, many local enterprise companies run one-stop shops with entry points. I agree entirely that, at a time when there are inevitable economic difficulties given worldwide conditions, it is particularly important that those who believe that they have a viable future but who require assistance over a difficult patch establish contact with local enterprise companies, Scottish Enterprise, Highlands and Islands Enterprise or directly with my Department. That would give us the chance to offer what advice and help we can. I am very much in the business of taking a positive approach to firms experiencing difficulties.
Mr. James Wallace (Orkney and Shetland):
I am sure that the Secretary of State will have heard many business people in Scotland express concern about the strength of the pound and the level of interest rates. Given that interest rates are significantly lower in countries that are about to become members of the single currency than in the United Kingdom, and given that tens of thousands of jobs in Scotland depend on manufacturing industries that export to European Union destinations, will the Government firm up their recent more positive sounds about economic and monetary union and establish a clear timetable for a referendum and British membership of the single currency?
Mr. Dewar:
It is always a pleasure to hear Liberal party policy, and it is good that the hon. and learned Gentleman pushes his line with such charm.
As to the wider issues that he raised, he may have to approach my colleagues at the Treasury. However, in 1997, for example, exports from Scotland increased by
12 per cent. I take a bullish view of the Scottish economy's medium and longer-term prospects, but I am anxious not to see a return to stop-go economics and to boom and bust. I certainly do not want to return to the days--it was not so long ago--when we saw interest rates at 15 per cent. and many associated problems. The hon. and learned Gentleman is entitled to point to the Conservative Front Bench in that regard. The Chancellor is determined to end that situation, and I think that he has the full support not only of my right hon. and hon. Friends but of many other sectors of political opinion.
Mr. Martin O'Neill (Ochil):
I am sure that my right hon. Friend is aware that a number of Scottish companies have suffered as a consequence of the international turbulence and, therefore, are not necessarily able to meet the regional selective assistance targets to which they were previously committed. Will my right hon. Friend and his colleagues continue to look sympathetically at those companies' requests that their problems be considered if the employment targets to which they were committed in more optimistic times are not met?
Mr. Dewar:
I would approach my hon. Friend's suggestion with a great deal of caution. RSA is very tightly controlled--and rightly so. Regional selective assistance is paid when jobs are delivered, and I want to hold to that principle. I repeat my message: firms that experience particular difficulties should not be slow in coming forward and approaching the Scottish Office and Scottish Enterprise, because they may be assisted in other ways. We naturally look sympathetically at cases in which, despite certain difficulties, the long-term viable job prospects seem to be good and realistic. I hold to the fact--there are examples that underline this point--that RSA needs to be tied to the targets that have been promised.
Mr. John Swinney (North Tayside):
In the light of the continuing economic difficulties in the shorter term to which the Secretary has referred, does he recognise the folly of the real-term reductions in the budgets for Scottish Enterprise and Highlands and Islands Enterprise? Does the right hon. Gentleman not consider that, in view of those difficulties, he should reverse the cuts and give himself more room for manoeuvre to invest in areas of Scotland that are suffering economic difficulties, such as the borders and the south-west?
Mr. Dewar:
I certainly recognise the folly of taking a simplistic line, as the hon. Gentleman has just done, on this matter. The hon. Gentleman is referring to the adjustments that we have made, particularly to the property portfolio of Scottish Enterprise. We wish to invest not in property but in people, skills and economic growth. Secondly, we have adjusted Scottish Enterprise's training budget because £70 million a year is coming in under the new deal and more is being spent on skills and training in Scotland than previously. I am sure that the hon. Gentleman is aware of those facts. I hope that he will both accept them and rejoice, with me, in the fact that Scotland is leading the way in the new deal: there are 15,500 people already in the system; 2,600 are now in jobs; and 5,700 employers have already signed up.
Ms Rachel Squire (Dunfermline, West):
Does my right hon. Friend agree that there are some success stories among businesses in Scotland? Will he join me in welcoming the additional 1,400 jobs that will be coming to the Fife area through BSkyB? Will he join me also in paying tribute to the management and work force of Solectron Scotland Ltd., which deals with the global manufacturing electronics industry? I visited its plant in Dunfermline yesterday, where it now employs nearly 1,300 people.
Mr. Dewar:
I am happy to endorse what my hon. Friend has said. It is important that we remember that, although there have been disappointments recently and some failures, we have been creating more jobs in Scotland than we have been losing. I hope that that situation will continue. Certainly every effort will be made to ensure that it does. In 1997-98, Locate in Scotland concluded 87 inward investment projects coming to Scotland, creating and safeguarding 18,000 jobs. I welcome the expansion in Dunfermline by BSkyB. I am well aware of the reputation and excellence of the work that is carried out by Solectron.
Dr. Liam Fox (Woodspring):
Does the Secretary of State expect unemployment in Scotland to fall or to rise between now and the establishment of the Scottish Parliament?
Mr. Dewar:
The hon. Gentleman, like me, will have to wait and see. Thanks to the determined line that is taken by the Government--for example, taking £20 billion out of the borrowing requirement and the way in which we have held down inflation--we are certainly very much better placed than many competing countries to ride out the turbulence that has resulted from the collapse of the far east economies and from events in Russia. I am sure that the hon. Gentleman would want to pay tribute to that and join me in hoping that we can continue the excellent record to which I have referred.
Dr. Fox:
The right hon. Gentleman's evasiveness is matched only by his willingness to blame other people. Let us go through what the Government are doing. With exporters facing continuing difficulties; with the failure of the new deal to attract sustainable jobs; with tax rises of the equivalent of 5p in the standard rate since the Government came to power; with the Chancellor of the Exchequer, in an hour's time, about to downgrade his own growth forecast; with an increase in borrowing; with a tax raid on pensions; and with a soon-to-be-announced extra 23p per gallon on petrol, which will further damage confidence in the rural economy, does not the Secretary of State accept that the price of the Government's incompetence is bound to be paid for in lost jobs, and that the next get well card that he writes will be to the Scottish economy?
Mr. Dewar:
The hon. Gentleman should try to come into the real world. I am prepared to debate with him as long as his arguments are in any sense creditable. As a start, for his education, he should consider the previous
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