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All Official Reports of meetings in the Debating Chamber of the Scottish Parliament.
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Displaying 2494 contributions
Public Audit Committee [Draft]
Meeting date: 12 November 2025
Graham Simpson
Over half of the people who apply do not get it. Why are they not getting it? Have you done any analysis of that?
Public Audit Committee [Draft]
Meeting date: 12 November 2025
Graham Simpson
In the submission from Colleges Scotland on the budget, which I am sure you have seen and which Jamie Greene mentioned earlier, there was a paragraph at the start about the reduction in funding. It says:
“The Scottish Funding Council ... has also recently set out the stark reality of the impact of this continued reduction in funding in a report which concluded ‘most colleges are not sustainable’ under current funding assumptions, and there is ‘an imminent risk of some colleges becoming insolvent by the end of 2025-26’.”
Do you agree with that?
Public Audit Committee [Draft]
Meeting date: 12 November 2025
Graham Simpson
We know that the number of people receiving the benefit will go up. Edel Harris tells us that, and the Scottish Fiscal Commission also predicts that costs will rise quite significantly over the years.
I will go back to one of the recommendations in the report, which is that the Government should
“set out how the ... financial gap”—
because there is one—
“will be managed over the medium term, including analysis of how this will impact on wider outcomes for disabled people.”
Do you accept that recommendation?
Public Audit Committee [Draft]
Meeting date: 12 November 2025
Graham Simpson
Following on from what Joe FitzPatrick asked about courses, do we have any analysis of which courses have been cut so far? Colleges are vital for providing the skills that Scotland needs. Are we at risk of reducing the impact that colleges can make?
Public Audit Committee [Draft]
Meeting date: 12 November 2025
Graham Simpson
Colleges Scotland sets out a range of scenarios for the budget, one of which is flat cash, which it calls a “Decline” scenario. It then goes on to set out “Diminished”, “Survivable” and “Sustainable” scenarios.
If you look at the “Decline” scenario, which is flat cash, according to Colleges Scotland, 11 colleges would be at risk of running out of money and would not be able to cover operational costs. Those 11 colleges employ around 6,500 staff. There is a fear that some colleges could close in that scenario.
In your briefing, you mentioned that two colleges were bailed out—they were given extra money by the Government and will presumably have to pay it back. In previous evidence sessions, we were made aware of the Scottish Funding Council risk register, which highlighted that some colleges were at risk. Can you see a scenario in which colleges could close?
Public Audit Committee [Draft]
Meeting date: 12 November 2025
Graham Simpson
I am not asking about the UK system; I am asking why more than half of the people who apply for ADP do not get it. Is it because they have applied in good faith and have just got things wrong or are there some who have not applied in good faith and are chancing their arm, if I can put it that way?
Public Audit Committee [Draft]
Meeting date: 12 November 2025
Graham Simpson
I shall move on. Miriam, the convener always asks the same question at the start of such meetings, so you should have known that he was going to ask at the start of this meeting whether you accept the recommendations. Your answer appeared to be, “We have not considered them yet. We will get around to it”. However, the report was published in September, you knew that you were coming here and I would have thought that you would have had an answer to that very simple question. Why did you not?
Public Audit Committee [Draft]
Meeting date: 12 November 2025
Graham Simpson
Okay—you recognise them.
I am going to ask you about one of the key messages in the report that leads to a recommendation. Then I am going to put the recommendation to you to see whether you agree with it. It is about the funding gap, which we have already mentioned. The report highlights the funding gap, with spending exceeding what we get in block grant by £141 million in 2023-24—Mr Stevens confirmed that. It is forecast to reach £770 million by 2029-30. Implementation costs have so far exceeded initial estimates. Despite that, the Government has not set out a clear strategy to manage the gap or ensure long-term sustainability. How are you going to manage that gap? You said earlier—repeatedly—that ADP is fully funded.
Public Audit Committee [Draft}
Meeting date: 5 November 2025
Graham Simpson
Okay.
Public Audit Committee [Draft}
Meeting date: 5 November 2025
Graham Simpson
They have to know what it is that they are meant to be doing. Is the issue that the bodies do not actually know what they are meant to be doing to deliver on the commitment?