20 December 2011

Jenny Marra : Appointment as Shadow Minister

Jenny Marra MSP
Appointment as Shadow Minister for Community Safety and Legal Affairs.
20 December 2011

Jenny Marra MSP has expressed delight at her appointment as Shadow Minister for Community Safety and Legal Affairs.
Commenting on the news that Scottish Labour leader Johann Lamont has invited Ms Marra to join her front bench, she said,
"I am extremely honoured to accept this position.
"I look forward to working with colleagues and stakeholders to help deliver a justice system that meets the challenges of 21st century Scotland."
Johann Lamont, Scottish Labour Leader, said,"I want my frontbench team to be inclusive, mixing experience with new talent.

"Scottish Labour has an excellent set of newly-elected MSPs and I am very pleased to have appointed eight of them to frontbench roles.
"Together over the coming months we will be working hard to change Scottish Labour so that we don't just hold the SNP to account, but begin to set out our ambitions for all the people of Scotland.
"I will be making further shadow cabinet appointments from outside the world of politics in the new year."

15 December 2011

Jenny Marra MSP welcomes SFA Football Academy at St John's



Jenny Marra MSP welcomes SFA Football Academy at St John's
15 December 2011
Jenny Marra has today welcomed the news that St John’s High School is to be earmarked as one of the SFA’s seven ‘performance schools’ to be created across Scotland.
The existing programme, which gives up and coming youngsters the opportunity to access top level coaching before and after the school day, is to be taken over by the SFA and will form an integral part of the Association’s plan to develop talent of the future.
Jenny has spearheaded the campaign to bring the proposed National Football Academy to her home city and this recent announcement can only strengthen Dundee’s case as being a centre of footballing excellence.
Jenny said,
"I think this is great news.
"There is a lot of good work in sport and football that is already going on at St John’s.
"I visited the school a couple of weeks ago and was very impressed.
"It will also help our campaign to bring the National Football Academy to Dundee.
"It would be an elite performance centre for people from across the country.
"Having another performance academy adds to the strength of the bid the council has agreed to put forward.
"I will continue to campaign on this issue and hopefully we can see the future of football in Dundee."

Jenny Marra MSP launches Christmas Appeal for Dundee Women’s Aid




Jenny Marra MSP launches Christmas Appeal for Dundee Women’s Aid
13 December 2011
Jenny Marra MSP is today launching a Christmas appeal in support of Dundee Women’s Aid.
The appeal is to gather essential items for women and children staying with Women’s Aid over the festive period.
With Christmas being a difficult time for some families, Dundee Women’s Aid will see an increase in women seeking refuge from domestic abuse.
Women and their children may only arrive at a refuge with the clothes they are wearing so there is a real need to provide for basic items.
Members of the public can support by donating basic essentials including toiletries, bath towels, children’s toys and supermarket vouchers.
Items can be handed in to Jenny Marra’s office at 15/16 Springfield, Dundee, DD1 4JE ( office hours Monday to Friday 9am to 5pm) or phone 01382 202584 for collection.
Jenny Marra MSP said,
"Women’s Aid provides essential support and refuge for women in Dundee but they need supplies and donations, especially at Christmas.
"I know this is a busy time of year for everyone but I would be very grateful if people could respond to this appeal with any toys, children’s clothes or toiletries that they can spare."

7 December 2011

Jenny Marra supports Dundee students at Education Rally






Jenny Marra Supports Dundee Students at Education Rally

6 December 2011
Jenny Marra MSP showed her support for Dundee students at a rally held before the public meeting on post-16 education in Tayside attended by Cabinet Secretary for Education Mike Russell.
The students gathered to present their response to the post-16 consultation paper that proposes increased ministerial powers over the governance of further education institutions. Earlier this year the paper sparked controversy in its proposal to give ministers the power to merge institutions.
Speaking before the rally Ms Marra said:
"I am delighted to be here to support the students in presenting their response to the post-16 legislative paper. Both Abertay and Dundee university student associations have been clear in their opposition to any merger proposals, as well as the Government’s cuts to Colleges. It is important their voice is heard throughout this consultation as it is their future at stake."
William Mohieddeen, president of Abertay Students Union added:
"The University of Abertay Students' Association thanks all supporters of the Hands Off Abertay campaign and those that are backing the Tayside students' response in 'All Taygether Now'.
"Particularly we would like to thank Jenny Marra MSP for addressing the students attending the rally at Dundee Union.
"The campaigning has been fully about projecting the student voice to the highest level in Government and we recognise those such as Ms Marra who are keen to interact with students and acknowledge the position they have in partnership in their education.
"This has been a significant piece of student activism and we hope to see significant interaction from the education secretary before imposing any further changes to the higher education sector.
"

2 December 2011

Jenny Marra MSP : Youth Unemployment


Jenny Marra MSP

Youth Unemployment

Speech in the Scottish Parliament

1 December 2011

I am angry.

I am angry after yesterday's strikes.

I am angry at John Mason?s suggestion that young people in our country do not want to work, and I invite him to come up to Dundee and speak to some of the young people to whom I speak every week, who are desperate to work—the young men who have left school and are desperate to get into the construction industry but cannot because there are no jobs available for them.

I am angry that, since two weeks ago, when the unemployment figures came out, cybernats continually tweet me with their answer to the unemployment figures, which is that young people in this country do not want to work.

That seems to be the message continually coming from members on the Scottish National Party benches and from those who tweet and put things on Facebook in their names.

Those of us who marched and were on the picket lines yesterday recommitted ourselves to fight the scourge of youth unemployment in this country, because yesterday was not just about pensions, although their protection is exceedingly important.

Yesterday was, in essence, about work: people?s right to work, to expect to work, to aspire to work, to enjoy success at work, to be properly paid for work, to be challenged, to pay taxes and to build a financial and satisfying legacy for old age.

The crisis in youth unemployment in Scotland has grown to breaking point.

As the economic downturn has unfolded it has become increasingly clear that Scotland?s youth are being hardest hit in the fight to find work, training or access to further education.

I want to talk a bit about the structural problems of the economic downturn that are affecting the choices of the young people in those of our communities that are most decimated by unemployment, such as an increasingly competitive job market that keeps them shut out, and a further education system that will see fewer opportunities for them after the SNP has made its debilitating cuts to colleges.

In a recent study, Professor David Bell of the University of Stirling talks of a "trade-down" generation, with today?s graduates, who are faced with an increasingly difficult job market, taking on jobs in retail or services at minimum wage—jobs that would otherwise usually have been done by those who had not been to university.

The burden of the economic squeeze has landed on the shoulders of young people who are on the first rung on the employability ladder.

They have left school early without many qualifications or any work experience and have entered a job market where they are now competing for jobs against more highly qualified candidates—and they cannot compete.

Little wonder, then, that unemployment among young people in Scotland is rising at a rate that is double that for 25 to 49-year-olds.

Traditionally, for those who have left school early and want to boost their employability, there has always been the option of studying or training at college, but demand for college places has soared and the Educational Institute of Scotland reports that college courses are increasingly difficult to find.

Coupled with budget cuts of 40 per cent in real terms, which I have put to the cabinet secretary before, and college mergers—with a predicted loss of up to 2,000 places at Angus College alone—the college option is becoming harder and harder for young people to realise, leaving them with little option but to return to school.

The rate of pupils staying on at school past the age of 16 has jumped from a relatively stable rate of between 77 and 79 per cent between 2000 and 2008 to 83 per cent last year—the highest figure on record.

Immense pressure is being put on teachers to provide courses for such large numbers.

The First Minister: Will Jenny Marra acknowledge that among the many recommendations of the Smith group is one that says that staying on at school is a good thing? Might that have something to do with this Government?s determination to maintain educational maintenance allowance, which has been removed elsewhere in these islands?

Jenny Marra: There are many who find the cuts to educational maintenance allowance quite debilitating.

It is good that some people are staying on at school, but it is not acceptable that others are not.

I will read to the chamber something that was posted on Facebook yesterday by the brother of Angus MacLeod.

Labour members feel very strongly that this sums up the state of youth unemployment in our country.

It is about a boy called Liam Aitchison, who died earlier this week.

John MacLeod met him in late September as they waited for a ferry. John was returning from the Uist communion and ended up giving Liam a lift to Stornoway.

He said that Liam was,

"engaging, smart, funny, had quite a back-story, a strong handshake and was eerily old for his years ... he would hail me on the streets of town (usually to tap me for fags)."

Two weeks ago, they met up for lunch.

John took reams of notes to get a CV together for him.

He had a looming date before the sheriff for "some juvenile mischief" and they felt that finding Liam "a situation" or a job might help.

John wrote that Liam

"had ... lost weight in these weeks; looked rather flat and tired. Picked at his food; inexplicably declined pudding. 'I'll Facebook you,' he said; but he didn't".

Liam never touched Facebook or his mobile again.

John wrote: "Liam went missing a few days later. His body was found in a derelict shack by the edge of Stornoway yesterday ... a lad disadvantaged in many ways ... in life ... but who had worked hard in the Pollachar Inn and on four fishing boats, had earned six Standard Grades, was a drummer in Uist pipe band ... and who could play a bewildering range of instruments"—

John said that Liam "completed the John Muir award in 2009 and was a keen cook".

He was not "a ned, a chav, a loser or a statistic".

John described him as "a young man worth meeting".

Liam was a young man who needed a job and who will never now realise that potential.

Liam was 16 years old.

27 November 2011

Jenny Marra show support for Dundee pensioner's Fuel Poverty campaign



Jenny Marra MSP shows support for Dundee pensioner’s fuel poverty campaign
23 November 2011
Jenny Marra MSP has today pledged her support to the Dundee Pensioners Forum following a protest they staged at the Wellgate centre in Dundee about concerns for fuel poverty.
Ms Marra has been active in championing fuel poverty matters in the Scottish Parliament, having just recently brought the matter to a debate.
In pledging her support Ms Marra stated:
"It is so often the case that pensioners are the hardest hit when it on comes to fuel poverty.
"I fully support the Dundee Pensioner’s Forum in their fight to be heard.
"We cannot leave the most vulnerable in society to choose between heating and eating this winter.
"I share their concern that the Scottish Government has cut funding to the Energy Assistance Package form £71million last year to just £48 million this year.
"This budget cut will mean less money available for progressive schemes such as home insulation, which would help vulnerable groups such as the Dundee pensioners to cut their bills and keep their homes warmer for longer.
"It is an issue I have raised in the Parliament previously, and I will do so again today in a debate on Climate Change.
"I also have scheduled a meeting with fuel poverty charity SCARF to discuss how we can articulate the concerns of groups like the Dundee Pensioner’s Forum to the Scottish Government.
"I hope to meet with the Pensioners Forum shortly."

17 November 2011

Jenny Marra MSP : Scottish Labour Welcomes End to Dundee-Abertay Merger Plan




Jenny Marra MSP
Scottish Labour Welcomes End of Dundee-Abertay Merger Plan
17 November 2011
Commenting on the news that Dundee and Abertay Universities have today ruled out merging together, Jenny Marra Scottish Labour MSP for North East Scotland, who led the campaign against the merger proposals said:
"Students and staff at both institutions will be delighted that the merger proposals have been scrapped and both universities will retain their independence.
"This proposed shotgun marriage dreamt up by Mike Russell, the Cabinet Secretary for Education clearly demonstrated how out of touch he is with local feeling in Dundee on this matter.
"At the public meeting I addressed it was clear that the only people in favour of this half baked plan were the SNP.
"Mike Russell talks up the autonomy of academic institutions when it comes to making cuts, but he is happy to make direct intervention in their governance and issues like merger which should be driven by academic imperatives."
Iain Gray MSP, Scottish Labour leader commented : " Everyone knew that Mike Russell was trying to force Abertay to merge with Dundee University.
"Scottish Labour initially raised this matter at First Minister’s Questions and forced Alex Salmond to give the assurance that it would not be forced through but would be up to the two universities to decide.
"They have now held talks and agreed that they do not want to merge.
"Mike Russell must now complete his U turn by indicating that he accepts this decision and will no longer be insisting on merger plans that no-one supports."

3 November 2011

Jenny Marra shortlisted for MSP Newcomer of the Year Award



Jenny Marra shortlisted for MSP Newcomer of the Year Award
2 November 2011
Jenny Marra MSP has been shortlisted for Newcomer of the Year Award at The Herald's Scottish Politician of the Year Awards.
The Herald wrote, 'Newcomer of the Year is a challenging section for the judges with Parliament in session for such a short time since the election.
"Although many of the fresh intake are still finding their feet, five names caught the judges attention, including Tory leadership contender Ruth Davidson, Labour's Jenny Marra and Graeme Pearson, Lib Dem leader Willie Rennie and Humza Yousaf of the SNP."

Jenny Marra Calls for Salmond to Meet with Human Rights Groups While in Quatar



Jenny Marra Calls for Salmond to Meet with Human Rights Groups While in Quatar



1 November 2011
Scottish Labour's Jenny Marra has called on the First Minister to meet with human rights organisations in Qatar after Alex Salmond hailed the "remarkable similarities" between Scotland and Qatar.
Newly-elected Scottish Labour MSP Jenny Marra, who is a member of Amnesty International, said,
"In Qatar, women continue to face discrimination and violence.
"Migrant workers are exploited and abused.
" The death sentence is supported and sentences of flogging are still passed.
"In June this year, Eman al-Obeidi – a woman who publicly accused soldiers supporting Gaddafi’s regime of rape – was deported by Qatari officials back to Libya against her will.
"Qatar has a shameful record on human rights and for our First Minister to compare Qatar to Scotland will stun human rights campaigners.
"Opening up business links with Qatar is a great way of using our leverage to reinforce our view that human rights must be absolute and universal.
"I hope that the First Minister will be asking appropriate questions on his trip and make time in his schedule to meet with human rights groups that campaign so courageously to end human rights abuses."
Motion tabled in the Scottish Parliament : Human Rights Action in Qatar
That the Parliament commends the work of human rights organisations working in Qatar to end what it believes is the systematic abuse of human rights including discrimination against women, detention without charge, and the use of the death penalty; further believes that these practices are inhumane and a violation of international law; calls on the First Minister to meet with human rights groups during his visit to Qatar, and urges him to raise the concerns of human rights groups with appropriate Qatari officials

27 October 2011

Jenny Marra welcomes SNP support for her Games Industry motion





Jenny Marra welcomes SNP support for her Games Industry motion
27 October 2011


Jenny Marra Scottish Labour MSP for North East Scotland has welcomed the First Minister’s support for her Parliamentary motion seeking tax breaks for the computer games industry.
On Monday she lodged a motion at the Scottish parliament calling on the SNP government to work with TIGA – the Games Industry Association – to introduce a creative content fund.
The issue was raised at First Minister’s Question time and Alex Salmond responded by stating he was aware of the work that TIGA had been doing on the subject and he would be asking his officials to get in touch with the association to discuss their campaign.
Jenny Marra said,
"Clearly my motion has touched a nerve.
"Only three days after it was lodged we have the First Minister saying he’ll get officials to get in touch with TIGA.
"However, better late than never.
"By scrapping Labour’s tax break for the computer games industry it’s clear the Tory led government has failed to understand how important the industry is to Scotland.
"But if the SNP government wants to see Scotland’s computer games industry continue to flourish then it must do more to support the industry.
"Hopefully, this meeting will take place very soon.
"The SNP government has the power to set up this fund it should get on with it."

Jenny Marra MSP : Speech on Fuel Poverty

Jenny Marra MSP



Speech on Fuel Poverty


Scottish Parliament debate
26 October 2011


Motion debated,That the Parliament notes with concern the rising number of fuel poor in Scotland; understands that there are now 900,000 such households; considers that fuel poverty will rise further this winter in light of what it considers to be drastically increased domestic fuel prices; further considers that, if this winter is as harsh as that of 2010-11, there will be a risk of people being unable to heat their homes; notes the Scottish Government’s target to eradicate fuel poverty by 2016, and would welcome action this winter to prevent fatalities and households across Scotland having to decide between heating or eating.

Jenny Marra : Members may be aware that the Scottish fuel poverty forum met this morning for the first time under its new chair, Professor David Sigsworth.
I wish him the very best of success, and I hope that the Scottish Government will have learned from its mistakes in neglecting the advice that led to the resignation of the forum’s previous chair, Graham Blount.
Early in my speech I ask the Cabinet Secretary for Infrastructure and Capital Investment to guarantee that he will assist the forum in a much more productive way by publishing its remit and revealing who will provide the secretariat to the forum.
I also ask that the forum will be given all the information that it requests from officials.Fuel poverty is a serious concern for hundreds of thousands of people throughout Scotland, and it is the poorest who suffer most.
With some 900,000 households struggling to meet their increasing fuel bills, the Scottish Government must do whatever it can within its powers to honour its obligation under the Housing (Scotland) Act 2001 to eradicate fuel poverty by 2016.
We have a long way to go to achieve that.
Rising fuel prices, harsher winters and stagnating wages are undermining efforts to meet the 2016 target.
As recent reports state that the cheapest dual-fuel price has—for the first time—risen above £1,000 per annum, we face a huge challenge to stem the tide of those who are falling into fuel poverty in this country.Fuel poverty affects us in Scotland uniquely.
In Braemar in my constituency, heating a home takes 55 per cent more fuel than is needed to reach the same standard in Bristol.
That is because we face colder, longer winters and because our households are more likely to be in rural locations, not to be connected to the main gas grid and to be harder to heat.
That causes many problems.

Health and wellbeing suffer as people choose between heating and eating, and our carbon footprint continues to grow.
Circumstances are tough, but we have convened here today on the cusp of winter—as the clocks go back this weekend—in the knowledge that the Parliament can make a difference.
As representatives of people across the country who worry about the impending winter, we have the responsibility to use the powers that are available to the Parliament to tackle fuel poverty to the best of our capability.
We have significant powers, not least in areas such as maximising energy efficiency.
We have the ability to create policies that help the growing number of families, single occupants and elderly people who are vulnerable to fuel poverty.
Too often, the Scottish Government has neglected its duty to tackle fuel poverty.
It has used cross-legislative jurisdiction as an excuse and has overemphasised the powers that we do not have, rather than used the powers that we have.
I say to those who believe that we can tackle fuel poverty only through the exclusive right to regulate energy prices that they are wrong.
Powers to regulate energy companies are reserved, but we can develop well-funded and well-targeted policies in the Parliament’s remit that work in tandem with Westminster to reduce fuel poverty.
Ignoring that role and responsibility is a breach of our contract with the Scottish people.
In his speech to the Scottish National Party conference last weekend, the First Minister said:
"We don’t control the energy markets but we can and will do something to help."I hope that he will be true to that pledge this winter.
So far, campaigners have been disappointed to find that Mr Salmond has cut expenditure on tackling fuel poverty from £70.9 million in 2010-11 to £48 million in 2011-12.
That is a reduction of almost a third, at a time when fuel poverty is worsening.
In answer to my question a couple of weeks ago about a Government underspend in last year’s fuel poverty budget, Alex Neil said that last year’s £7 million underspend was being "recycled".
What does that mean?
Is the money subsidising this year’s budget?
Does it mean a further £7 million cut in real terms on top of this year’s £23 million cut?
That would be a cut of £30 million from the Government’s fuel poverty spending in the past couple of years, while the poorest households have suffered the harshest winters and some of the steepest energy price increases in living memory.
What could the Scottish Government do if it was not cutting the budget by £30 million?
Fuel poverty campaigners suggest incentivising installers to deliver insulation and energy efficiency schemes in very remote and rural areas.
In the Western Isles, 58 per cent of households are fuel poor.
In Orkney, the level is 44 per cent.
Those figures are unacceptable, but not irreparable.
By incentivising installers to travel to those areas, we can target resources efficiently for those who need them most.
Similarly, improvements could be made to widen access to resources for the most vulnerable by investing in the Scottish housing quality standard, which could be expanded not only to improve the performance of households in the social rented sector but to include the private rented sector in the scheme.
That policy needs resources to work.
In 2009, 62 per cent of dwellings failed the SHQS, and most failed on energy efficiency criteria.
For the rest of the United Kingdom, the Government has announced that privately rented properties are to meet minimum energy efficiency standards before they are allowed to be let.
The Scottish Government has the power to implement a similar policy if it so chooses.
Such schemes should be underpinned by proper incentives and regulation if they are to make a difference.
Those are just two initiatives in the campaign against fuel poverty.
The continuing drive for consumers to maximise their fuel efficiency must be supported.
Similarly, schemes that target harder-to-heat homes in communities in which homes are off the main gas grid would offer significant rewards when we are looking to reduce the overall levels of fuel poverty in Scotland.
It is important to recognise that those opportunities are our opportunities in the Parliament.
The prerogative rests with the Scottish Government to fully utilise the powers that it has to help the rising number of fuel poor in Scotland.
There must be a tangible commitment to policies, underpinned by a robust budget commitment, that will deliver practical help to those who need it most.
I hope that the debate will go some way to urging the Scottish Government and the First Minister, as he said, to do something to help the fuel poor this winter.

26 October 2011

Jenny Marra urges SNP to back New Fund to boost Scottish Computer Games Industry




Jenny Marra MSP


26 October 2011

Jenny Marra has today called on the SNP government to work with the computer games industry to introduce a new fund to boost the video games industry in Scotland.
It follows calls from TIGA – the Games Industry Association – to introduce a Creative Content Fund.
Ms Marra, who has laid a motion in the Scottish Parliament today welcoming TIGA’s calls , said the SNP had so far done "more to hinder than help" the industry and urged the SNP government to do more than "simply look to London" for help.
She said,
"If Scotland’s computer games industry is to remain world-leading, we need both the UK and Scottish governments working to make Scotland the most attractive place in the world to develop games.
"By scrapping Labour’s tax break for the computer games industry it is clear the Tory-led government has failed to understand how important the industry is to Scotland.
"But if the SNP government wants to see Scotland’s computer game industry continue to flourish then it must do more to support the industry than simply look to London.
"I urge the SNP government to work with the industry and explore avenues for funding to make the innovative new fund a reality.
"The SNP government has got the powers to set up this fund – the SNP should use them.
"There are games hubs across the UK, but a specific Scottish government fund would send a clear signal to industry that Scotland is not only open for business – but is the place for computer game developers to set up business.
"So far, by threatening the leading centre for games technology in Scotland – Abertay University – with merger, the SNP government has done more to hinder than help the computer games industry in Scotland."

Text of motion submitted by Jenny Marra:
Scottish Video Games Fund: That the Parliament welcomes the proposal by the games industry association, TIGA, for a Scottish Government creative content fund to boost new studio production and stimulate new intellectual property in the Scottish video games sector; considers that the Scottish Government has the ability under existing powers to help solidify Scotland as a global player in the video games industry through initiatives such as this; understands that such a fund would help generate jobs and attract talent to the Scottish sector; appreciates the significant contribution that companies in the sector make to the Scottish economy, and calls on the Scottish Government to use its powers to establish the fund.

11 October 2011

Jenny Marra MSP welcomes SNP climb down over universities merger



Jenny Marra MSP welcomes SNP climb down over universities merger



29th September 2011

Speaking on the day that Alex Salmond faced an embarrassing climb down over proposals to merge Abertay and Dundee Universities Jenny Marra welcomed the guarantee.
It had been revealed over the past week that the Scottish Funding Council had given the institutions only 5 weeks to talk about merging.
This led to a campaign by students, staff and people in Dundee which resulted in a groundswell of opinion against a merger.
Jenny Marra said: 'I was relieved to hear the First Minister say today that there will not be a forced merger between Abertay and Dundee Universities.
'The SNP government has had to respond to huge pressure from staff, students and people in Dundee who know that the two universities work well together, side by side.
'It is especially relieving for the government to clarify that there will be no forced mergers at this time of year when students are deciding which universities to apply to.
"The promise of no forced merger removes the uncertainty that can harm applications and student numbers.
"The Government has had to back down in the face of pressure from Dundee.


"It is a welcome decision."