COMMISSION ON THE POWERS AND ELECTORAL ARRANGEMENTS
OF THE NATIONAL ASSEMBLY FOR WALES
MINUTES OF PROCEEDINGS
of the
EVIDENCE OF:
Delyth Evans
held at
Caradog House, Cardiff
On
FRIDAY 11 JULY 2003
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In Attendance
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Lord Richard
Eira Davies
Vivienne Sugar
Sir Michael Wheeler-Booth
Tom Jones
Huw Thomas
Ted Rowlands
Dr Laura McAllister
Peter Price
Delyth Evans
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Proceedings
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Lord Richard
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Good morning.
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Delyth Evans
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Good morning.
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(In Welsh then interpreted)
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Ga i ddiolch ichi am y gwahoddiad i roi
tystiolaeth ac roeddwn i wedi bwriadu paratoi tystiolaeth
ysgrifenedig pan oeddwn i'n Aelod o'r Cynulliad ond
oherwydd pwysau'r gwaith ches i ddim amser i wneud hynny.
Efallai yr â i yn ôl ato yn nes ymlaen. Rwy'n credu
bod y drafodaeth yma ar bwerau a threfniadau'r Cynulliad
yn bwysig ac yn amserol ac rwy'n croesawu cyfraniad
y Comisiwn at y drafodaeth a hoffwn ganmol y ffordd
ddiwyd a thrylwyr rydych chi'n gwneud y gwaith. Does
dim atebion syml i'r cwestiynau sydd ger eich bron.
Mae'n glir nad yw'r trefniadau sydd gyda ni ar hyn o
bryd yn berffaith ac mae'n glir hefyd bod lle i wella.
Yn gyffredinol, mae busnes llywodraethu Cymru wedi gwella
cryn dipyn ers datganoli ac ryn ni'n gallu ymateb yn
llawer mwy effeithiol i anghenion Cymru nag o'r blaen
ac wrth i broses datganoli barhau ac rwy'n hyderus y
bydd yn parhau dros gyfnod o amser. Rwy'n credu ei bod
yn bwysig ein bod yn symud ymlaen gyda gofal, yn ofalus
ac mewn ffordd sy'n cyd-fynd â disgwyliadau a dyheadau'r
mwyafrif o'n cyd-Gymry. Diolch.
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Interpretation:
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May I thank you for the invitation
to give evidence and I had intended to prepare written
evidence when I was an Assembly Member but due to pressure
of work I didn't find the time to do so. Perhaps I will
return to that later on. I think this discussion regarding
the Assembly's powers and arrangements is an important
and timely one and I welcome the Commission's contribution
to that discussion and I commend the very diligent and
thorough way in which you are undertaking the work.
There are not any simple solutions to the issues before
you. It is clear that the arrangements that we have
at present are not perfect and its also clear that there
is scope for improvement. Generally the business of
the governance of Wales has improved quite a bit since
devolution and we are able to react much more effectively
to the needs of Wales than we were able to do so previously
and as the devolution process continues and I am confident
that it will continue over a period of time. I think
it is important that we proceed with caution, with care
and in a way which is in accordance with the expectation
and aspirations of the majority of our fellow Welsh
people. Thank you.
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Lord Richard
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Thank you for that. Can I start on a
rather different tack. Can you help us about the workloads
of the AM? How much time it takes and what you do? You
were in for the four years. Big constituency. How much
time did you actually spend on Assembly affairs?
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Delyth Evans
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I worked hard, I think most Assembly
Members do work hard and I worked in a very focused
way because I was keen to keep my working time within
working hours of the Assembly. I tried to limit the
amount I did at weekends but because I was covering
a very large constituency this was inevitably an awful
lot of travel around Mid and West Wales, particularly
on a Friday and sometimes on a Saturday. I was also
a Deputy Minister. So that was also quite a lot of work.
However, as a Regional Member, as opposed to a constituency
Member, I think, I assume that my constituency correspondence
was quite a lot lighter than I expect---
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Lord Richard
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Give us an impression of how much you
got, casework? How many letters a week?
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Delyth Evans
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It varied actually. Its hard to say.
Sometimes ten letters a week, 20, quite a lot less I
imagine than a lot of constituency AMs. Although often
people would come to me as a last resort after failing
elsewhere. I think I spent quite a lot of time pursuing
matters that were often very difficult to help people
with. In terms of the volume I am sure it was a lot
less.
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Lord Richard
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The travelling that you had to do in
your area. That was to hold meetings? Address people?
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Delyth Evans
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Yes, I'd get lots of invitation to meet
people, meet organisations, visit schools, hospitals.
I turned an awful lot down because it was impossible
to do all of them. There were all party meetings that
I had to attend. As a Member representing Mid and West
Wales that includes 8 Parliamentary constituencies.
All of those Labour Party constituencies wanted a bit
of me as often as possible. I would be called upon in
Pembrokeshire and also Montgomery.
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Lord Richard
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How much of your time was devoted to
that constituency business as compared with the sitting
in the Assembly and actually doing Assembly business?
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Delyth Evans
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It was governed by the physical needs
to be in the Assembly really. So when I had to be in
the Assembly because of Committees or Plenary that would
govern the amount of time.
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Lord Richard
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How much did you have to spend in the
Assembly? There is Plenary two days a week.
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Delyth Evans
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Yes, although I was always there on Tuesday,
Wednesday, Thursday because we changed the Plenary dates
during the term. I was often there on a Monday because
of Deputy Ministerial meetings with Ministers. So the
Friday was the day that I would keep clear for the constituency.
But sometimes I would be in constituency on Monday,
occasionally I could get somewhere like Llanelli or
Carmarthen on a Monday afternoon. Tuesday, Wednesday,
Thursday I would be in the Assembly. I was also a Member
of five Committees at one stage.
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Lord Richard
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Tell us about that. How often did they
meet?
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Delyth Evans
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They varied, the two Subjects Committees
that I was a Member of met fortnightly. That meant I
had a Committee meeting every week, Culture would meet
one week and Rural Affairs the next week. I was also
a Member of the Mid Wales Committee. I chaired that
Committee at one stage and being the only Labour Member
of the Mid Wales Committee I felt I had to attend one
of those meetings which met twice a term. I was also
a Member of the Business Partnership Council for a time.
I was also a on the Legislation Committee for a time,
which met on Thursday morning. I also often subbed on
other Committees when other Members could not be there.
Because I was Deputy Environment Minister I had to stand
in for Sue Essex on the Environment Committee occasionally.
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Dr Laura McAllister
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Was that so onerous because you were
the only Labour list AM without a constituency as such?
Is that the realistic reason, you seem to have a pretty
heavy load?
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Delyth Evans
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That only applied to the Regional Mid
Wales Committee where I was the only Labour Member.
But the work of that Committee is not onerous. Its a
bit more demanding when you Chair it. It was more physically
getting there and being there that was onerous. You
didn't -- it didn't involve much preparation other than
reading papers. The difficulty with a Subject Committee's
and the other Committees was that I think the work of
the Committees in the Assembly's is very important,
particularly for back benchers but also for the way
that the Assembly works. It is quite difficult to keep
abreast of all of the issues relating to that particular
subject. If you have got a number of Committees that
you have to be on it's difficult to keep across all
of the Rural Affairs issues and the whole of the Culture
agenda in a way that I felt very happy with. I was sort
of struggling to keep up with everything.
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Vivienne Sugar
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What personal support you did you have
in terms of people preparing papers for you and diary
management and just making the most effective use of
your time?
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Delyth Evans
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I had a full-time researcher who worked
with me in my Assembly office. Chris was responsible
for my diary and for papers and any research I needed.
I had a part-time secretary in my constituency office
in Llanelli who dealt with constituency casework. But
I didn't really ask Chris to prepare papers for me in
addition to the papers that were prepared by the secretariat
because it would be too much to read and he was too
busy doing other things.
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Lord Richard
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What about your ministerial duties? What
percentage of your time do you think was occupied by
being Deputy Minister?
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Delyth Evans
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Up to about a third. It depended what
was happening. At one time the Culture Committee conducted
a review of the Welsh language policy and I played a
fairly prominent role in that review. With the support
of the Minister, obviously. With encouragement of the
Minister, so that took up a lot of time. There were
other times where there were specific things happened.
I Chaired a task and finish group for the Minister on
the publishing industry in Wales which took up a lot
of time. It did vary but.
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Lord Richard
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As a Deputy Minister did you go to the
Ministry daily?
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Delyth Evans
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No. It was a very kind of informal, slightly
strange position. It's not like being Deputy Minister
in Westminster.
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Ted Rowlands
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Were you bound by collective responsibility
- could you have been an independent, could you have
said something differently or did you feel bound by
the collective Ministerial responsibility?
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Delyth Evans
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You are sort of semi-detached from the
Government. You are not a Member of the Government.
It's changed now. Rhodri tried to bring the Deputies
more into the Government. They are given official support
now, which we didn't have. You are half in and half
out. You are supposed to abide by collective responsibility,
although there were some times problems with that because
the Deputies were not always entirely amenable to that.
What was decided in the end was that you had to toe
the line on your own portfolios but you were able to
speak a little bit more freely on other people's portfolios.
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Lord Richard
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Do you think it was a good idea you were
able to be a Member of the Committee?
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Delyth Evans
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And being a Deputy? Yes, I do actually
because it's a much more informal structure than Westminster
and the Committee's are very organic bodies. Because
they are very small every Member has to play, or is
expected to play a very significant role. So I didn't
have any difficulty taking my hat off or putting it
back on again and contributing in that way. That was
understood. Occasionally the other parts would make
an issue about it, but it was generally understood that's
how it worked. People were reasonably happy with it.
I quite liked that. I felt that I was able to contribute
as an ordinary Member of the Committee but when I was
there in a Ministerial capacity I was able to put on
a different hat. That worked. It's the only way you
can too it when you have got a small number of Members
because if you took another four deputies out of the
back bench role I'm not sure the system would be able
to cope with that. So I had to be able to be a back
bencher in the Committees and it was a role that I enjoyed.
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Lord Richard
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As we have gone round the meetings listening
to people, it happened last night in the meeting in
Cardiff, lots of people said "we don't believe they
work". 60 is more than enough. Cut it down to 40. We
have been vaguely trying to work out what the load is
on say a back bench AM. In terms of the amount of time
the Assembly sits at the moment, and the amount of time
an AM has to be there, it seems the hours are not really
great.
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Delyth Evans
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You have to be there, I have to be there
on a Tuesday morning because we have a Labour group
meeting. That was also the time when you try and have
other sort of group pre-Committee type meetings. You
have to be there on a Tuesday afternoon because of Plenary,
have to be there on Wednesday morning or afternoon because
of Committee. Wednesday afternoon because of Plenary
and Thursday morning for a Committee. There were two
and a half days when one had to be there.
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Lord Richard
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Two and a half days?
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Delyth Evans
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Two and a half full days, yes, but then
as a Deputy Minister I had to be there---
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Lord Richard
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Trying to look at it from the point of
view of the back bench AM. Load is only two and a half
days a week. Some people would say they are not working
hard enough. They should make greater efforts as back
benchers. If you did you could spread the load.
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Delyth Evans
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I was the never able to work out why
there the work seemed to be quite as hard as it was.
Not necessarily intellectually hard but time consuming.
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Lord Richard
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Lot of paper?
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Delyth Evans
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A lot of meetings. Meeting organisations,
Committee related meetings. It was often very difficult
in a week. If I asked my researcher to fit in an additional
meeting during the week it was sometimes quite difficult
to do that.
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Lord Richard
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On a two and a half day basis?
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Delyth Evans
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Yes, although that does make it sound
rather a short time commitment in the Assembly, but
that must be right, yes.
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Huw Thomas (In Welsh then interpreted)
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Ga i fynd nôl? Rydych chi'n dweud bod
dau Bwyllgor yr wythnos. Oedd gwaith y Pwyllgor yn waith
oedd yn codi o ddyheadau Aelodau'r Pwyllgor neu oedd
hi'n wir mai ymarfer gwthio papur oedd y system mewn
gwirionedd a'ch bod chi'n boddi o dano?
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Interpretation:
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Can I go back. You mention that there
are two Committees a week. Was the Committee work work
that actually arose from the aspirations of the Committee
Members or was it a fact that the system was actually
a paper pushing exercise and that you were drowning
in that?
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Delyth Evans (In Welsh then interpreted)
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Wel, mae'r elfen o graffu yng ngwaith
y Pwyllgor yn bwysig iawn ac mae wedi gwneud gwahaniaeth
yn y ffordd roedd llawer o'r cyrff cyhoeddus yn gweithio
yng Nghymru am eu bod nhw'n ymwybodol eu bod yn atebol
i'r Cynulliad ac maen nhw'n paratoi yn fanwl iawn i
wneud cyflwyniadau i'r Pwyllgorau. Felly, roedd gwaith
craffu y Pwyllgorau yn bwysig ac rwy'n credu bod hynny'n
rhan hanfodol o waith y Pwyllgorau am ei fod yn gwneud
gwahaniaeth i'r ffordd y mae'r cyrff cyhoeddus yn gweithio
yng Nghymru.
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Interpretation:
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Well, the scrutiny element of the
Committee is very important and that has made a difference
in the way that many of the public bodies were working
in Wales because they are aware that at they are accountable
to the Assembly and they prepare in great detail to
make presentations to the Committees. Therefore, the
scrutiny work of the Committees was important and I
think that that is an essential part of the Committees
work because it does make a difference to the way in
which the public bodies are working in Wales.
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Huw Thomas (In Welsh then interpreted)
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Rydyn ni wedi clywed tystiolaeth gan
y sefydliadau cyhoeddus, mae cyrff cyhoeddus yn teimlo
nad oes yna graffu iawn arnyn nhw wedi bod a phan fydden
nhw'n dod gerbron y Pwyllgorau byddai'r Aelodau'n gofyn
y cwestiwn cyntaf fyddai'n dod i'w meddwl ac nid efallai
o'r gwaith roedden nhw wedi'i gael neu o'r ohebiaeth
roedden nhw wedi'i chael o'r etholaethau, ond o safbwynt
y weithdrefn, bron fel mae gennych chi yn San Steffan
lle mae'r Pwyllgorau'n cael amser i baratoi, lle mae'r
clerc yn edrych ar y cwestiynau ac yn dweud dyma'r math
o graffu y dylech chi yn unig ei wneud ar gyfer y corff
yma.
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Interpretation:
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We've heard evidence from the public
organisations, public bodies feel they have not been
scrutinised properly and that when they came before
the Committees the Members used to just ask the first
question that came into their heads and perhaps not
from the work that they received or the correspondence
they received from the constituencies, but from the
point of view of the procedure, almost as you have in
Westminster where the Committees are given time to prepare,
where the clerk looks at the questions and says this
is the kind of scrutiny only you should undertake on
this body.
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Delyth Evans (In Welsh then interpreted)
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Rwy'n sicr bod hynny'n gallu bod yn wir
ond cyfrifoldeb yr Aelodau yw gwneud gwaith craffu effeithiol.
Ac, wrth gwrs, mae'n brofiad eithaf newydd i bobl ond
dyw hynny ddim yn tanseilio'r ffaith bod y rôl yn un
bwysig a bod y gwaith yn eithriadol o bwysig. Cwestiwn
arall rwy'n credu yw p'un a yw'n cael ei wneud yn iawn
neu beidio. Ond mae'n flin gen i, colles i'ch cwestiwn
cyntaf, o, ie, rôl gwaith y Pwyllgor, ie. Mae'r gwaith
craffu hwnnw yn bwysig. Ond un peth oedd yn dechrau
dod, yn enwedig gyda'r Pwyllgor Materion Gwledig oedd
ein bod ni'n rhedeg allan o bethau i'w gosod ar yr agenda.
Felly, roedd yna berygl bod pethau'n cael eu rhoi ar
yr agenda er mwyn eu rhoi. Bod y Pwyllgor yn meddwl
am adolygiadau iw cynnal dim ond er mwyn llenwi'r
agenda a bod neb am i hynny ddigwydd. Mae yna berygl
y gallai hynny fod wedi digwydd. Wedi dweud hynny, roed
dy gwaith a gafodd ei baratoi yn rhai o adroddiadau'r
Pwyllgor yn eithriadol o bwysig. Adroddiad y Pwyllgor
addysg ar ôl 16 ar ddiwylliant er enghraifft ar y celfyddydau,
rwy'n credu, adolygiadau'r Pwyllgor diwylliant ar y
Gymraeg, nifer o enghreifftiau eraill o adolygiadau
pwysig iawn a ddaeth allan o'r Pwyllgorau ac yna mae'r
amser sy'n cael ei roi i graffu ar y Gweinidog yn bwysig
iawn. Yn y Pwyllgor Amaethyddiaeth roedd y gwaith o
graffu ar y Gweinidog yn ystod clwy'r traed a'r genau
yn eithriadol o bwysig. Yn enwedig i'r ffermwyr. Roedden
ni'n gallu gweld bod y problemau'n cael eu deall ac
ati ac roedd gwaith y Pwyllgor yn cael ei fonitro'n
agos iawn yn ystod y cyfnod anodd iawn yna. Siarad o
brofiad y Pwyllgorau roeddwn i'n aelod ohonyn nhw ydw
i ond rwy'n siwr bod modd dweud yr un peth am Bwyllgorau
eraill. Felly mae gwaith y Pwyllgorau yn bwysig. Rwy'n
siwr y gallai'r Aelodau wneud gwaith gwell wrth gwrs
ar adegau ambell waith, ond mae rhaid ichi warchod a
diogelu gwaith y Pwyllgorau rwy'n credu.
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Interpretation:
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I am sure that that can be true but
it is the responsibility of the Members to carry out
effective scrutiny. And, of course, it's quite a new
experience for people but that does not undermine the
fact that the role is important and that that work is
exceptionally important. I think whether it's done effectively
or not is another question. But, sorry, I missed your
first question, oh, yes, the role of the Committee's
work, yes. That scrutiny work is important. But one
thing that was beginning to start particularly with
Rural Affairs Committee was that we were running out
of things to put on the agenda. Therefore, there was
a risk that issues were placed on the agenda for the
sake of it. That the Committee were thinking of reviews
to carry out just in order to fill up the agenda and
nobody wished to that to happen. There is a risk that
could have happened. Having said that, the work that
some of the reports that the Committee prepared were
exceptionally important. The report of the post 16 education
Committee on culture for example, on arts, I believe,
the culture Committee's reviews of the Welsh language,
a number of other examples of very important reviews
that came out of the Committees and then the time that
is given to scrutinise the Minister is very important.
In the Agricultural Committee the work of scrutinising
the Minister during the foot and mouth disease out break
was exceptionally important. Particularly for the farmers.
We could see that the problems were being understood
and so on and there was very close monitoring of the
work of the Committee during that very hard period.
I am only speaking from experience of the Committees
of which I was a Member but I am sure that the same
can be said of other Committees. So the work of the
Committees is important. I am certain that Members could
of course undertake better work at times occasionally,
but you have to safeguard and protect the works of the
Committees I believe.
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Sir Michael Wheeler-Booth
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Arising out of those questions there
was a reference to the support given to Committees at
Westminster by the clerk to the library which is very
efficient. We've heard slightly disparate, we've received
or I have received slightly disparate impressions of
the level of support and the efficacy of support for
the Assembly in its first four year term. Could you
give us your impression of what you find out how you
think it's working?
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Delyth Evans
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In terms of the level of support from
the library and---
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Sir Michael Wheeler-Booth
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And from the Committee staff.
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Delyth Evans
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Well, I thought that the Committee staff
were superb. It's difficult for them because they can't
-- occasionally the Committee staff would prepare questions
or Members to ask. I never really used those questions
because I preferred to ask my own questions. I have
a background as a journalist, so perhaps I seek out
information, used to seeking out information and thinking
in that way; in an inquisitive way about these. But
that might have been useful to some people. The library
has a much more limited role than the library in Westminster
certainly. That's more a question of resources than
anything else. There has been an effort to improve that
by providing specific services to Committees which only
got under way in the last quarter, I think, of the Assembly's
work. I think because it's early days people are learning
the job and it's a bit early to come to judgment about
those kind of things.
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Lord Richard
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Did you use the lawyers?
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Delyth Evans
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Only I sought advice on the Data Protection
Act.
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Lord Richard
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As a Minister or as---
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Delyth Evans
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As a back bencher because that had implications
for us as politicians.
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Vivienne Sugar
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I want to stay with the issue of work
load and capacity. In your paper you say that the transfer
of primary powers to the Assembly would require an increase
in AMs and Assembly staff. But from your assessment
of what back bench AMs are committed to now, you give
a ballpark figure of two and a half days, surely there
is capacity to take on more scrutiny if there were to
be primary powers. So I wonder whether you care to speculate
how much could be absorbed and how many more AMs would
be needed to do the job?
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Delyth Evans
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Back to the two and a half days point.
Within the two and a half days that Members are expected
and required to be physically in the Assembly, their
time is very stretched during the two and a half days.
Anybody who comes in to try and do a lunch time presentation
understands that because we are constantly rushing around
trying to be everywhere at the same time, getting to
meetings and so on. The rest of the week in my experience
AMs work very hard in their constituencies doing other
commitments that are outside the Assembly. I honestly
think that most AMs I know work very hard in the time
that they are in the Assembly and when they are outside
the Assembly in their constituencies. So I want to make
that point clearly. As far as the extra capacity that
would be required for primary legislation. Obviously
the work and the nature of the Committees would change.
I think I was struck by what somebody told me from the
Scottish Parliament; that they are under enormous amount
of pressure because of primary legislation, they are
constantly spending time on the minutiae of new legislation.
If the Committees were to take on that role I don't
know how the would fit in all the of the other things
that they are doing at moment. Some things would have
to fall. Certainly the type of Committee reviews that
have been conducted in the past. I don't see there would
be any room for that type of work. You have to protect
the scrutiny time. Scrutiny of Ministers and agencies
can take up to half of a Committee session. So one and
a half hours of a Committee can be spent on scrutiny
which only leaves one and a half hours for any other
business. If you are dealing with complicated legislation
that seems to me not very much time to do that. The
other aspect is on the official side. If you are dealing
with primary legislation in the Assembly, I assume that
you would need an awful lot more lawyers because I don't
-- I haven't asked anybody about this but I don't think
there is the capacity there or the expertise to create
and process new legislation. I would imagine there are
vastly more officials in London doing that kind of work.
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Ted Rowlands
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I read your submission and the very cautious
words you tell us about your views on transfer of primary
legislation. I want to clarify the basis on which you
express the views. You have expressed them in terms
of the capacity issue very vividly and forcefully. Is
it a matter of principle also that you that feel at
this stage there should not be such a transfer? Or,
as you also imply in your piece, that it's a question
of public opinion? You explained your caution on the
capacity issue, what about the issue of principle and
then the issue of public opinion?
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Delyth Evans
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It's not an issue of principle for me,
I'm a total agnostic really on transfer of primary powers.
It was very important to me that the integrity of Wales
as a nation was recognised within the UK political system.
That has been achieved with Assembly, so that there
was a principle of democracy, there for me which the
Labour Government delivered. Having achieved that I
think I am now -- I don't have strong views either way.
So I don't feel for any kind of principle that Wales
should have primary powers as an exertion of national
identity. I think I am naturally cautious on big constitutional
change like that because I think these things need to
be done carefully. I am very concerned about the public
opinion aspect of things at the moment. Because we all
know that politicians in general are not highly regarded
and there is a disillusionment and cynicism about politics
across the country that is very worrying. Therefore,
I do think politicians need to be extremely mindful
of that and should be working quite hard to address
it. In doing so we should not take actions that are
going to make the situation worse and confirm people's
views that politicians are self regarding, arrogant
people who do things in their own interests and not
for the interests of the public at large, that's terribly
important to me. So although I'm not somebody who likes
the idea of politics driven by focus groups at all,
I think in this case we should not be doing something
that does not have the support of the majority of the
people.
|
|
Dr Laura McAllister
|
|
This issue of public opinion is a really
complicated one isn't it, in the sense that one can
take ones choice really. Listen to the opinion polls,
which suggest that more people favour a Scottish model.
Listen to people in the public meetings who seem to
be saying that if we have got an Assembly let's make
it work. Let's make it deliver in terms of public services.
I just wonder, could you say anything something about
the sequence. We're mindful that we need to prove any
worth of having additional powers. The worth has been
set out for us by the Secretary of State that we have
to prove that it will benefit or people in terms of
public services and in terms of the quality of their
lives and good governance, so on. But is there not also
an argument to say that people are working so hard to
make a fairly flawed compromised settlement work that
there is a danger that it won't be able to move on in
the direction where people will see tangible benefits
unless there are additional powers. I wonder to what
extent should that condition our debate and considerations
as a commission.
|
|
Delyth Evans
|
|
It's a slightly contradictory position
that most general view is that the Assembly is not held
in very high regard but at the Simon time opinion polls
say that people want more powers for it. That's rather
odd. I think when people are asked: do you think the
Assembly should have more powers? if people assume that
by having more powers that's going to significantly
improve the quality of their life and the quality of
their hospitals then obviously they will say they want
more powers. I think that it's misconceived, this idea.
That's what I was trying to explain in my paper; that
we are making progress in all those areas and having
additional or primary powers in the Assembly is not
significantly, in my view, going to change that.
|
|
Sir Michael Wheeler-Booth
|
|
That was one significant exception, which
is you say if there was a change of Government at Westminster
then the democratic Welsh accountability might be negated.
|
|
Delyth Evans
|
|
That's my concern with the present position.
|
|
Sir Michael Wheeler-Booth
|
|
It would be possible for an imaginary
figure, demon figure to completely stop, because of
the primary legislative power residing at Westminster,
the aspirations of the Assembly.
|
|
Delyth Evans
|
|
Yes, that's right.
|
|
Sir Michael Wheeler-Booth
|
|
Largely stop it.
|
|
Delyth Evans
|
|
There is that possibility.
|
|
Sir Michael Wheeler-Booth
|
|
Your paper, if I may say so, is extremely
logical and persuasive and I think probably the best
case against primary powers that I have read, but you
get three-quarters of the way up the mountain then you
suddenly begin going down again because you say: what
would happen if we had an imaginary demon figure, name
of Redwood often comes up in evidence, on some future
occasion. It's impossible to imagine that there will
be a Labour Government perpetually in power, or very
difficult to imagine in Westminster. So where does that
leave your argument?
|
|
Delyth Evans
|
|
Like a sort of well trained journalist
I was trying to address both sides of the argument.
That is the most compelling case for additional powers.
But you could address that case in different ways. Giving
primary powers to the Assembly is not the only way of
addressing that flaw in the settlement. You could, for
instance, introduce legislation in Westminster that
would guarantee Parliamentary time for Welsh based legislation,
there should be some priority given or some way of ensuring
that legislation or request for legislation coming from
the Assembly---
|
|
Sir Michael Wheeler-Booth
|
|
That could be rescinded by another Government.
|
|
Lord Richard
|
|
It is more difficult to repeal an Act
than it is to---
|
|
Delyth Evans
|
|
What I am saying is that that needs to
be looked at, but primary powers is not the only way
of addressing that weakness in the settlement. That's
the case I was trying to make. But I hope my paper is
not seen as a very strong argument against primary powers.
That's not how it was intended. I am fairly neutral.
I am saying we have are already making a lot progress
with the powers that we have and the argument that we
can only make Wales a better place with primary powers
is, in my view, misplaced and does mislead people into
thinking that that's only the way we can make a difference.
We're making a difference already.
|
|
Peter Price
|
|
I want to come back to some of the nuts
and bolts of the role and how it's carried out with
the implication of capacity. You are obviously a supporter
of the family friendly hours. What does that mean in
practice?
|
|
Delyth Evans
|
|
It means in practice that the formal
work of the Assembly, the Committees and Plenary sessions
are tightly packed into a normal working day.
|
|
Peter Price
|
|
That being classified as?
|
|
Delyth Evans
|
|
9 till 5.30. So that does put pressure
on the business. Particularly in Plenary. However, I
feel quite strongly that Plenary is not well used, has
not been very well used and that there ought to be ways
that would could improve the use of Plenary time without
extending the time. I argued quite strongly in favour
of retaining the current hours of Plenary. There were
attempts made to extend Plenary hours, I felt that that
gave out completely the wrong signals about the kind
of in institution the Assembly was trying to be; a modern
family friendly organisation, not only for the politicians
about but also for the hundreds on staff who work there
and that you can -- I have learned from experience that
you can work efficiently within limited time periods
if you have to. That's the only way a lot of mothers
in particular can work. If you extended the hours at
Plenary all that would happen is the politicians would
waffle on for a lot longer. It wouldn't make for a more
effective set up.
|
|
Lord Richard
|
|
How many AMs have got families in Cardiff?
One of the things that happens in Westminster they come
down on the Monday and go back on the Thursday. Family
friendly hours on the Tuesday and the Wednesday.
|
|
Delyth Evans
|
|
That family friendly hours don't apply
to AMs from North Wales or West Wales either. I'd say
no more than about 7 or 8. But not many of those have
young families. Most have grown up children.
|
|
Peter Price
|
|
I have just follow through, you were
mentioning an attempt hat been made to extend the hours.
When that vote was taken was it on party lines or did
it cut across parties?
|
|
Delyth Evans
|
|
As I recall it was free vote across---
|
|
Peter Price
|
|
It did cut across party lines. There
was not an informal whip and the Assembly divided?
|
|
Delyth Evans
|
|
No, not at all.
|
|
Peter Price
|
|
So far as the meetings that are going
on there that you described as being Committee related
but not actual Committee meetings, what was the nature
of those meetings? I mean how semi-formal are they?
|
|
Delyth Evans
|
|
Quite informal usually. I was referring
to group meetings in anticipation of Committees. So
you would have the Labour Culture Members meeting for
a pre-meeting. Didn't always happen, but it did happen
when there was important business.
|
|
Peter Price
|
|
That would be half an hour or something
like that?
|
|
Delyth Evans
|
|
Three-quarters of an hour to an hour.
But also you get organisations coming to talk to you
if they were going to give evidence to the Committee
or if there was business coming before the Committee
that they had an interest in they would want to come
and talk to you to express their views on it. One of
the very important aspects of the Assembly is its openness
and its accessibility to people. Far more so than Westminster.
You have to protect the time that AMs have to meet people.
Not just constituents but organisations and groups from
across Wales who want to talk to them and do have a
very important role to play in the development of policy
needs under the Assembly's business.
|
|
Peter Price
|
|
You mentioned the volume of correspondence,
about ten to twenty letters per week. Can you give some
idea how many of those are representations from bodies
that are circulating every Member, as compared with
the kind of letters that demand action of some kind
following up an individual constituency problem?
|
|
Delyth Evans
|
|
About half, half I would say. Sometimes
less. Constituency casework was -- I mean, sometimes
one or two letters a week. But, yes, I think. So it's
hard to put a figure on it actually. But I would say
about half.
|
|
Peter Price
|
|
Last point is about your experience of
representing Mid and West Wales which is a uniquely
large constituency. With that experience what comment
would you have about the electoral regions that are
currently in Wales?
|
|
Delyth Evans
|
|
That's a very difficult one. I just don't
think that any system is perfect. I think there are
good and bad things about the regional system. I did
feel as a regional Member that I was able to represent
-- I was able to take a regional view and look at things
in a slightly more strategic way than a constituency
Member who was focusing entirely on things that were
going on in their constituency. So when I was talking
about rural issues or transport issues, I was able to
take a strategic view across my region. So I do think
that that enabled me to contribute in a slightly different
way and in a valuable way. I am in favour in the principle
of PR and so the regional system is a way of enabling
that to happen. But I do not think it's in any way ideal.
But no system is perfect. So I don't have very clear
views on it, I am afraid, or I don't have very clear
views as to how we can improve on it.
|
|
Tom Jones (in Welsh then interpreted)
|
|
Y Pwyllgorau Rhanbarth y buoch chi'n
eu cadeirio, Pwyllgor y Canolbarth, mae dyn yn meddwl
tybed beth ddylai gael ei wneud am y rhain. Ydyn nhw'n
gweithio? Oes yna ddiffiniad rhanbarthol sy'n gwneud
synnwyr mewn gwirionedd? Oes yna bynciau rhanbarthol?
Rydyn ni'n clywed tystiolaeth gan Aelodau'r Cynulliad
nad ydyn nhw'n teimlo mai dyma'r ffordd orau o gydadweithio
â phobl mewn rhanbarth. Hwyrach pe bai'r Pwyllgorau
Pwnc yn mynd allan ac yn trafod pwnc penodol byddai
hynny'n denu mwy o sylw ac mae'n debyg mai dim ond Pwyllgor
y Gogledd sy'n orfodol yn ôl y cyfansoddiad. Oes gennych
chi farn ar y ffordd orau i ddefnyddio amser Aelodau'r
Cynulliad ar y naill law a hefyd er mwyn cydadweithio
â'r bobl ymhellach i ffwrdd o Gaerdydd?
|
|
Interpretation:
|
|
The Regional Committees you were Chair
of, the Mid Wales Committee, one wonders about what
should be done about these. Do they work. Is there a
regional definition which actually makes sense? Are
there regional topics? We hear evidence from Members
of the Assembly that they don't feel that this is the
best way of interacting with people within a region.
Maybe the Subject Committee's actually going out and
discussing a particular topic might attract more attention
and apparently only the North Wales Committee is required
by the constitution. Do you have a view as to the best
use of the AMs time on one hand and in order of also
to interact with the people further away from Cardiff?
|
|
Delyth Evans (In Welsh then interpreted)
|
|
Wel, des i i'r casgliad bod gan y Pwyllgorau
Rhanbarth ran werthfawr i'w chwarae, yn sicr i Bwyllgor
y Canolbarth y bues i'n Aelod ohono, a'r rheswm am hynny
yw'r ffordd y mae'r Pwyllgorau Rhanbarth yn mynd allan
i'r cymunedau ac yn mynd â'r Cynulliad allan i gymunedau
ledled Cymru ac rwy'n credu bod hynny yn bwysig iawn.
Wrth gwrs, mae pobl yn gallu delio'n uniongyrchol â'u
Haelod Cynulliad penodol nhw ond mae gweld y Pwyllgor
wrth ei waith a gweld Aelodau'r Pwyllgor yn cyd-drafod
yn werthfawr iawn wrth esbonio i bobl sut mae'r Cynulliad
yn gweithio mewn gwirionedd. Nawr mae'n dibynnu lawer
iawn ar Gadeirydd y Pwyllgor a'r Aelodau. Rwy'n credu
bod yr holl Bwyllgorau Rhanbarth yn bur wahanol o ran
eu natur. Un peth y llwyddon ni i'w wneud yn eithaf
llwyddiannus yn ein Pwyllgor Rhanbarth ni oedd mynd
i gymunedau a delio mewn ffordd draws-bleidiol â materion
oedd yn bwysig i'r cymunedau hynny. Ga i roi enghraifft
ichi, roedd yna broblem erydu'r arfordir yn ardal Tywyn
oedd wedi bod yn broblem fawr yn yr ardal. Doedd neb
wedi mynd i'r afael â'r broblem. Roedd cyfrifoldebau
gan lawer o asiantaethau, yr awdurdod lleol er enghraifft,
a doedd dim byd yn digwydd. Doedd y bobl ddim yn hapus.
Aethon ni i Dywyn. Aethon ni gyda'n gilydd. Daeth y
gwahanol asiantaethau at ei gilydd a daeth bron 200
o bobl i'r cyfarfod Pwyllgor yma am eu bod nhw'n gweld
bod y Cynulliad yn dod i'w hardal ac yn trafod rhywbeth
oedd o bwys mawr iddyn nhw. Fe wnaethon ni symud ymlaen
ar hyn.
|
|
Interpretation:
|
|
Well, I came to the conclusion that
there is a valuable role for the Regional Committees
to play, certainly for the Mid Wales Committee, which
I was a Member of, and the reason for that is the way
in which the Regional Committees go out into the communities
and take the Assembly out to the communities throughout
Wales and I do think that this is very much important.
Of course, people can deal directly with their particular
Assembly Member but seeing the Committee working and
seeing the Committee Members discussing with each other
is very valuable in explaining to people how the Assembly
actually works. Now it depends very much on the Chair
and the Members of the Committee. I think all the Regional
Committees are very different in nature. One thing we
have managed to do quite effectively in our Regional
Committee was to go to communities and deal in a cross
party way with matters which were important to those
communities. May I give you an example, there was a
problem of coastal erosion in the Towyn area which had
been a great problem of this area. Nobody had gone about
tackling the problem. Many agencies had responsibilities,
the local authority, for example, and nothing was happening.
The people were than unhappy. We went to Towyn. Went
together. The various agencies came together and nearly
200 people actually came to this Committee meeting because
they saw that the Assembly was coming to their area
and discussing something of great importance to them.
We did move forward on this.
|
|
Tom Jones (In Welsh then interpreted)
|
|
Allwch chi esbonio sut gwnaeth Pwyllgor
Rhanbarth, hwyrach nad oedd y Gweinidog oedd yn gyfrifol
am y gwaith hwnnw'n Aelod o'r Pwyllgor hwnnw, ond sut
aethoch chi ati i ohebu â'r Gweinidog perthnasol. Roedd
pwnc yn cael ei graffu yn y Pwyllgor ond sut oeddech
chi'n dangos i bobl eich bod chi wedi gwrando ac wedi
mynd â'r neges yn ôl ac yna ymateb gyda phenderfyniad
y Gweinidog?
|
|
Interpretation:
|
|
Could you explain how a Regional Committee,
maybe the Minister responsible for that work was not
a Member of that Committee, but how did you actually
correspond with the relevant Minister. A topic was scrutinised
in the Committee but how did you show people that you
had listened and taken the message back and then respond
with a decision of the Minister?
|
|
Delyth Evans (In Welsh and then interpreted)
|
|
Ydyn, oedden drwy siarad â'r Gweinidog.
Cael cyfarfod â'r Gweinidog. Yna gohebu yn ysgrifenedig
â grwp lleol i ddangos bod hynny wedi digwydd ac felly
beth oedd yn digwydd o ganlyniad i'r cyfarfod. Roedd
y ffaith bod gennych chi Aelodau o'r pleidiau gwahanol
i gyd yn cynrychioli un ardal a allai ddod at ei gilydd
er mwyn sicrhau bod rhywbeth yn digwydd yn eithaf effeithiol
ac yn fwy effeithiol na phe bai un neu ddau o Aelodau
o un blaid yn galw am i rywbeth ddigwydd. Roedd hyn
yn rhoi grym ychwanegol i'r hyn roedd y Pwyllgor yn
awyddus i'w weld yn digwydd. Ein bod ni'n dod o bleidiau
gwahanol ac yn gallu penderfynu ar ran y Canolbarth,
ein bod ni am weld hyn yn digwydd. Roedd hyn yn rhoi
mwy o bwysau ar y Gweinidog ac fe wnaeth hi ymateb i
hyn. Does dim byd i ddweud y gallai Pwyllgor yr Amgylchedd
fod wedi mynd allan a delio â'r un broblem, ond dwy
ddim yn meddwl y byddai hynny wedi digwydd achos roedd
hyn mor benodol i'r ardal. Mae enghreifftiau eraill
lle buon ni'n cydweithio fel hyn. Ond rwy'n credu yn
bendant fod Pwyllgor y Canolbarth yn Bwyllgor eithaf
bach ac fel arfer roedd pawb yn deall a bydden ni'n
cydweithredu'n eithaf da gyda phobl ar draws llinellau'r
pleidiau.
|
|
Interpretation:
|
|
Yes, we do, did, through speaking
with the Minister. Having a meeting with a Minister.
Then corresponding in writing with a local group to
show that this had happened and so what was happening
as a consequence of the meeting. The fact that you had
Members from different parties all representing one
area who could come together in order to ensure that
something happened was quite effective and more effective
than had there been one or two Members of one party
calling for something to happen. It did give extra power
to what the Committee wanted to see happening. That
we were from different parties and could decide on behalf
of Mid Wales, that we wanted to see this happening.
It did put more pressure on the Minister and she did
respond to this. There is nothing to say that the Environment
Committee could have gone out and dealt with the same
problem, but I don't think it would have happened because
this was so specific to this area. There are other examples
of us working in his way. But I do think the Mid Wales
Committee was quite a small Committee and usually everyone
actually understood and we would co-operate quite well
with people across party lines.
|
|
Tom Jones (In Welsh then interpreted)
|
|
Felly fyddech chi ddim yn newid y system
ranbarthol o gwbl?
|
|
Interpretation:
|
|
So you wouldn't change the regional
system at all?
|
|
Delyth Evans (In Welsh then interpreted)
|
|
Wel, rwy'n credu yn bendant fod angen
canllawiau cliriach i ddweud beth yn hollol y dylair
Pwyllgorau Rhanbarth fod yn ei wneud am fod cymaint
o amrywio rhyngddyn nhw. Ond o ran eu cadw nhw, rwy'n
credu bod ganddyn nhw ran i'w chwarae.
|
|
Interpretation:
|
|
Well, I do think we need clearer guidelines
to say what exactly Regional Committee should be doing
because there is much variation between them. But in
terms of retaining them I think they have a role to
play.
|
|
Eira Davies (In Welsh then interpreted)
|
|
Ga i fynd ar ôl yr iaith Gymraeg. Fel
dirprwy Weinidog ar y Pwyllgor Diwylliant wrth gwrs
roedd gennych chi gyfraniad allweddol i'r Adolygiad
ar yr iaith Gymraeg, ydych chi'n credu y dylai'r Cynulliad
gael pwerau i ddeddfu ynghylch y Gymraeg?
|
|
Interpretation:
|
|
May I follow up on the Welsh language.
As a deputy Minister on the Culture Committee of course
you had a key input into the Welsh Language Review,
do you believe that the Assembly should have law making
powers over the Welsh language?
|
|
Delyth Evans (In Welsh and the interpreted)
|
|
Wel, ar un ystyr fe fyddai'n gwneud synnwyr
y dylen nhw achos ei bod hi'n unigryw i Gymru o'i chymharu
ag unrhyw le arall ym Mhrydain, ond fe allech chi ddweud
hynny am unrhyw beth. Gallech chi ddweud nad yw'r gwasanaeth
iechyd yng Nghymru yn effeithio ar bobl yn Lloegr neu
unrhyw agwedd neu bolisi arall. Darlledu yng Nghymru
neu beth bynnag arall. Felly dwy ddim yn credu ei bod
hi mor syml â dweud mai mater i Gymru yn unig yw hi,
sef yr iaith Gymraeg a beth am gael y pwerau. Mater
i'r ysgolion yng Nghymru yn unig.
|
|
Interpretation:
|
|
Well, in one sense it would make sense
that they should because its unique to Wales as opposed
to anywhere else in Britain, but you could say that
about anything. You could say that the health service
in Wales does not impact on people in England or any
other aspect or policy. Broadcasting in Wales or whatever
else. So I don't believe that it's as simple as just
saying its just solely a matter for Wales, namely the
Welsh language and what about having the powers. Solely
a matter for the schools in Wales.
|
|
Eira Davies (In Welsh then interpreted)
|
|
Ond mae wedi dod yn amlwg oherwydd ffiasgo'r
Swyddfa Cofnodion Troseddol. Sut gallech chi osgoi sefyllfa
o'r math yna?
|
|
Interpretation:
|
|
But it has become evident because
of the fiasco over the Criminal Records Bureau. How
could you avoid that kind of situation?
|
|
Delyth Evans (In Welsh then interpreted)
|
|
Mae hynny wedi cael ei ddatrys yn effeithiol.
Mae'r Swyddfa wedi derbyn bod angen newid agwedd. Felly
mae'r canlyniad wedi bod yn un cadarnhaol. Dwy ddim
yn credu y byddai cael pwerau sylfaenol yng Nghymru
wedi newid hynny. Dwy ddim yn credu.
|
|
Interpretation:
|
|
That has been resolved relatively
effectively. The Bureau has accepted the need for a
change in attitude. Therefore the outcome there has
been a positive one. Having primary powers in Wales
I don't believe would have changed that. I don't believe.
|
|
Lord Richard
|
|
Can I thank you very much. That was terribly
useful from the practical point of view to see what
AMs do and how they do it.
|
|
Delyth Evans
|
| Thank you for your time. |
|
|