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Displaying 2810 contributions
Public Audit Committee [Draft]
Meeting date: 18 February 2026
Colin Beattie
We have had 20 years—in my case, 15 years—of reassurances from you and your predecessors. Why should we believe that it is going to work this time? You paint a very rosy picture, but the report does not paint quite such a rosy picture. How can we get the reassurance that things are actually happening and we are moving in the correct direction?
10:00
Public Audit Committee [Draft]
Meeting date: 18 February 2026
Colin Beattie
I will move on to the timescales involved. Paragraph 9 of the report states:
“The SPPA did not meet its 1 April 2025 legislative deadline for providing affected members … with Remedy calculations and options”.
Paragraph 10 states:
“Following guidance from TPR, the agency provided ‘breach of law’ reports for the affected cohorts in May and June 2025”.
Will you give us a bit of background as to what a breach of law report is and explain what sort of consequences, if any, it has?
Public Audit Committee [Draft]
Meeting date: 18 February 2026
Colin Beattie
At this point, there have been no consequences for the SPPA, other than the formal issuing of the breach of law reports.
Public Audit Committee [Draft]
Meeting date: 18 February 2026
Colin Beattie
Have you had an opportunity to see the assumptions behind the original estimates about time? Did they seem reasonable?
Public Audit Committee [Draft]
Meeting date: 18 February 2026
Colin Beattie
Paragraph 12 of your report states:
“the SPPA’s Chief Executive wrote to the Scottish Government with a progress update and a request for additional funds over the medium-term period to deliver Remedy.”
In the bullet points that follow, you deal with different scenarios and you note that, in the worst case, it could be 2030 before this is resolved. What amount of additional funds did the SPPA request from the Scottish Government in September 2025 and what amount did it get? What was approved? Was the full amount received?
Public Audit Committee [Draft]
Meeting date: 18 February 2026
Colin Beattie
You know that for sure.
Public Audit Committee [Draft]
Meeting date: 18 February 2026
Colin Beattie
From what you have said, should I understand that the Pensions Regulator has a problem in dealing with you as a Scottish entity?
Public Audit Committee [Draft]
Meeting date: 18 February 2026
Colin Beattie
I am looking at what needs to happen with regard to delayed discharge. The Auditor General told the committee that the delayed discharge reflects a wider long-standing failure to shift the balance of care from hospitals to community settings. Since I have been on the committee, that has been the headline. Nothing has changed, and I have been sitting here for 15 years.
Malcolm Bell from the Accounts Commission told the committee:
“IJB reserves are being continually depleted, often to shore up day-to-day work”—[Official Report, Public Audit Committee, 21 January 2026; c 29.]
instead of doing what they should be doing, which is transforming the whole-service offering. Witnesses were clear that progress depends on clear leadership, stronger governance and firm accountability at both national and local levels, but none of that seems to have happened.
I say again: this is a repeat. The issue comes up every time that a report comes before the committee, but there is no movement. Why?
Public Audit Committee [Draft]
Meeting date: 18 February 2026
Colin Beattie
Is it correct, then—this is my interpretation of what you are saying to me—that you have moved away from the original concept of transferring resources from the secondary to the primary sector and are now looking to find other funds to go into the IJBs?
Public Audit Committee [Draft]
Meeting date: 11 February 2026
Colin Beattie
I always look at voluntary redundancy—while it is, in a way, more humane—from a management point of view. You do not know who is going to apply, and, in the context of workforce planning, it becomes in itself a blunt instrument. You are getting rid of numbers, but what about skills, experience and so on?